Tutu Hockey

hey... there are lots of posts so go search the BLOG ARCHIVE - (͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

  • Home
  • PREVIEW: Mental Midgets | Musqonocihte
  • Contact Me

Search This Blog

The Screaming Mandrake

 

Bizarre, Dark History, Folklore, General

The Screaming Mandrake: Power, Potions and Witchcraft

Belonging to the nightshade family and found in the Mediterranean region, the mandrake has been known for centuries as one of the most powerful and potent of all plants. People originally believed that the mandrake had two forms; one male and the other female. Some botanists now think that these are two distinct species with…

Miss_Jessel
October 28, 2018
16 minutes
Folklore, Magic, Mandragora, Mandrake, Screaming mandrake, Witchcraft

Belonging to the nightshade family and found in the Mediterranean region, the mandrake has been known for centuries as one of the most powerful and potent of all plants. People originally believed that the mandrake had two forms; one male and the other female. Some botanists now think that these are two distinct species with the one known as the Autumn Mandrake native to the Levant area and the other Mandragora Officinarum found in the rest of the Mediterranean[1].

Two Mandrakes. Wellcome Collection.

The name mandragora (mandrake in Middle English and Middle Dutch) is formed from man symbolising its resemblance to a miniature person and dragora or drake taken from the archaic word for dragon alluding to its magical powers[2].

A Powerful Poison

The medical properties of the mandrake were known to the Egyptians 6000 years ago. Egyptians called it ‘the water of life’ and used it to improve health, vigour and longevity. The mandrake was attributed with divine powers and placed in a visible corner of a dwelling. Vows were made to it and candles lit[3].

Dioscorides describing the mandrake. Wellcome Collection.

Mandrake plants contain hyoscine, an alkaloid which if too much is ingested causes hallucinations, delirium and even comas. Accidental poisoning could lead to various symptoms such as vomiting, diarrhoea, dizziness and blurred vision[4]. There were some positive benefits of medicinal mandrake such as the relief of rheumatic pains and eye infections and even as far back as AD60 the Greek botanist and physician Dioscorides wrote about its use as an anaesthetic. An anaesthetic mandrake root mixture which also contained opium, hemlock and ivy was used by surgeons well into the Middle Ages.

During the Roman period a mandrake infused wine or ‘death wine’ was also known to have been offered to those being crucified[5]. I suppose being drugged into a near coma made the tortuous punishment a little easier to bear.

For many it was the presence of this alkaloid together with the mandrake’s unusual shape that conjured up images of magic and power.

‘Love apple of the ancients’[6]

Circe. 17th Century. British Museum Collection.

Mandrakes were also believed to be a powerful aphrodisiac (as long as the dosage was right otherwise the outcome would not have been so pleasant for either parties!). The Greek made a mandrake love potion by steeping the root in wine and vinegar and the plant became associated with the Greek goddesses Aphrodite and Circe (the goddess of sorcery) who used the potion to cast a spell over the Argonauts. In Arabic the mandrake is known as the Devil’s Apple and was believed to inflame a man’s love. It was also alleged that if a man carried the female-shaped mandrake in his pocket he would win the woman he desired.

‘Goe, and catche a falling starre, Get with a child a mandrake root’, John Donne[7]

The mandrake has long been linked to fertility probably because its shape reminded people of a human figure. Even in early illustrations it was drawn with a head, body and legs crossed.

One of the oldest references can be found in the Bible in Genesis, when Rachel desperate for a child asks her sister Leah for a loan of the mandrakes which her son, Rueben had harvested from the field as it was believed that eating the sweet smelling yellow fruits of the mandrake would imbue a person with sexual energy and fertility.

The mandrake could also act like an ancient test tube such as in the legend of King Hermones who wanted a male heir but was adamant in his refusal to have sex with women! The king ordered his advisors to find another solution. His astrologers, at an auspicious time took the king’s semen and placed it on a mandrake. Through alchemy a male-child was created much to the king’s delight [8].

Not only could the mandrake help to get a woman pregnant it was also used in childbirth. In order to make use of the mandrake’s power it had to be carefully looked after e.g. the root was placed on a plate and fed with milk or red wine on special days such as every Friday. The milk used to bathe the mandrake could then be fed to pregnant women. Some traditions suggest putting the mandrake under a woman’s bed in a plate full of milk mixed with breast milk. Both rituals were believed to ease childbirth and protect the mothers and babies. [9].

‘Would curses kill, as doth the mandrake’s groan’[10]

One of the most powerful legends concerns the deadly scream emitted by the mandrake when it was pulled out of the ground and how to avoid being its victim.

In Theophrastus’ treatise written in or around 230BC he explains how to pick the mandrake to avoid being bewitched. He advised drawing three circles around the plant with a sword of virgin iron and then facing west cut portions of the taproot. After cutting the second portion the picker must dance around the plant muttering incantations concerning the mysteries of love. The sword should only ever be used to cut a mandrake[11].

A later account written by the Roman Jewish historian Josephus (c.37 to 100AD) was the first to mention the use of a dog to extract the plant. He instructed the digger to dig around the root until the lower part was exposed. A starving dog should then be fastened by a rope to the mandrake root and then encouraged to pull out the plant by placing a piece of food just out of its reach. The scream of the mandrake would kill the dog instead of its master and the mandrake would then be safe to handle[12]. This practice of using a dog to remove the mandrake was still being used in the 13th century as witnessed by the Moorish herbalist Ibn al-Baitar. He wrote that the dog in this case survived the ordeal[13]. In Germany it was believed that the dog had to be completely black with no blemishes.

Pulling a mandrake with a dog. Wikimedia.

Other variations on how to extract the mandrake have come down to us. These include stuffing your ears with wax or earth and blowing a horn whilst pulling the mandrake out. Anything to drown out the mandrake’s screams. Pliny suggests using an ivory staff to dig around the mandrake, others advise placing crosses on the plant for protection against evil forces whilst the Roman writer Apuleius stated that on certain holy days an evil spirit would emerge to do the pickers’ bidding, similar to the genie in a lamp.

Some claimed that the legend of the screaming mandrake was invented by witches to stop ordinary folk from picking their precious plant[14]. Witches were believed to enter an alliance with the spirit of the mandrake. They would promise to care for the mandrake if the mandrake’s spirit would act as a vessel for other spirits and familiars. Offerings were made to the mandrake spirit on the night of a full or dark moon and a circle of salt drawn around the plant. A black dog was tied to the plant and food used as a lure. The mandrake was then covered by a cloth and placed in a special bag.

A more practical but less colourful explanation is that it was the squelching sound made by the mandrake when its fleshy roots was pulled out of the damp earth that was mistaken for a screech.

The Little Gallow’s Man

Male Mandrake from Hortus Sanitatis. Wellcome Institute.

Myths also arose relating to where mandrakes could be found. In Welsh folklore mandrakes were found at crossroads. Crossroads were associated with supernatural and dark forces and it was here criminals were often hanged and buried along with others who could not be interred on consecrated ground.

Crossroads and gallows were known to be popular places for the gathering of herbs for a witches brew and so the link between mandrakes, gallows and witchcraft was widely accepted. The ground where a gallows was placed was seen as contaminated by the blood or semen of the hanged. Some stories stated that it had to be semen from innocent men who with the help of a witch were given a second chance at life as a mandrake whilst others claimed that they were formed from the tears and blood of the fallen innocent. In Iceland the mandrake was known as Thjofarot or Thiefs’ root and it was believed to grow where the froth from a hanged thief’s mouth fell[15].

Talismans and Charms

Female Mandrake. Wellcome Institute.

Mandrakes became popular as talismans and good luck charms. They were thought to bring wealth, popularity and the ability to control one’s own and other people’s destinies[16]. It was believed that King Solomon wore a mandrake root seal which enabled him to gain sovereignty over souls.

The powers  of the mandrake seem to be limitless such as making a person invisible, healing domestic animals, changing the weather, guiding a person to hidden treasure, transmitting diseases and allowing its owner to tell fortunes.

Mandrakes could also protect a family as well as individuals. Sprinkled with blessed water and salt mandrakes were buried near the front door to protect the households from intruders and evil spirits.

In Germany the trade in mandrake talismans flourished as they rose in popularity and were worth their weight in gold. Often roots of other plants were carved to look like mandrakes in order to meet the increased demand. People took painstaking care of their mandrakes wrapping them in white cloth, tying it with golden rope and placing them in special boxes or bags of pure silk[17]. In Germany the talismans were passed down to the youngest son.

Although mandrake charms were at first ignored by the ecclesiastical authorities the scale of their popularity eventually started to worry the Church. Wearers of the charms were accused of invoking demons and tried for witchcraft. In 1603 in Romorantin, France the wife of a Moor was hanged as a witch for keeping a familiar in the form of a mandrake and in 1630 three women in Germany were executed for possessing mandrake talismans. Although this was not the first time that the church took exception to mandrake talismans e.g. in 1431 during her public interrogation Joan of Arc was asked whether she was had a mandrake figurine to which she replied ‘I have no mandrake, and never had one,’ [18] the increasing hostility of the church did dampen public enthusiasm for the charms. Trouble was that giving away a mandrake charm was not easy as they had a habit of returning unaided to their owners.

Up Up And Away!

Witches taking flight. Goya. 1796-98. British Museum Collection.

Witches on brooms, flying high above the ground silhouetted against the moon is an image most of us grow up with but this was not always the case. In earlier traditions witches were believed to be able to fly on just about anything including kitchen utensils and furniture. It was only later that witches were linked to brooms.

The famous witches’ brew was made from deadly nightshade, henbane, devil’s snare and of course mandrake. Such a concoction was obviously lethal and so could not be ingested. It had to be placed somewhere where the user could get the maximum effect without dying. There are only two places on the body which are suitable; the armpits and the genitals. Women’s clothing at the time would have made it extremely difficult to smear the ointment on their armpits so they were left with only one alternative. In order to reach far enough inside the vagina an appropriate implement was needed and so they used a tool which was easily available – a broom handle[19].

Historical evidence can be found for the use of the broomstick. On being arrested for witchcraft and the killing of her husband in 1324, a broom with the tip coated in a strange substance was found in the cupboard of Lady Alice Kyteler[20].

The medieval chronicler of witches Jordanes de Bergamo in the 15th century stated that he had heard witches confess to using brooms to insert a potion into their ‘hairy places’[21] which enabled them to fly. Giovanni Della Porta in the the 16th century confirmed that he had witnessed a woman who had applied the brew to her body state that she ‘had passed over both seas and mountains’[22] and the ‘witch’ Antoine Rose testified that she had smeared a potion given to her by the devil onto a stick which she had then straddled shouting ‘Go, in the name of the devil, go!’[23]

Since the ointment contained ingredients which are known to cause intense hallucinations it is not surprising that the women believed they were flying, what is more remarkable is that more of them did not poison themselves before they were arrested and executed.

The English Mandrake

Although the power of the mandrake was well-known in Britain they were expensive and difficult to obtain and so people began to look around for cheaper substitutes. Carvers of mandrake charms saw the large root of the white byrony (a climbing plant belonging to the gourd family) as a perfect alternative. Known as the English Mandrake these counterfeit mandrakes were carved to represent the human body with wheat and grass used to represent pubic hair. Not everyone was convinced by the power of the English Mandrake, Dr William Turner denounced the superstition stating that people ‘are thus deprived both of their wits and money’. These views did not seem to have damaged their popularity as the charms were considered valuable heirlooms and left as bequests in wills.

False Mandrake Root. Wikimedia.

In Jean-Baptiste Pitois’ book ‘The History and Practice of Magic’ he describes how to make a powerful charm from the root of the byrony plant[24].

  1. Take it out of the ground on a Monday (preferably the day of the moon) a little time after the vernal equinox.
  2. Cut the ends of the root.
  3. Bury it at night in a country churchyard in a dead man’s grave.
  4. For 30 days water the plant with cow’s milk in which three bats have drowned.
  5. On the 31st day take out the root in the middle of the night and dry it in an oven heated with the branches of the verbena plant.
  6. Then wrap it in a dead man’s winding sheet and carry it with you everywhere.

Even in the early years of the 20th century the confusion between the byrony and the mandrake persisted. A story told in Warwickshire claims that in December 1908 a man employed in digging a garden half a mile from Stratford upon Avon cut out the large root of a white byrony plant. Mistaking it for a mandrake he stopped working claiming that it was bad luck to cause damage to them. A few days later he fell down some steps and broke his neck[25].

Although not quite as potent as the mandrake the white byrony it can cause nausea, vomiting, anxiety, paralysis and death[26] so it is not really surprising that it came to be viewed with the same mixture of respect and fear.

An Unbreakable Cord

The reputation of the mandrake affected one of the other members of its family, the tomato. Early herbalists associated the tomato with the mandrake and so in the 18th century instead of being eaten people preferred to grow them as ornamental plants[27]. Potatoes were also initially viewed with suspicion, luckily for the sake of the humble chip and roast dinners people eventually overcame their fears.

The myths surrounding the link between the mandrake and witchcraft are numerous. It was believed that if a witch made love to a mandrake root they produced offspring which couldn’t feel real love and possessed no soul[28]. Many of the stories contradict each other but they do show how over the centuries the mandrake has been seen as a powerful and dangerous supernatural tool. Even though today getting hold of a mandrake is much less hazardous, being available online and even on eBay, the plant’s link to witchcraft remains unbroken as it still plays an important role in modern witchcraft.

Professor Sprout pulling a Mandrake. From Warner Bros Harry Potter films.

!!HAPPY HALLOWEEN!!

Bibliography

Mandrake, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandrake

Bryonia Dioica, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bryonia_dioica

The plant that can kill and cure, https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-33506081

Mandrake, https://www.britannica.com/plant/mandrake-Mandragora-genus

The History and Uses of the Magical Mandrake, According to Modern Witches, https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-history-and-uses-of-the-magical-mandrake-according-to-modern-witches

Mandragora autumnalis, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandragora_autumnalis

How to harvest a mandrake, http://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2017/12/how-to-h arvest-a-mandrake.html

Herb Analysis: Mandrake, greatest ally of witches, https://www.magicalrecipesonline.com/2015/10/herb-analysis-mandrake-ally-of-witches.html

Rare occult herbs: Mandrake, https://www.groveandgrotto.com/blogs/articles/rare-occult-herbs-mandrake

The Magic of Mandrake, http://www.thewisemag.com/mystery/the-magic-of-mandrake/

Why Do Witches Fly on Brooms?, https://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/why-do-witches-fly-brooms/

The Fascinating Reason Witches are Commonly Depicted Flying on Broomsticks, http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2014/10/witches-fly-broomsticks-2/

Myths and mandrakes,  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC539425/

Fantastically Wrong: The Murderous Plant That Grows From the Blood of Hanged Men, https://www.wired.com/2014/06/fantastically-wrong-mandrake/

Trial of Joan of Arc, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trial_of_Joan_of_Arc

Alarune, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alraune

The  Solanaceae  II: The  mandrake  (Mandragora officinarum); in league with the Devil, Mr Lee, https://www.rcpe.ac.uk/sites/default/files/w_lee_2.pdf

Plants of Life, Plants of Death, Frederick J. Simoons, 1998

An ABC of Witchcraft Past and Present, Doreen Valiente, 1973

Executing Magic in the Modern Era: Criminal Bodies and the Gallows in Popular Medicine, Owen Davies and Francesca Matteoni, 2017

Henry VI Part 2, William Shakespeare

Notes

[1] Mandrake

[2] The  Solanaceae  II: The  mandrake  (Mandragora officinarum); in league with the Devil

[3] The Magic of Mandrake

[4] Myths and Mandrakes

[5] The Magic of Mandrake

[6] Myths and Mandrakes

[7] Ibid

[8] Plants of Life, Plants of Death

[9] Herb Analysis: Mandrake, greatest ally of witches

[10] Shakespeare, Henry VI Part 2

[11] The  Solanaceae  II: The  mandrake  (Mandragora officinarum); in league with the Devil

[12] Mandrake, Wikipedia

[13] The plant that can kill and cure

[14] Mandrake

[15] The Magic of Mandrake

[16] Myths and Mandrakes

[17] The Magic of Mandrake

[18] The Trial of Joan of Arc

[19] Why do witches fly on brooms?

[20] ibid

[21] ibid

[22] The Fascinating Reason Witches are Commonly Depicted Flying on Broomsticks

[23] ibid

[24] Mandrake, Wikipedia

[25] Myths and Mandrakes

[26] Bryonia Dioica

[27] The plant that can kill and cure

[28] Alarune

By LT at November 18, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

MARK DEVLIN CHATS WITH TONY SAYERS RE THE “GOD” STUFF

By LT at November 18, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: Mark Devlin
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

Sine Wave

 👀

A RARE SINE WAVE IN THE MAGNETOSPHERE: Imagine you're at a hard rock concert. Waves of heavy metal crash against your eardrums, you can barely hear a thing, when, suddenly, the delicate trill of a flute cuts through the cacophony.

Something like that happened to Stuart Green of Lancashire UK during the severe geomagnetic storm of Oct. 10, 2024. "My backyard magnetogram was a riot," says Green. "But when I took a closer look, there was a delicate wave riding on top of the 'noise.'"

Green detected a rare "pulsation continuous"--or "Pc wave" for short. This is research jargon meaning, essentially, a pure sine wave in the magnetosphere. Pc waves are classified into 5 types depending on their frequency. Green's specimens are Pc1 and Pc2.

Usually, Pc waves are recorded only during periods of extreme quiet. They are delicate and hard to detect. Capturing one during riotous geomagnetic activity is extremely unusual. It is a testament to the sensitivity of Green's research-grade (albeit homemade) magnetometer--and the degree to which every mode of the magnetosphere was simultaneously activated by the Oct. 10th storm.


Zooming into Green's data shows the 7-to-8 second regularity of the waves

So what? These particular waves matter because they can help satellites survive severe space storms. Fast Pc1 and Pc2 waves scatter "killer electrons" out of the Van Allen radiation belts, making the region safer for satellites that orbit through the belts when they are supercharged by solar activity.

Would you like to monitor the magnetosphere for rare waves? Stuart Green's backyard magnetometer is a great DIY project. Here are his instructions.
By LT at November 15, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

German Gov't Admit There Was No Pandemic

 

The Most Revolutionary Act

Stuart Bramhall
Nov 13, 2024
Huge news out of Germany as the federal government have been forced to admit that so-called "conspiracy theorists" were right about everything during the Covid pandemic.

Baxter Dmitry April 2, 2024

Thanks for reading The Most Revolutionary Act! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.

Huge news out of Germany as the federal government have been forced to admit that so-called “conspiracy theorists” were right about everything during the Covid pandemic.

In fact, according to the German government data, there was no pandemic at all, just a tightly choreographed military grade psy-op to brainwash the masses into accepting an experimental vaccine with disastrous consequences.

These secret German government documents obtained via a Freedom of Information request and subsequent lawsuit have blown the lid of the global elite’s Covid lies and the it’s vitally important that as many people as possible are made aware of the truth.

Before we dive in, subscribe to the channel if you haven’t already, and join the People’s Voice Locals community to join our incredible community and support the channel.

More and more people all over the world are waking up and seeing the global elite for what they always have been: deranged psychopaths hell bent on destruction and domination.

Germany is no different. The German population suffered some of the most brutal lockdowns and vaccine mandates in all of Europe and now the people are rising up and demanding accountability.

Step forward Paul Schreyer and Multipolar magazine who launched a Freedom of Information request and then launched a lawsuit against the German government when they tried every trick in the book to keep the secret documents under lock and key.

As Professor Steven Homburg explains, the results are stunning, and represent total vindication for everyone who dared to question the narrative of lockdowns and mask and vaccine mandates.

The secret government documents – all 2,000 pages of them – reveal that we were right about nearly everything and the so-called “pandemic” was all fraud.

These facts are damning and prove the official narrative about Covid, pushed by world governments and mainstream media, is completely bogus.

Which makes the tyranny we experienced during the so-called pandemic even harder to swallow, as Professor Homburg explains.

The data also reveals that Sweden, which was the only European country free of masks and lockdowns, performed much better than Germany. Which raises the question, what were the tyrannical lockdowns and mandates really about?

Professor Homburg has the answer – and as it turns out, we were right all along.

Breaking down vaccine hesitancy through brutal lockdowns was always the goal of the global elite. Unfortunately, for those who did not see through the psy-op at the time, the health consequences are dire. Serious questions must be asked.

Unfortunately for the vaxxed, the bad news doesn’t end there. Japanese researchers have linked Covid vaccines to hundreds of diseases.

While a new study out of the US has found that those who have been vaccinated and boosted can expect to meet their maker far sooner than they would have expected.

A disturbing new study has revealed that people who have been “fully vaccinated” with Covid mRNA injections can expect to lose a staggering 25 years from their life expectancy.

Researchers analyzed data from the CDC, Cleveland Clinic Data, and insurance company risk assessment data and uncovered a disturbing trend of plummeting life expediencies among those who had multiple doses of mRNA.

Unfortunately for the vaxxed, the news gets even worse. The chronic damage to health caused by each dose of mRNA does not lessen over time, as previously believed.

In reality, the negative health effects appear to continue indefinitely.

According to the researchers, CDC All-Cause Mortality data reveals that each jab increased mortality by 7% in the year 2022 compared to the mortality in 2021.

This means that people who have had 5 doses – that’s two doses and three boosters – were 35% more likely to die in 2022 than they were in 2021.

Correlating with the German information, the study also confirmed that people who are not vaccinated were no more likely to die in 2022 than in 2021.

These numbers are damning. But anybody paying attention can see that something is very wrong with the vaccinated. They are dropping like flies with heart problems and turbo cancer all over the world.

Professional athletes are supposed to be among the healthiest people on the planet but in the past few years thousands have collapsed with sudden and inexplicable heart conditions.

Fully vaccinated professional athletes are continuing to drop like flies, with four professional soccer players have collapsed suddenly, clutching their hearts, in the last week alone.

Egyptian star Ahmed Refeat became the third professional soccer play to suffer cardiac arrest in front of live TV cameras, with doctors later admitting they “hadn’t seen something like this before.”

Orlando Pirates midfielder Makhelene Makhaula was the second football star to collapse on the field this week, as medical staff were seen desperately attempting to revive the South African star.

Listen as the stunned announcer admits, in his own words, that footballers are dropping like flies all over the world since the vaccine roll out.

On Sunday in the Argentinian top flight, Estudiantes’ Javier Altamirano suffered a seizure and collapsed suddenly in the big match against Boca Juniors, one of the biggest clubs in South America.

It’s not just professional athletes dropping like flies. People from all walks of life, including popular social media influencers, are being struck down with heart conditions and rare forms of cancer at unprecedented rates.

[…]

Via https://thepeoplesvoice.tv/german-govt-admits-there-was-no-pandemic/

By LT at November 13, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: Germany, no pandemic
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

TAKE A LISTEN 👉🏼 A WARNING TO THE INDIGENOUS COMMUNITY PT. 1 and 2 | 12 TRIBES


By LT at November 13, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

The Disappearing Finno-Ugric People Of Karelia. Who Are They?

By LT at November 12, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

Trump will Leave due to Health Challenges, Biden to Declare War #remoteviewing...

By LT at November 12, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

LINKS

 I GOT LOTS TO READ👇

The Stull-Best murder.

The trick-or-treat murder.

A plant that is "both ghost and vampire."

Victorian era swapping.

The practice of feeding the dead to vultures.

Railway travel in 19th century France.

Mexico's "back door to Hell."

Why "Fido" became a popular dog name.

Rules for medieval anchoresses.

Ancient fortune-telling tools.

A genealogist goes rogue.

Scary medieval animals.

Scary medieval witches.

A murderous mother.

The range of mystical experiences.

Drunken ghosts!  Cannibal ghosts!

Julius Caesar vs. the pirates.

Humans aren't the only ones who like to tie one on.

When numbers were tactile.

Why ghosts aren't usually naked.

The nature of terror.

An alien abduction case in Los Angeles.  (A caveat: I live in L.A., and it's often hard to tell the extraterrestrial visitors from the native residents.  Just FYI.)

An alien abduction case in New York.

We see them here, we see them there, we see those damned ghosts everywhere.

A visit to the UK's most haunted castle.

A wild story about a royal dentist.

The piece of cheese that nearly destroyed a rocket test.

October 31 is more than just Halloween.

Mark Twain's haunted house.

A brief history of palm reading.

A brief history of the muses.

The grim side of Victorian humor.

A memorial to librarians who died during WWI.

The strange case of the vanishing police chief.

A demon-possessed convent.

More evidence that we've been underestimating Neanderthals.

A diplomatic incident, 1600.

A previously unknown Chopin piece has been discovered.

Victorian scientists were fascinated by ghosts.

Ancient Mesopotamians were fascinated by beer.

The Harvard astrophysicist who's fascinated by alien wreckage.

Maybe we shouldn't meditate.  (And don't even talk to me about hypnosis.  I know someone who was really screwed up by that crap.)

A brief history of the word, "scary."

The skeleton that confirmed a Norse saga.

Why smugglers used to love ghost stories.

The Corpsewood Manor murders.

By LT at November 12, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

Astonishing events happening in space and on Earth this year! Flash floods in Spain: Muddy torrents sweeping away cars

spaceweather.com

READING

BIG WOBBLE: https://www.thebigwobble.org/2024/11/astonishing-events-happening-in-space.html

By LT at November 05, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

CONVERSATIONS ON “GOD” - MARK DEVLIN TALKS WITH PATRICK TRIPP

By LT at November 04, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

Why The CIA Kills Rock Stars

By LT at November 04, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

EDITED - Alan Watt - Redux 185 - "Promise of Bread, Delivery of Circus - election..

By LT at November 04, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: Alan Watt
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

Dirty Electricity - Measurement and Mitigation - Dr. Sam Milham

By LT at October 31, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

Gurdjieff Law of Accident Secret Mystery Revealed!

By LT at October 26, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious

EVIL despised "VESSEL"

 


IN THE NEWS

  • NYC’s despised “Vessel” reopens with suicide prevention nets. The fixture was closed for three years after four people died by suicide.

    Editor’s Note: The following story contains mentions of self-harm. If you or someone you know is struggling, call or text 988 or visit 988lifeline.org to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

    Manhattan’s “Vessel” — a 150-foot-tall (~46-meter) reflective structure and tourist trap in Hudson Yards — is open again. The honeycomb-shaped fixture was closed for three years after four people died by suicide by jumping off the top.

    Architects and community representatives have long advocated for increased security measures at the Vessel and even its permanent closure, voicing concerns over the site’s potential as a trigger for impulsive suicides, with its low railings, towering height, and public visibility.

    The Vessel closed for nearly five months after a third person died by suicide in 2021, and reopened with a ban on solo visitors. Just two months later, a 14-year-old boy died by suicide, prompting the structure to close indefinitely.

    *

    Hudson Yards announced in April that it would reopen with “floor-to-ceiling” mesh caging that would enclose the structure’s exposed sections but still allow visitors to see views of New York City with relatively little obstruction. Earlier this year, the Golden Gate Bridge, an infamous location for suicide attempts, finalized a similar netting project spanning all 1.7 miles (~2.7 kilometers) of the transportation artery.

    The Vessel’s presence in the $25 billion Hudson Yards, the most expensive private development in United States history, was contentious from the outset.

     

By LT at October 23, 2024 No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: artwork, Hudson Yards, suicide, Vessel
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Comments (Atom)



just a reminder

  good reminders!  


oh yeah...

oh yeah...

  • Sault - ACTS OF FAITH 0.0
  • take a whack at the global oligarchy
      Dean Henderson and Jeff discuss current events and take a whack at the global oligarchy. Check out more info from Jeff Rense at Alt News ...
  • I can sing all his songs
    Burt Bacharach, Music artist Co-author (with lyricist Hal David) of an extensive string of hits in the '60s, Burt Bacharach is one of...

(͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

Hi
THE MATRIX: The Matrix’s greatest weakness is awareness. By recognizing these signs, you’ve already begun to dismantle its illusions. Remember: systems of control fear conscious, connected, and courageous individuals. As you unplug, you light the way for others—and together, we birth a new paradigm rooted in truth and freedom.

About Me

My photo
LT
Adoptee, Author, Editor, Publisher, Mosaic Artist, Blogger, wildly curious
View my complete profile
  • The Watchers
    Torrential rain and floods in Honduras leave 16 dead, over 34 000 affected
    1 hour ago
  • Strange Company
    Newspaper Clipping of the Day
    2 hours ago
  • La vie est belle ……
    5 hours ago
  • ici et maintenant
    1 day ago
  • The Secret Sun
    Return to the Year that Broke Reality
    1 day ago
  • OTIS and PUCK
    hugely bigly
    1 day ago
  • SatTrackCam Leiden (b)log
    [UPDATED] Possible Space Debris found near Newman, Australia on Oct 18, might be Jielong 3 upper stage remains
    1 day ago
  • Sarah Kendzior’s Newsletter
    Inventing Antifa
    3 days ago
  • Onward Podcast with Brett Hawes
    BREAKING: Indigenous Tribunal's Bioweapon Declaration
    5 days ago
  • Official ADAPT 2030 Website
    3 months ago
  • Poppytalk
    A Forest Refuge: The Thoughtful Calm of Montpellier Residence
    4 months ago
  • Creative Independent
  • something found or shared
  • TYWKIWDBI ("Tai-Wiki-Widbee")
  • AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
  • Growth Supply
  • Ellie's World
Show 5 Show All

the sun is shooting at us

spaceweather.com



I do this!

I do this!
click quote

I blog

  • Finding the Invisibles
  • Otis and Puck
  • American Indian Adoptees
  • TUTU HOCKEY

Blog Archive

subscribe please

Posts
Atom
Posts
All Comments
Atom
All Comments

Followers

Report Abuse


Labels

December poetry (43) art makes you think big (40) Ah August (33) collage (32) Poetry (22) Trump (16) Wednesday's Word (15) Appreciation Friday (14) Spaceweather (14) Alan Watt (12) ghosts (12) BOOM (10) September (10) Tuesday's Terrific Thought (10) December (9) New Series: Places I have lived (9) Wyoming (9) free gift (9) #podcasts (8) Trace Hentz (8) Mental Midgets (7) Monday Maniac (7) Short Film (7) artists rule my world (7) massachusetts (7) plastic pollution (7) CME (6) Jackson Hole (6) Saturday Slow (6) Thursday (6) art for all (6) brain bending gifs (6) Appreciation Friday: Artist Nick Cave (5) RULES (5) cell phone danger (5) elites (5) spooky (5) spooky creepy bad guys (5) superhuman artificial intelligence (5) wealth gap (5) #MeToo (4) 2018 (4) Assholes Watching Movies (4) Bad History (4) Friday (4) Hawaii (4) Hurricane (4) January 2017 (4) November (4) Obama memes (4) Sunday Love (4) Tesla (4) WHITNEY WEBB (4) crow talk (4) curating weird but good stuff (4) did you know (4) evolution of music (4) francais (4) happy christmas (4) holiday decorating (4) humor (4) star trek (4) surreal (4) #EarthDay (3) American politics (3) Ancient Evil (3) Atlantis (3) Bill Murray (3) Calvin (3) Duluth (3) Facebook (3) Film (3) Good Music Monday (3) Healing (3) How to handle a meanie (3) Laramie Harlow (3) Margaret Atwood (3) Mark Devlin (3) Monday Mystery (3) Note to Self (3) Plastic Brick (3) Russia (3) Storytellers (3) Survival kit (3) Thought Bombs (3) Trace Lara Hentz (3) WTF (3) Years of Living Dangerously (3) a.i. (3) art saves lives (3) auroras (3) book covers (3) brain vacation (3) canopy of leaves (3) circles (3) crow (3) cure disease (3) earthquakes (3) flouride (3) holidaze (3) life path (3) local economy (3) love and art (3) money (3) movie magic (3) pangea (3) peace is cheaper (3) plans (3) quantum physics (3) space junk (3) star stuff (3) think with me (3) writing fiction (3) #ShakeUp (2) #covfefe (2) #nowyouknow (2) #shoplocal (2) 2016 (2) 2018 art (2) Ancients (2) Appreciation Friday: Artist Sidney Nolan (2) April Fool (2) Art Appreciation: Joseph Beuys (2) Bad Dogs (2) Bad Santa (2) Big Thinkers (2) CA fires (2) CIA (2) Chemicals (2) Cherokee (2) City of Angels (2) Criminal (2) Cynthia Manick (2) Daily Dose (2) Death Doulas (2) EMF pollution (2) Elf (2) Epstein (2) Equifax (2) Fairies (2) Field Notes (2) Film Festival (2) Films (2) Frances McDormand (2) Frank Waln (2) George Carlin (2) Germany (2) Gilmore Girls (2) Good Man Monday (2) Google AI (2) Grid (2) Illinois (2) Irish poet (2) JAWS (2) Jon Ronson (2) Journey (2) Leonardo (2) Lonnie Holley (2) MA (2) Mail Art (2) Mark Twain (2) Mark Twain Prize for American Humor (2) Matrix (2) Mindfulness (2) Minnesota (2) Minoan (2) Missouri (2) Monday (2) NYC (2) New Mexico (2) North Adams (2) Northern Exposure (2) Oklahoma (2) Old Eire (2) Oregon (2) Peter Sellers (2) Poet's Seat 2017 (2) Portland (2) STRING THEORY (2) Salvator Mundi (2) Science of Stress (2) Seattle (2) Shelburn Falls (2) Star Forts (2) Stephen King (2) Stuff to Blow Your Mind (2) Terence Kemp McKenna (2) The voice of the natural world (2) Thursday Thought (2) Tolstoy quote (2) Tom Petty (2) Visionary (2) Wes Anderson TV commercial (2) What happened to America (2) ancient alchemy (2) beware of artists (2) big news (2) big puzzle (2) birthday (2) black and white light (2) black bears (2) blue hand books (2) books (2) bots (2) break social rule penalty (2) broken hearts (2) challenge of being human (2) christopher knowles (2) climate chaos (2) coming in 2017 (2) curing cancer (2) drones (2) einstein (2) encryption (2) fight aging (2) for profit prison (2) freak show (2) free (2) get out of jail free (2) giant snow balls (2) good editor (2) happy dog (2) helicopter (2) hopi (2) human trafficking (2) i'm reading (2) indiefilm (2) inspired (2) jdubqca (2) just think (2) learn to grieve (2) let go (2) little people (2) maps (2) monsanto boycott (2) my boss is a cheap basturd (2) mystery (2) oligarchy (2) oliver sacks (2) peace (2) pinterest image (2) pittsburgh (2) poem (2) poison (2) poisoned planet (2) privacy (2) quantum world (2) rabbits rabbits rabbits (2) rich people power (2) santa (2) scam (2) secrets of the ice (2) see (2) slaves (2) solstice (2) songbirds (2) sorcery (2) sound waves (2) the structure of space-time (2) think hard(er) (2) this is not normal (2) trees (2) truth (2) tweet later (2) volcano (2) yellowstone (2) #Castlerock (1) #Crayongate (1) #MARA (1) #MOAB (1) #Martabus (1) #NoDAPL (1) #NotOk (1) #RESIST (1) #SilentNoMore (1) #SurveillanceInvasion (1) #TwoLineGhostStory (1) #enditmovement (1) #racism (1) #reaccomodate (1) #taketheknee (1) 000-year-old stylized engravings show domesticated dogs (1) 1% (1) 10 to Zen (1) 100 foot journey (1) 100 years (1) 1930s (1) 1962 (1) 2016 Geminids (1) 2024 (1) 2025 (1) 30 Seconds to Mars (1) 3191 blog (1) 5 Peeps 1 Guitar (1) 5 senses? (1) 50 Eggs (1) 500 new fairytales (1) 5G (1) 70s (1) 8 (1) 99% Invisible (1) A Brief History of Everyone who ever lived (1) A Sparrow Came Down Resplendent (1) A Thousand Years (1) A perfect circle (1) AI (1) Aborigines (1) Acoustic Power Stations (1) Adam Curtis (1) Adam Rutherford (1) Adoptionland (1) Ai WeiWei (1) Aimee Mann (1) Alex Pentek (1) All I Do - Kirk Whalum (1) Amazon rainforest (1) Amber Tamblyn (1) Amsterdam (1) Ancient Essenes (1) Animal Farm (1) Annie Proulx (1) Antarctica (1) Antikythera Mechanism (1) Aperture Magazine (1) Appreciation Friday: Artist Carlo Zinelli (1) Appreciation Friday: Artist Georgia O'Keefe (1) Appreciation Friday: Artist Jean Jullien (1) Appreciation Friday: Artist Kameelah Janan Rasheed (1) Appreciation Friday: Artist Robert DeNiro Senior (1) Appreciation Friday: Artist Wendy Stevens (1) Appreciation Friday: Composer Dukas (1) Appreciation Friday: Hundertwasser (1) Appreciation Friday: Joan Schulze (1) Argentina (1) Art Appreciation: Dave Kaufman - Holton Rower Paint Montage (1) Art in Motion (1) Artificial Superintelligence (ASI) (1) Ashi Akira (1) AshiAkira (1) Ashley Gilbertson (1) Ashville (1) Asta Roseway (1) Atlantic (1) August 2017 (1) Aurora Robson (1) Australia (1) Austria (1) Automatic (1) Azarkant (1) Aztec (1) BBC (1) Babylon Berlin (1) Bandstand (1) Banjo (1) Barking and Biting (1) Be-ZINE (1) Beach Santa (1) Beaver Moon (1) Being (1) Bernie Krause (1) Best Movie Lines (1) Betelgeuse (1) Big Science (1) Big Wobble (1) Bigotry (1) Bimbo's Initiation (1) Birches (1) Bird Ghosts (1) Black Knight Satellite (1) Black-eyes Susan (1) Blog Tip (1) Blucher Boot Co. (1) Blucher Custom Boot Company (1) Blues Brothers (1) Bob Dylan (1) Book Trailers (1) Boom Town (1) Born on Third Base (1) Broken Horses (1) Bruce Schneier (1) Buddha Stands With Standing Rock (1) Buffalo Dreams (1) Bukowski (1) Burnout (1) Burt Bacharach (1) Busy Beaver (1) Byfusion machine (1) Canada (1) Capricorn (1) Captain Kidd (1) Carly Simon (1) Carol Hand (1) Catch a fire (1) Cathy (1) Catskills (1) Cecilia Bengolea (1) Cell (1) Chad Kouri (1) Chain Reaction (1) Chambers (1) Charles Hugh Smith (1) Cheryl Dumesnil (1) China (1) Choctaw (1) Chris Milk (1) Christmas (1) Chuck Collins (1) Clarissa Pinkola Estés (1) Coast to Coast (1) Coconut Orange Moisturizing Sugar Scrub Recipe (1) Coley's Toxins (1) Colorado (1) Comet 3I/ATLAS (1) Comet Lemmon (C/2025 A6) (1) Compliments of Hamilton and Sargent: A Story of Mystery and Tragedy on the Gilded Age Frontier (1) Connecticut (1) Cork (1) Cosmic Modesty (1) Cosmic Postcard (1) Costa Rica (1) Cowgirl Hall of Fame (1) Cowgirls (1) Cree Nation (1) Crested Butte (1) Cretan (1) Crow The Legend (1) Culture with Sculpture (1) Custer Died for Your Sins (1) Cynthia Jobin (1) Danny Bland (1) Darcelle (1) Darrell Miller (1) Data (1) David Bowie (1) David Letterman (1) Dawnland Voices (1) Death to Stock Photo (1) December 13-14 (1) Dennis McFarland (1) Denver Museum of Nature and Science (1) Derek Walcott (1) Dick Clark (1) Dime Novels (1) Disney mistakes (1) Donny Iris (1) Dr. Esther Sternberg (1) Dr. Ford (1) Dr. Gabor Mate (1) Dr. Nick Begich (1) Dr. Strangelove (1) Dragon Day movie (1) Drew Magary (1) Drugstore Cowboy (1) DuckDuckGo (1) ELEVATION 1049 – AVALANCHE (1) Ear Hustle (1) Earth Rings (1) Eartha Kitt (1) Easter Island (1) Eddie Vedder (1) Edward Snowden (1) Election2016 (1) Elizabeth Moss (1) Elves (1) Elwood (1) Emergency Prep (1) Emily Dickinson (1) Emperors of Hate (1) Empire (1) Entangled Universe (1) Equinox (1) Eric Clapton (1) Eric Kaplan (1) Essenes (1) Evie Shockley (1) Exploring American Monsters: Massachusetts (1) Exposed (1) Eye Fruit (1) Faith Hill (1) Feedburner (1) Filmmaker Albert Maysles (1) Finks (1) Fintan Magee (1) First Avenue (1) Five Grand Stereo (1) Flaming Lips (1) Flashdance (1) Fleetwood Mac (1) Floating (1) Folklore (1) Foods that Help Improve Your Health (1) Founding Fathers (1) Frances Crowe (1) Frank Ocean (1) Frank Pommersheim (1) Free Energy (1) Friday the 13th (1) From Orphan to Activist (1) Full Crow Moon (1) GPS (1) Gabe Foreman (1) Gardiner Island (1) Garlic Up (1) Geneva Hills (1) George Clooney (1) George Harrison (1) Glaciers (1) Global Warming (1) Going Crazy in New York and San Francisco: An Interview with Poet Julien Poirier (1) Google Cultural Institute (1) Great chart for essential oil application (1) Greek Myths (1) Green River Fest 2016 (1) Groton (1) Guston (1) Guy DeBord (1) HAARP (1) Haiku Poems (1) Hand of the Mysteries (1) Hannibal (1) Happy Birthday (1) Hart Island (1) Harvest (1) Heart Six Dude Ranch (1) Helene (1) Hello It's Me (1) History is Unwritten (1) Hitler (1) Hoarders (1) Hobo Code (1) Holding Space (1) Holy Grail (1) Home meets Dwell (1) Honey And Salt: Music Inspired by the Poetry of Carl Sandburg (1) Hot Books in Cold War (1) How to Cook a Ghost (1) Hudson Yards (1) Hyperallergic (1) Hypnosis for pain (1) I Know You From Somewhere (1) I have a crush on Bill (1) IT (1) Ice Age (1) Ice Age Civilizations (1) Identity (1) Illegal gold mining (1) In Transit (1) In the Swarm (1) Independent Lens (1) Indigenous Thoughts concerning the Universe (1) Indigenous View of the World (1) Inukshuk (1) Ireland (1) Ireland famine (1) Italy (1) J Glenn Evans (1) James Baldwin (1) James Barry (1) Jane Pauley (1) Jared Leto (1) Jazz (1) Jazz Drummer Matt Wilson (1) Jean Shepard (1) Jeff Bridges (1) Jennifer Lawrence (1) Jessica Sabogal (1) Jethro Tull (1) Jim Hightower (1) Jimmie Durham (1) Joan Schulze (1) Jobs (1) Joe Biden (1) John Goodman (1) John Trudell (1) John Wayne (1) John Yau (1) Joy Harjo (1) Judy Garland was a poet (1) Juno (1) Jupiter (1) Justice (1) KURZWEIL (1) Kamchatka (1) Karl May (1) Kat Lehmann (1) Katharine Luomala (1) Katherine Walker (1) Keepers of the Forest (1) Kelly Lynch (1) Keri Smith (1) Kevin Brown (1) Killer Robots (1) Kinstugi (1) Kitschy (1) Kristen Stewart (1) Kurt Vonnegut (1) LT HENTZ (1) Lacuna (1) Lake Superior (1) Laura Grace Weldon (1) Leaf Peeping (1) Legend (1) Leonard Cohen (1) Lin-Manuel Miranda (1) Lindsey Buckingham (1) Listen Up (1) Logan February (1) Losing my religion (1) Lost Lands (1) Lost art of reading (1) Louisiana (1) Love Injection (1) Loving (1) LunchMoney Lewis (1) MASS MOCA (1) MEDBED (1) MRI (1) Madre (1) Magic Lake (1) Maid (1) Make an Herbal Tincture by using the Folk Method (1) Maori (1) Margaret Ann Bulkley (1) Mark Leckey (1) Marlon Williams (1) Marvin Gaye (1) Mary Ellen Bute (1) Mary Oliver (1) Math Issues (1) Mating Calls (1) Matt Dillon (1) Maurice Kenny: In Memoriam | Dawnland Voices (1) May Day (1) Mayim Bialik (1) Megalithic Sites Are More than Just Stone (1) Mekko (1) Menehune (1) Message on the Golden Record (1) Mexico (1) Michael Zwack (1) Michelle Branch (1) Microsoft (1) Mighty No Bitey (1) Millennials (1) Milton (1) Minneapolis (1) Misogyny 101 (1) Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (1) Mission New York (1) Mitochondria (1) Miyake Events (1) Model Wookie Mayer (1) Monk's Mound (1) Monkey (1) Mormon Factoids (1) Mortal City (1) Motion Poems (1) Mount Rainer (1) Moving Boom Boom (1) Mozilla (1) Murder Bag (1) Museum Hack (1) Museum of Contemporary Art (1) Mutual Aid (1) My Friend Cayla (1) Myth of Normal (1) NC (1) NFL (1) NMT (1) Nanette (1) National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum (1) National Museum of African Art (1) National Sword (1) Nature's Great Engineer (1) Navajo (1) Navajo Peyote Songs (1) Neon Skull (1) Netflix (1) New York City (1) Newark Museum (1) Norway (1) Norway spruce (1) Nothing to Hide (1) Nyuck Nyuck Nyuck (1) OY/YO (1) Obit (1) Oblivion (1) Oceans (1) October 2017 (1) Ohio (1) Old Faithful (1) Old Grudges (1) Olympia Scarry (1) Ophelia (1) Orange (1) Oren Lyons (1) Osage Artist Anita Fields (1) PBS (1) POLAR STRATOSPHERIC CLOUDS (1) Pacific (1) Palestine (1) Panama Papers (1) Paranormal Ranger (1) Patient Zero (1) Patricia Sun (1) Patti Smith (1) Patty Boyd (1) Patty Smythe (1) Paul Carrack (1) Paul Kingsnorth (1) PayGasNotRent blog (1) Pearl Jam (1) Pennsylvania (1) Peregrine Falcons (1) Perfume Genius (1) Persian Book of Kings (1) Pickle (1) Pigs can fly (1) Pink Face (1) Planet Earth (1) Play It Loud: Guitar Gods (1) PlayTime (1) Pluto (1) Poet Jason Schneiderman (1) Poet Laureate David Lee (1) Poet Muriel Leung (1) Poets West (1) Portrait of Jennie (1) Potato (1) Pounce (1) Power Struggle (1) Prayer Poem (1) Prince (1) Prince Edward (1) Prison Nation (1) Psychopath Test (1) Purple Rain (1) Quebec Blackout (1) Quote of the Day (1) REM (1) Radiohead (1) Rafeef Ziadah (1) Rainbow Prophecy (1) Rainforest (1) Raven (1) Rawhide (1) Really? (1) Redbone (1) Redux (1) Remote Viewer (1) Rest in Peace (1) Rhythm of The War (1) Roadtrip (1) Robert Frost (1) Robert Redford (1) Rock Balls (1) Rock Musician (1) Romare Bearden (1) Rome (1) Rosa Lane (1) Rule #2 (1) Rule #4 (1) Rule #5 (1) Running Man (1) Rushmore (1) SPACE HURRICANES ARE REAL (1) SYMPHONY of Science (1) Salzburg (1) Sam Neill (1) Sam Shepard (1) Sandhill Cranes (1) Sara Knox Hunter (1) Saturn Day (1) Say What (1) Scandal (1) Scoops (1) Secret World (1) Seymour Krim (1) Sherman Alexis (1) Shiny Toy Guns (1) ShipGoo1 (1) Short Films (1) Shoshone (1) Sidewalk Talk (1) Silly Saturday Stuff (1) Sina Queryasm (1) Sixteen Rivers Press (1) Skateistan (1) Skeletons (1) Skid (1) Sleeps with Knives (1) Small Business (1) Socrates (1) Song Exploder (1) Sound Cannon (1) South Park (1) Soviet Union (1) Space Grunge (1) Spain (1) Spam Museum (1) Spanish (1) Spock (1) Spring (1) Spring Solstice (1) Spruceton Inn (1) St. Paddy (1) Standoff (1) Star Wars (1) Stars Hollow (1) Steiner (1) Stereogranimator (1) Sterlin Harjo (1) Steve Halpern (1) Storm Names (1) Stuart Ross (1) Sunday Love: Podcasts (1) Sunday Morning TV (1) Sunday Slow (1) Sunday Sound: Sinkane (1) Superbug Bacteria Resistant (1) Superior (1) Suspiria (1) SyFy Channel (1) Syndicate (1) TIP (1) TL Hentz (1) Talepu (1) Team Human (1) Tending the FIre (1) TerraCycle (1) Terrific Thought (1) The Apprentice (1) The Brain Book (1) The Chemist's War (1) The Fray (1) The Hidden Life of Trees (1) The Hobbitt (1) The Internet of Things (1) The LadyKillers (1) The Laundromat (1) The Mimicry Orchid (1) The Monkeys Teeth (1) The Pirch (1) The Price of Certainty (1) The Printing Dress (1) The Purple Thistle (1) The Queen of Versailles (1) The Strange Sound of Happiness (1) The Sun (1) The Wander Society (1) The Womb (1) Theodore Maynard (1) Thing Explainer (1) Thomas Jane (1) Three Billboards Outside Ebbings (1) Thurman Daniel Bland (1) Tilda Swinton (1) Todd Rundgren (1) Tom Hanks (1) Tom Higgins (1) Tomato (1) Top of the Lake (1) Trace A DeMeyer (1) Tracy K Smith (1) Treasures in the Trash Museum (1) Tree Rings (1) Tutu Hockey (1) Twin Peaks (1) Twitter Poet Laureate Brian Bilston (1) Two Brothers (1) UFO (1) USGS (1) University of Chicago Press (1) Unraveling the Spreading Cloth of Time. MariJo Moore (1) Urban Monk (1) Ursula Johnson (1) Utopia (1) V for Vendetta (1) VPN (1) Valerie Bandura (1) Vanishing Wilderness film (1) Vegas (1) Vera McGinnis (1) Vessel (1) Vibrio (1) Vice (1) Viggo Mortensen (1) Vine Deloria (1) Virginia (1) Visionary Hildegard von Bingen (1) Volkswagon Bus (1) Vonnegut (1) WAYUU TRIBE (1) WORDAI (1) WWII (1) Walk of Fame (1) Walking Backwards (1) Walmart (1) Warhol museum (1) Warren Beatty (1) Warriors of the Rainbow (1) Washington state (1) We Have Come Back For Our Bodies (1) Wendell Berry (1) Wes Anderson (1) West Wing (1) What Lies Upstream (1) What the world needs now is love (1) What would life be like without them? (1) White and 21 (1) Whitley Streiber (1) Why? (1) Wild Geese (1) Will Sumner (1) William Henry (1) William Saroyan (1) Wilma Mankiller (1) Wisconsin (1) Wonder Boys (1) Word Painting (1) X-Files (1) XX (1) You Don't Have to Say You Love Me (1) Zines (1) a great silence is spreading over the natural world (1) a-bomb test (1) adoptees (1) adult coloring books (1) ah (1) alaska (1) alchemy (1) alcohol (1) aliens (1) all month (1) alzheimers (1) ancient metallic astronomical clock (1) angry (1) anonymous (1) anthurium andreanum (1) anti-nukes (1) apps (1) art or nature (1) artist Tiokasin Ghosthorse (1) artwork (1) aussie (1) baadaboom (1) baby ducks (1) back-up your stuff (1) background check (1) bad comedy (1) bad habits (1) bag lady (1) ballsy swea (1) barefoot in iceland (1) bath time (1) beautiful people (1) beavers (1) belly ache (1) biggest storm in DC history (1) bird love (1) birds and bees (1) black blobs (1) black hole (1) blackacre (1) blog photos (1) blog wild (1) blogging (1) blogging platforms (1) blogs (1) boogered (1) book igloo (1) books on why girls are so weird (1) boondoggle (1) bora bora (1) brain power (1) brother (1) bumble bees (1) bunny (1) cabin fever (1) cacao (1) caitlin johnstone (1) captivity (1) carbon sink (1) carrington event (1) cat gifs (1) catfishing (1) cave dwellers (1) celebrity lookalikes (1) chemo brain (1) circle of love (1) clones (1) completely fucking unblemished (1) complex (1) concentration camps (1) conqueror (1) content (1) cosmic rays (1) cowgirl boots (1) crazy folder stuff (1) creativity (1) cryptography (1) curse (1) dancing (1) data centers (1) deadly algae bloom (1) debt free (1) deer me (1) democracy (1) designer babies (1) digital poison (1) disturbingly modern patriarchy (1) dna (1) do do (1) documentary (1) dogs in hats (1) doom scrolling (1) drawing (1) dream catcher (1) drive-by truckers (1) dying to myself (1) déjà vu (1) earth energy (1) earthbag building (1) easy on the eyes (1) eclipse (1) ee cummings (1) egomaniac (1) emojipedia (1) emotional scars (1) emotions (1) empathy (1) empty barrel (1) essential oils (1) etched in stone (1) eugenics (1) even when it sucks (1) every church (1) every day (1) experiment (1) face tattoos (1) fairy (1) fairy lights (1) fairy tales (1) fear of missing out (1) feng fu (1) feral poetess (1) fierce women of art (1) find home (1) fire ember art (1) first computers (1) first jump (1) fog (1) for adoptees (1) forest bath (1) fox (1) free rides (1) frequency (1) frontier (1) frugality (1) funniest thing today (1) funny blogs (1) gaslighting (1) geoengineering (1) geology (1) geomagnetic storms (1) get outside (1) give (1) glamping (1) good design (1) good idea (1) good tickle (1) good words (1) google doodle team (1) google search you (1) great secrets (1) greed (1) greenwash (1) greg lake (1) guinea pigs (1) hacking (1) hair swapping (1) halloween (1) hands (1) hanging gardens of Babylon (1) happier (1) happy new year (1) happy? (1) hats (1) head gear (1) health (1) heart (1) hiatus (1) hijacked message (1) hikikomori (1) hindsight (1) historians can and do debate all day... (1) holistic medicine (1) horror (1) hot spit and monkey vomit (1) how totalitarian movements come to power (1) how we win (1) http://trendland.com/dennis-wojtkiewiczs-fruit-paintings/ (1) http://www.humansandnature.org/the-king-of-michigan-avenue (1) human language (1) human life cycle (1) human tears (1) hybridization (1) hydrotherapy (1) i am blue (1) iceburg sounds (1) illusion of reality (1) imagination (1) imagine (1) immigration (1) immune system (1) immunology (1) indiebound (1) insane (1) instagram (1) internet safety (1) ironic (1) isolation (1) jetsonorama (1) jibjab (1) joy of missing out (1) just sayin' (1) katexic (1) keep learning (1) kellogg (1) khipu (1) knife tossing (1) know your rights when protesting (1) knuckleheads (1) land of fires (1) landgrab (1) language of autocrats (1) launder money (1) laziness trend (1) leaving social media (1) leila george (1) longevity (1) love story/ ghoststory (1) lovebombing (1) lying (1) lynchings (1) mad scientists (1) magnificent seven movie (1) makwa (1) manna (1) map the nap (1) master the scarf (1) maxi priest (1) mcr-1 (1) meditation (1) memoir (1) mermaids (1) migration (1) mind-blower (1) mini-doxie (1) mob dumping (1) modified salmon (1) molten goo (1) monopoly (1) moon ring (1) more than honey (1) mosaic (1) muons (1) must see (1) my christmas present (1) my digs (1) my dinner party (1) my friends (1) neanderthals (1) net neutrality (1) new book (1) nine to five (1) no pandemic (1) no way (1) not about you (1) note of wisdom (1) notebook (1) nuke tests (1) numerology (1) occupation (1) oil pulling (1) old lady (1) old photos (1) oncology (1) one task at a time (1) online you (1) open minds (1) opium (1) organized crime (1) orgonite (1) otipêyimsiw-iskwêwak kihci-kîsikohk. Metis in Space (1) overload (1) own your feelings (1) oxygen (1) paint away (1) pay it forward (1) peeps (1) penname (1) pentatonix (1) personal terrors (1) petroglyph (1) philly (1) pickleball (1) pill bottles (1) pineal gland (1) pineapple (1) planetary change (1) plant the flag people (1) playbook (1) please bury me in the library (1) podcast (1) poetry rituals (1) police brutality (1) politics on Facebook (1) poop nugget (1) portals (1) poverty (1) power paradox (1) prehistoric creatures (1) pressure points (1) propaganda (1) psychic ability (1) psychic hotspot (1) psyops (1) quantum mechanics (1) race relations (1) radiation (1) random act of kindness (1) rare nighttime apparition (1) reLOVEution (1) reality TV (1) realname Marion Morris (1) recycle (1) redlight (1) renown Seattle poet J Glenn Evans (1) repost (1) retronaut (1) revelations: the human antenna (1) reverse aging (1) reverse terrorist (1) richest 1 percent (1) right path (1) ring of fire (1) rituals (1) roadside attractions (1) rock and roll supermom (1) rock bands (1) rock music days (1) rock paper scizzors (1) rodeo (1) rooster (1) rudolph (1) sacred (1) sacred geometry (1) sacred mayans (1) sahara (1) sarchotic (1) save water (1) scary (1) segregation (1) self.migration (1) sexism (1) shaman (1) share the land (1) shooting (1) side effects (1) signs of love (1) simple things (1) skull racks (1) slime ball (1) slop (1) small hands (1) small notebook journal (1) snapwidget (1) sneaky (1) snow (1) social justice (1) solar (1) solar flares (1) solar water bulbs (1) space and time (1) spammers (1) spell (1) spoiler alert (1) spooky sky (1) spring floods (1) spruce up (1) spying webcams (1) star power (1) state parks (1) story (1) strange stuff (1) stuffed (1) suffering (1) suicide (1) sundog (1) supermoon (1) supernova (1) supervolcano (1) support animals (1) surveillance (1) sweatbaths (1) sweet love (1) take a bow (1) tax season (1) techno-jihad (1) text message (1) the rest of us (1) theory (1) theory of relativity (1) think big (1) this might hurt (1) this really happened (1) tie a scarf (1) tiger (1) time travel (1) today (1) too cold (1) trash talk (1) trick yourself (1) trust (1) tumeric bombs (1) twitter (1) two lions (1) typing (1) tyranny (1) ubuntu (1) unclaimed dead (1) undo rich people power (1) universal basic income (1) unusual history (1) uranium mining (1) useful Idiots (1) useless eaters (1) vandalism (1) vintage halloween (1) vintage ventriloquist (1) virtual reality (1) voices in your head? (1) vulcan (1) wacked (1) wake up call (1) walking cosmos (1) war (1) war on poverty (1) war-mongers (1) warding off evil (1) warped spacetime (1) we're not ending this blog (1) weary (1) weather folklore (1) weather manipulation (1) western history (1) what? (1) white oak (1) wicked (1) wildfires (1) win blevins (1) windpower (1) wink wink (1) witch bottles (1) witchcraft (1) women and men (1) women in hiding (1) wordpress (1) work to death (1) wow signal (1) write a memoir (1) write what scares you (1) writer's virus (1) writing about music (1) wrong head blog (1) yellow trace (1) yellowstone hike (1) yodelling (1) you are loved (1) you choose (1) you think (1) young brain (1) zodiac (1) |PINK| (1) ”War for the Planet of the Apes” (1)
blog experiment #18. Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.