Autism Project Donations:

Autism Project Donations here - https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=23MBUB4W8AL7E

Sunday 29 October 2017

If It Wasn't So...

I wouldn't say it.

So, yup. Bitcoin is something that took off - a lot.

I mean what's the point of someone like me continuously having to say things like 'told ya so?' ...I don't want to do that. It's very frustrating, not about having to say this kind of thing (because I don't have to), but to see the same inane critiques of something new, anything, really, by people with the same mindsets you will find among aggressive-toned, and actually aggressive, but otherwise fairly ordinary individuals. 

Bitcoin was always going to 'take off.' It had the numerical coverage in 'a' market and it possesses innovation that permits a certain 'ease of use,' and it has a function in the digital product marketplace for sure. It improves on 'standard' money forms and formats for the kind of new marketplace which exists, obtaining for a new type of product category. Bitcoin is a thing; it's a thing
Let's sell our Bitcoins and go First Class,
on 'Oud Airways.' 

So it's time to get over it and move on and not become fixated if at some point there are temporary and relative price retracements.

But you see, one of the things that is an issue, is that there is so much opinion out there, so much noise, in fact, that it becomes ever more difficult to 'see' anything clearly these days.

For me a current example of the sort of widespread nonsense and meaningless describing of things people don't really know about, but insist on claiming to be experts on, is oud

Oud is this wood thing that they use in the Middle East as a kind of household scent or fumigation. It's absolutely disgusting and yet clever people have been marketing it to the point that you cannot go to any fragrance counter anywhere in the world today and not find some of it, and at atrocious sums of asking money.

Okay some people might like it - I don't like it. It doesn't smell pleasant at all!
Why didn't 'oud' trade take off in England?
You know, back when Sir Richard Burton was translating
that salacious 1000 Nights And 1 Night (correct title). 

But the point I would argue is that you will find absolute gibberish and utter rubbish spoken about the subject, all over the internet and everywhere - television, in literature, in Wikipedia; everywhere.

What the bloody hell are they talking about?! You will interminably hear these descriptions: barnyard, skanky, earthy/woody (if you're lucky, they'll include that) - and then worst of all 'incense-y.' It's not incense-y. Some people do include it in incense sticks yes, but then incense sticks are in the first place not 'incense!!!' People are just taking, hiving off, words and names and applying them wherever they like.

And then another one - fecal. Jesus H. Muhammad!

We used to have this saying in Malaysia, about the dumb people - 'lagi bunghi lagi baik.' Means, the 'louder' the better, as in, the more blaring, the noisier, the more over-powering...

Yes, oud hangs around as an odor and you can almost never get rid of it, so, if you think paying stupid money is justified because of longevity, then sure, oud. Oud = Hillary Clinton! Must do.

See the thing is - and let me be direct here, even if there will be members of the dumb ordinary public who will hate me for saying this kind of thing: there's people, regardless of how much money they have, just plain simply do not know, and never will know because they don't come from the class that teaches them.

I have not seen anyone anywhere on-line - and I defy someone to show me - 'experts' telling you straight what this thing is indeed like, but not truly like. Oud is a fake thing, in a way, in that it is near to something significant, but it is not that particular thing.

But oud is extraordinarily expensive. Don't waste your money.

Here is the real deal, and why:

Even Wikipedia is all over the place about it - on the one hand it says 'attacked by a beetle,' and in the same paragraph says 'inoculated with the fungus.' Fungus? What fungus? 

LOL

There's fungus involved. Yep. That's part of it.

How about we shift over to truffles...

Ha-hah!

No one ever mentions that now do they, when it comes to oud!

Some aloeswoods (oud) some, not all, are a source of more or less penicillin, and it is used, and has been used, for centuries to render a cure to various diseases from infection. That is why aloeswood is important in ancient cultures. 

People who have never been raised around really big money society have no idea about truffles, and they make up stuff. Truffles are only very vaguely odorific in their natural state. People talk a lot of rubbish about truffles. The only time you will really become aware of the scent of truffles is after you have eaten the things. And it helps if you have ingested some alcohol into your body as well.
A depiction of the Arabic chemist 'Al Kindi' - Muslims
love to make much of this guy, except they killed him when he was
an old man! They don't put that in too many current compendiums. 

Truffles - why they are of interest to these olden days clever clever and rich people, is that they are like MSG once inside the human body. And yet, they tend to enhance only two things - the male chemistry in the male, and the female chemistry in the female. Fact. Take it from me. Like oud, truffle increases in power over time - unlike oud, truffle increases in intensity inside the human organism. Oud increases in intensity in the air, after contact with the skin. Truffles more or less smell like mushroom, like fungus, and a little bit antiseptic - oud smells just plain sickly awful albeit it does have a certain toxic, penicillin-like sense about it. Think old fashioned plasticine (therefore aliphatic acids), and possibly poisonous mushroom, and almond. Oud is really strong, truffle is not that strong. Truffle is a LOT MORE subtle.

There are secrets about how to use truffles to their fullest value. I have talked about it before, maybe a long time ago now though.  

Oud doesn't enhance anything in particular - it just stays, cloyingly, around. It is sickly, vaguely antiseptic at best, albeit alongside this unpleasant maybe cyanose, sort of vaguely almondy-poisonous odor with hints of something literally not too good. It isn't uplifting and it certainly isn't anything at all like incense. For incense you want to be thinking Omumbiri Myrrh, and of course, Frankincense. 

But - bu-u-u-u-ut - there are all these marketing places that will take your money off you and try to convince you oud is this wonderful amazing, blah blah blah, thing. It isn't. Forget it.

What you are smelling is the chemistry of ascomycota, a fungus which previously we all knew from the red colorant 'cochineal.' Except with oud it is related to a resin produced by the tree, as a defense against either the bugs that can infest it, or the fungus which can get into it. It's a kind of a gas reaction that is taking place that causes you to smell something, and for that smell to seem to grow and grow and also to hang around. Even cochineal is quite pleasant in a way, and especially compared to oud, which is not pleasant because of its strong hint of something poisonous about it.

Ah gawd almighty. What the idiot world thinks and does and behaves like... I dunno. SMH (Shake My Head).

Oud is certainly not an aphrodisiac. That's for sure.



Wednesday 18 October 2017

Words Of Mystery And Magic

To the actual people who live there, 'Egypt' is not called Egypt, but Masr.

'Masr' is a peculiar, ancient word that few, even among the locals know the true meaning of.

Some people say it is just the word for 'city,' others 'civilized' or 'civilization.' While these are broadly true, the essence of its meaning is 'to blend or meld together as in a crucible.'

Egyptology in its formal suit, agrees that in the times of the Pharaohs themselves, the place was known as 'Km't.' And today, this is written and said: 'Kemet.'

Kemet is however, superficially merely a descriptive phrase that suggests that the land there has soil that is dark or black and thus, fruitful.

The real 'name' for the place is: 'Ka-Ra-Sar-Atnapishtim.' Or, Karasart-Utnapishtim.
A scene from the movie short 'La Legende de Shalimar.'

Utnapishtim is, according to the Sumerian legend or epic narrative, the only person to survive the Great Flood designed by superhuman beings to destroy the world and all of Mankind. He build an ark which protected him and this was eventually lodged on Mount Nisir. 'Nisir' though, means a place of seclusion or mystery, inaccessible, hidden. One of his future offspring, Gilgamesh, searches for some item that has the property of bestowing eternal life - which he eventually finds at the bottom of the sea.

The component 'Sar' can mean an Epoch over which a Cosmic 'king' will rule. This is the, let's say, phonemic reason there are such people who are called 'Tsars,' and also 'Caesar.'

So you can see that if you go by what I am saying, there is some vague similarity to this modern popular film - Zeitgeist's - ideas that have largely been taken from the books of Zecharia Sitchin. 

Today, these very ancient folkloric stories are used in modern marketing - of things like, for example, the House of Arabian Oud's premium perfume 'Kalemat Black Arabian.'

'Kalemat' is taken to mean in this context - 'words of magic,' and the word has the same essential idea behind it that the Greek word 'Logos' has.

'Kalemat' means: 'Spirit of Universal Power in the Material Realm.'

The word found on hieroglyphic inscriptions for the composition of some kind of special perfume made by the Court of Cleopatra - in modern times translated as 'Calamus' or 'Calaminth...' is actually 'Ka-El-Ma't.' Physically, materially, it describes the physical item ambergris, but also there is a philosophical dimension, namely that it engages a force in the mind that comes about through the harmonization of human thinking and ideas with sensations given rise to from the burning of ambergris. And these ideas are not human ideas...

The analogy is that of a plant growing, in a dark, inaccessible, hidden and mysterious Earth-bed, and which comes to life, develops, and at a point, bears fruit, having been given its energy to grow from the fire of the Cosmic stars.

There is nothing, that is available or capable of being made in the material realm, whose doors cannot be opened, and whose very existence not exploded into being - 'kun faya kun.' (The ancient Aramaic and also now the Arabic for 'Be, and It Is.'


Morvan - And She Smiles (Moonsouls Remix)

 

Thursday 12 October 2017

Authenticity

The word 'authenticity' means of undisputed origin, not a copy.

But almost everything you see around you today, is a copy, and often a very poor copy.

There is very little that is in fact truly authentic nowadays. 

When you have achieved that semi-divine status (well in fact, among living human beings in what they consider a practical lifestyle, it is a divine status) of material human wealth, then you can purchase all kinds of expensive things to suit your whims or your desires - and these will for the most part, and regardless of who you are and where you came from in the modern world, be inauthentic things and give you completely inauthentic experiences. So much then, for material wealth, if that is all it is.  Not that we don't like wealth - we just don't want to be a victim of success, which is a thing that can happen.
This is Sergio Ermotti - he's the Sean Hannity of
the banking world

And perhaps you have come across some fellow here and there too, usually in the media spotlight, pontificating about the 'wealthy elite...' They don't know what they are talking about.

There is no - 'the wealthy elite.' There are people who get to spend a lot of money sometimes - and if that is what is meant, then certainly there are a number of these types around.

A truly elite individual, is someone whose functionality when they determine a certain path, is always guaranteed - and that type of person comes from a different place to what the pop version of the 'wealthy elite' considers must be the case.


*

Now here is a secret to the whole Egyptian pyramid thing, and something that will be a touch at variance to what you see and hear from all the book-writers and academics and 'experts' and even different to what the contemporary 'Illuminati' mythology says:

The first psychologists of the human being as a structural 'thing,' that were on the Earth ever, were the ancient Egyptians and by 'ancient Egyptians' I mean not really 'Egyptians' at all, of course.

These people left a huge monument to the psychology of the human being. Every one of those megalithic statues and monuments, equates to a driving emotional or psychological factor that exists inside the human.
And this is a whole-cut shoe - which means it
comes from only one piece of leather; only the great
master-craftspeople can make this shoe

The sphinx is of course a dog, or a lion (and it is meant to be both dog and lion, or, better put - dog OR lion), and it represents appetites or the innate sense of justice and morality, and an innate sense of good and evil. 

And the obelisk is the thing that represents or depicts the highest flying part of the mind, which can take a point of vantage so high up that it is able to see in all directions, as it were, including past or behind the walls to sight and vision, that are there at the level of our normal physical sight.

There is another 'figure' which has never been discovered, or perhaps, it is there but not been understood for what it is - and which represents or depicts how the creative, inventive, and in the reverse, the fearful aspect of the living dynamic mind, works.

The modern 'Illuminati' are not the people who know anything about all this - they know there is some significance but they don't actually know what it is although they claim that knowledge.

Once again, we have another example of the inauthentic.

You will observe, that all the symbolic figures have two aspects - a positive one, and a negative one. And taken altogether, the whole thing presents a complex equation with multiple variables.


*

...Now if you have a lot of money and you want to buy your wife some French perfume - then you can indeed spend a lot of money if you want to; there are a lot of producers around with expensive and well-packaged products.

But if you want an authentic product, then buy something from the young man 'Sultan Pasha.' He doesn't have any formal qualifications as far as I know. And he's not recognized by the big perfume houses.

Sultan Pasha is a young man from London and he makes the best and the most authentic perfumes in the world today. 

How does he know what he knows, and how does he do what he does?

It's a mystery, you see... That's the correct answer. It's a mystery. And it's meant to be a mystery. It's designed to be a mystery.

Me - I'm not a believer in 'Intelligent Design;' I am a believer in Intelligent Mystery.

Friday 6 October 2017

Just Calm Down

Why calm down?

Because everything's fine to the extent that it is a lot better now than when there were no mobile phones with video cameras in them!

People will work it all out sooner now, than later.

I fancy there is a line in Noel Coward's Mad Dogs and Englishman about where Mandalay is, and what it's connection is to the Islamic Rohingya - but then I'm probably wrong and it is only a near miss.

Or perhaps I'm mistaking his gibberish lines in it with some foreign words about Abu Sayyaf and the heat they've been taking with Duterte's crack-down.

One of the things casinos are notorious for, though, and about which there has never really been much conjecture - is cash money laundering.