Autism Project Donations:

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

Saturday 15 January 2022

Alberta Plains Mounds

I won't dwell on this because there are many other 'interesting' things happening right now albeit behind the scenes as far as the corporate media is concerned.

However, interestingly, or strangely -, not sure which(!) the BBC had a huge long article just last night about the pre-historic stone mounds of Alberta...

Why they wanted to cover it I have no idea. I know why I did.

Canadian 'barrel-aged' maple syrup.

Naturally the first thing they went straight to was what modern 'sci-entists' and archaeologists and so on 'know' that the mounds or medicine wheels as they are also called, were all about in those ancient times before science existed - however as you know they are able to go back in time and thus declare for certain what was going on.

Because they know. Right?

By the same token, and regardless that the Native Tribal or 'First Nations' people have a strong contemporary culture going on - it is not all that clear that even they know what was going on back then.

Theoretically, ancient Siberian people - hunters - from what is now termed 'Beringia' (starting from around the Lena River in Russia) would cross the land bridge and eventually ended up, some of them, staying in Canada and North America permanently as those places are called today. 

All the way across the other side of the world, the same ancient practices went on, in which people covered themselves in red and yellow ochre either during mysterious 'spirit' ceremonies, or when they prepared a body for burial.

I have to make brief mention of this, though - if you go search on the internet for the word, the Greek word, 'Herm,' you will find a formal statue like a short obelisk with the head of a man on the top. And this is not a 'Herm.' It has come to be called a 'Herm' because these statues were later on, much much later on, placed nearby the Herms, and they are presumed to be of the young God Hermes.

A very good use of black truffles.


But if you go to Mount Hermon in Lebanon - where the 200 Watchers came down and formed liaisons with human women - you will also find a 'Herm.'

A Herm is a mound of ordinary stones, onto which only the rightful king and his family are permitted to lay stones, and according to which ritual act, they hold claim to the land and to the manifestation of their kingdom realm - which is not of this Earth. And which is why they place Earth stones there... 

'Manifest your kingdom realm,' are in fact the actual source words that have been translated in the Lord's Prayer as 'Thy Kingdom Come.'

Now, these are just plain ordinary stones. There is absolutely nothing at all different or significant about them.

...Someplace else, in absolute secrecy known only to the rightful king and his usually very small group, there is another place, where there is another ceremony that takes place, parallel to the 'external ceremonies' that are made at the 'Herms' or stone mounds.

And, you can fake being a king all you like, but unless you have access to the other place, all your efforts against the real king and his people will come to naught.

'Human' beings are contested space. They are primitive, animal-like creatures, with a lot of intelligence and moral comprehension and consciousness. They are capable of being 'en-souled' - which is a much more complex phenomenon than you might casually suppose.

There are many other beings, who 'sharpen knives' against both human beings and the kings who arrange the affairs of human beings. And their knives are blunted and their plans come to nothing in the end. According to the times and to the rituals undertaken at the secret Herms...



3 comments:

  1. I've been meaning to head out to Majorville for a long time. Also Red Rock Coulee where you can see the Sweetgrass Hills down in Montana 100 km away. Writing on Stone and Head Smashed in Buffalo jump are also both worth the effort. As is Drumheller, Dry Island and Dinosaur Provincial Park. I tell people Banff, Jasper and Waterton are beautiful, but the Alberta high plains hold their own, both in beauty and relevant history.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Do the Tula statues walk around at night? Some people think so. But I guess it depends on what they mean by "walk around."

    https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/tula-giants

    ReplyDelete

Your considered comments are welcome