Sunday, August 30, 2020

Simon Shack, Tycho Brahe, Retrograde Mars & the vital importance of the Moon: Exploring the Tychos!

 

Above is a new video I've just published entitled "Simon Shack, Tycho Brahe, Retrograde Mars & the vital importance of the Moon: Exploring the Tychos!" (link to the video here).

If someone told you that evidence suggests that the sun may not be the center of our solar system, and that while our earth is by no means stationary it is also possible that earth does not revolve around the sun, would you immediately reject that possibility and call them names because you are so convinced that the heliocentric model is correct that you will not entertain any challenges to that model?

What if you learned that the astronomer most famous for presenting the deciding arguments showing that the planetary data support the heliocentric model, Johannes Kepler, was in recent decades found to have falsified his data (data collected by the rigorous observations of his own mentor, who had died mysteriously), falsified in particular to try to force the heliocentric model to be able to absorb the data regarding the motions of the planet Mars, whose behavior is so difficult to explain that Kepler referred to his research on that planet as his "war on Mars" and who ominously declared that:

"By the study of the orbits of Mars, we must either arrive at the secrets of astronomy, or remain forever in ignorance of them"

-- would the knowledge that Kepler apparently deliberately falsified his data (which was discovered in 1988 by a professor of the history of astronomy) make you any more open to examining the evidence which suggests that Kepler's theory might not actually fit the facts that we see in the heavens above us?

This video does not support the flat earth theory, which I have examined a found to be hopelessly out of step with evidence that we can examine for ourselves (without even going into space) -- see for example my post from 2015 entitled "The invisible kraken: evidence that the earth is not flat."

Nor is this video making any arguments in support of the concept of "geocentrism," which continues to be maintained by some individuals to this day (often in conjunction with literalist interpretation of ancient scriptures).

Instead, this video explores some aspects of the important arguments of researcher Simon Shack, author of the "Tychos" model, which argues that the data and evidence we have available at this time may best be explained by the hypothesis that our sun is part of a binary system -- as in fact over 80% of the stars we can examine appear to be as well (or if not binary, then some other multiple and not solo, according to modern astronomy).

Simon's work, about which you can learn more at his website tychos.info, suggests that Tycho Brahe, under whom Kepler studied and worked as an assistant, formulated a more accurate model of the heavens, but that after Brahe's untimely death, Kepler "flipped it on its head" and instead argued for a heliocentric solar system, despite data which contradicted Kepler's assertions -- and that if we update Tycho's analysis to include some of what we've discovered about binary systems (as Simon Shack has now done), we can explain some evidence which poses serious problems for the heliocentric theory and which suggests that the heliocentric model may be gravely flawed and in need of radical revision.

This video cannot possibly explore all the evidence that Simon discusses: the interested viewer is also urged to check out Simon's 2018 book, entitled The Tychos: Our Geoaxial Binary System, which is available at that same website linked in the previous paragraph.

I myself am open to exploring all the evidence and have not "made up my mind" about the mechanics of our solar system. But I am keenly aware of other evidence which shows that we have been misled about a number of extremely important subjects, including aspects of humanity's ancient history -- and more recent history as well -- and it should be fairly obvious that the subject of the motions of the heavenly bodies and the cycles of the heavens is indeed of great interest to my own area of research regarding the suppression of humanity's ancient wisdom and the undeniable existence of a world-wide system linking the ancient myths and the stars.

Saturday, August 22, 2020

Welcome to new visitors from Zero podcast with Sam Tripoli! (and to returning friends!)





















Big thank-you to Sam Tripoli for inviting me to have a conversation with him on his new podcast exploring spiritual questions and the quest to discover what life is all about, entitled Zero (a name with significant meaning).

Our discussion was recorded on August 21, 2020.

Welcome to all new visitors learning about my research and this website for the first time after watching the show, and of course welcome back to all returning friends! I hope you will visit often.

Sam has a number of podcast platforms where he offers free content exploring a wide variety of subjects. Zero is slightly different in that it is hosted on Rokfin, which is a subscription platform designed to allow content creators to monetize content, so it costs $9.99 USD per month to subscribe to the entire platform, which then gives access to content from all the creators who are using Rokfin to host their work. 

You can view a short clip from my conversation with Sam by going to the Instagram for Zero, which is @podcastzero (https://www.instagram.com/podcastzero/).

In our discussion, we touched on a number of subjects in a short period of time; for those who would like to explore further into some of these areas, below are some previous blog posts which may be of interest, including:
Please let Sam know that you appreciate his having me on the show (such as through feedback on Instagram or other channels), and please also have a look at our conversation from a month ago on his long-format podcast, Tin Foil Hat (links and video to that episode can be found in this post).

I hope you will find the material on this website to be helpful in your own journey: I am convinced that the ancient myths are telling us and showing us that we each have access to an unbreakable Self, available to us at all times, even in this very present moment.


Thursday, August 20, 2020

Austerity and Rent-Seeking vs Public Infrastructure and Prosperity

I've recently published this new video, entitled "Austerity and Rent-Seeking vs. Public Infrastructure and Prosperity."

It explores a web of connected subjects which are important to understand but which in my experience are very rarely understood, involving the subject of rent-seeking and a power struggle (continuing to this day) involving the privatization by a very few of the gifts of nature and the gods which should instead be  properly understood as having been bestowed and intended for the benefit of all the people.

The discussion in the video makes use of arguments presented across a number of the writings and analysis of Professor Michael Hudson, particularly arguments he articulates in an article he published in 2011 entitled "Simon Patten on Public Infrastructure and Economic Rent Capture," available on his website at michael-hudson.com.

It also refers to the decades-long work of the developers of Modern Monetary Theory, including that of Warren Mosler, and suggests that those interested check out Warren Mosler's page where he makes available several of his books and articles for free reading in their entirety online.

Previous posts which have touched on these and other related subjects include:

I realize that for all of us, challenges to a paradigm which has been ingrained at all levels of education (and which continues to be reinforced through the complicit media, including NPR) will usually be met with skepticism and even some hostility. I would, however, recommend reading at least the top entry on Warren Mosler's "required reading" list (linked above) prior to immediately rejecting some of the assertions in this video (some of which very much run counter to what we have been taught to believe)!

Thank you for watching!


Monday, August 17, 2020

Important interviews with Dr. Richard Schwartz and Dr. Frank Anderson of Internal Family Systems Therapy



image: Wikimedia commons (link).

One of the ways I am consistently amazed by the wisdom given to all cultures in the ancient myths is my continuing discovery of the work of some of the most forward-thinking healers in the field of trauma, mental health, and addiction healing and the way that much of the core of their work and the core of their insights matches what the myths are saying to us -- even those very earliest myths to which we have access today, such as those from the earliest texts of ancient Sumer and ancient Egypt and the Vedas of ancient India.

Most recently, I have been exploring the amazing work of Dr. Richard Schwartz, who founded the Internal Family Systems therapeutic paradigm (often abbreviated as "IFS"). 

One of Dr. Schwartz's most profound discoveries, a position at which he arrived through interaction with numerous patients and one with which he certainly did not begin (he was actually initially dubious that it could be possible, based on the teaching he had received in his professional training) is the concept of an innate and unbreakable Self, something which can be demonstrated to be taught through the world's ancient myths in which we often encounter a "divine twin" such as in the myths of Castor and Polydeuces (or Pollux, with Pollux being the immortal twin in that pairing), or Heracles and his twin Iphicles, or Gilgamesh and Enkidu (who are paralleled by Jacob and Esau in the Bible), or the dual sets of twins in the Popol Vuh of the Maya (in which one set of twins does not escape the underworld, while the other set of twins does), or even Jesus and Thomas Didymus (the Twin) in the New Testament gospels -- and there are many other examples.

Listen to the way Dr. Schwartz describes this unbreakable Self, and the way it can play a very positive role in every aspect of our lives (writing here in the second edition of his book, Internal Family Systems Therapy): 

We are all born with a Self. It does not develop through stages or borrow strength and wisdom from the therapist, and it cannot be damaged. It can, however, be occluded or overwhelmed by parts. 43

[. . .] therapists who have used IFS over the past three decades verify that everyone can access the active compassionate leader we call the Self, which is characterized by clarity, perspective, compassion, and other qualities that constitute effective leadership. This is true no matter how severe their symptoms or how initially polarized their internal system. When the Self is differentiated from the parts, people experience what we are calling a Self-led state of mind. 44

The Self of IFS interacts with parts and is also transcendent. As an entity, it is available to hear competing perspectives, to nurture, and to problem-solve. As a wave, it is one with the universe and other people as if, at that level, all waves overlap in ultimate commonality. Parts find the relationship with the Self incredibly reassuring, but to reap the benefits of being with the Self, they must first risk differentiating from and noticing the Self -- a frightening prospect for many protectors. 45

Since these feelings automatically emerge as soon as parts separate, we access the Self-energy that is already there, and we don't have to ask the client to make an effort to feel any particular way. The one caveat in this process is that it requires at least some willingness to find out if the Self exists and some curiosity when experiencing the Self. Without willingness and curiosity, we may view experiences of the Self as delightful aberrations or illusions, unattainable in everyday life. 46

Below are two videos, one with Dr. Schwartz and the second with another senior IFS practitioner, Dr. Frank Anderson, in which the understanding of "Self" and "parts" are explained more fully (links to both of those videos are here and here). Please note that while I may not agree with every single position expressed by everyone in these interviews, I am quite convinced of the validity of the general pattern being expressed by the system Dr. Schwartz has discovered and articulated -- and of its resonance with the teachings found in the world's ancient myths:


Here is my transcription of one of the sections in Dr. Anderson's interview in which he describes the IFS understanding of the plurality or multiplicity inherent in everyone, as well as the critical concept of the Self, which (as both Dr. Schwartz and Dr. Anderson point out) is described in so many of the world's ancient traditions. This discussion can be found beginning at approximately 11:00 into the video:

In the mental health field in the ways that I was taught, multiplicity is pathological -- and we don't have that view at all in Internal Family Systems. We believe that everybody has multiplicity, that we're all born with it, that it's a normal function: that it's healthy, in fact. And that is a place where we diverge a bit from mainstream, because when I was in my residency program, for example, if anyone had multiplicity, it was pathological and our goal was to make them whole again. And we don't feel that way: parts are normal, everybody has them, they interact with each other in wonderful, lovely ways; they interact with the world -- and then when difficult or overwhelming experiences happen in our lives, which it does for all of us of course, these parts take on extreme roles. So the parts are not the pathology: parts take on extreme roles. And so that's one of the things that we hold differently.  

I think one of the other big kind of assumptions in IFS and somewhat of a divergent view is that everybody has what we call Self-Energy. Some people call it "internal wisdom," some people call it their "Core," their soul -- and we believe everybody's born with it, everybody has it, and it does not need to be cultivated. It's one of the things in the mental health field that happens a lot is: "build somebody's strength, build their resources, build their access to be able to handle things." Our view is different than that -- it's like, "No: everybody has it, it's in there." They may not have access to it -- and it doesn't need to be cultivated; it doesn't need to be built: it's inherently in us. As a matter of fact, in our view, you're born with it -- we all are. So we all have parts, we all have Self: they're all normal -- and they work smoothly and well together, or not. And when they don't, there's discord within the system, and that's when people end up coming to the therapist's office: to sort through the discord.

These descriptions, from Dr. Schwartz and Dr. Anderson -- leading (and in the case of Dr. Schwartz, founding) voices in one of the most cutting-edge therapeutic paradigms in mental health and trauma recovery -- can be seen to have been anticipated by the world's ancient wisdom encoded in the myths given to all the various cultures of the human family. 

Indeed, as I have written in previous posts (such as this one about the "Descent of Inanna," a myth found in some of the most ancient texts we have from the ancient culture we call Sumer), the ancient myths also teach that we can be ignorant of the very existence of what Dr. Schwartz and practitioners of the IFS therapy refer to as Self -- and that one of the purposes of the myths appears to have been to remedy this lack of awareness of this tremendous resource of Self, which everyone is born with and which does not need to be cultivated, but with whom we can lose connection, primarily through the interference of parts taking on the role of "protectors," for whom trusting in the leadership of Self can be a very "frightening prospect for many protectors."

If this incredible innate gift of Self has so many positive qualities, how is it that trusting in Self is so difficult for parts which have taken on extreme roles? In a very important part of the interview with Dr. Anderson, beginning at about 46:30, Dr. Anderson gives us an example of the pattern through which we can become alienated from our Essential Self:

What ends up happening in trauma -- OK, if you're on the playground, and you're being bullied by a bunch of kids: you're experiencing something painful, OK? And, depending on the level of the severity or the extreme nature of it, what ends up happening there is there's a chasm between the Self and the parts. Self is there, parts are there, and if you're getting yelled at and screamed at or hit or punched or whatever in this bullying situation, it's too much to handle. Trauma is overwhelming by definition. What ends up happening in the moment of trauma is that Self leaves, to protect our essence. And parts are left carrying the bag. So there ends up being this chasm between the Self and the parts. Parts are left getting yelled at and beat up, or whatever. Self is protected: our core, our essence, is protected. But what ensues as a result of that is there's a chasm between the Self and the parts. The parts don't like the Self: "You left me, to get beat up. You left me to be yelled at and screamed." Now, we know that Self is not malicious in intent at all: Self is preserving the essence of what's good in all of us. And Self was the same age at the time of the trauma. But parts experience the Self as abandoning them. Part of healing in trauma is repairing that Self-to-part relationship. And there's often a moment of apology and repair: "I'm sorry. I was six years old too. I did the best I could." And there's a repair in the internal relationship.      

In the ancient myth of Eros and Psyche, which forms one of the central "stories within a story" in the amazing esoteric text of the Metamorphoses of Apuleius (not to be confused with the Metamorphoses of Ovid), most commonly known today as "The Golden Ass" (shortened version of "The Golden Tale of the Ass"), but which myth is also referenced by numerous ancient sources, including sources centuries earlier than Apuleius, we see a powerful dramatization of loss of trust in the Higher Self, leading to disastrous loss of contact with Self and alienation and isolation of Psyche.

As I have argued in my books Astrotheology for Life (2017) and Myth and Trauma (2020), the myth of Eros and Psyche (along with many other myths from around the globe) can almost certainly be understood as teaching the very same "plurality" or "multiplicity" of personhood inherent in the human condition -- with Eros corresponding to the Higher or Essential Self, and Psyche corresponding to our, well, psyche: our egoic mind with all its wonderful parts, sometimes in harmony with one another, but sometimes polarized due to experiences such as those described in the two interviews linked above.

I recommend obtaining an actual copy of The Golden Ass by Apuleius and reading the entire story (I've always been partial to the translation by Jack Lindsay linked here), but the pattern of the loss of communion with the Higher Self represented by Eros in the story is quite familiar to anyone who grew up hearing any sort of fairy tales: Psyche is living happily with her loving husband, even though she has never actually laid eyes on him -- but her jealous sisters show up and introduce doubts about the true identity of her unseen husband, insinuating that he must be some kind of hideous monster since he will not allow Psyche to actually see him. So, Psyche follows the advice of her two sisters (who may very well be seen as representing a dramatization of a somewhat dysfunctional internal family, expressed as external characters in the story) and waits until her husband is asleep in their bed, at which time she creeps out of bed and gets a lamp in order to see what he actually looks like:


image: Wikimedia commons (link).

Sadly for Psyche and her relationship with Eros, she is astonished and delighted to find that her husband is in fact the divine Eros -- but as she stares at his sleeping form, a drop of oil spills from the lamp and alights upon the shoulder of the slumbering god. The burning oil awakens Eros, who immediately sees that Psyche has failed to trust in him -- and he flies out the window, apparently lost to her forever.

This lack of trust in the Self is seen in numerous other myths from around the world, characterized by doubt -- including the story of "Doubting Thomas" found in the Gospel according to John in the New Testament, as well as the example of "Doubting Arjuna" found in the Mahabharata of ancient India (the "doubting" of Arjuna leads to the beloved Bhagavad Gita, spoken (or sung) by the Lord Krishna to address the doubt of Arjuna (just as Jesus addresses the doubt of Thomas in the John Gospel).

Whether they are aware of these connections or not, the discoveries of Dr. Schwartz and Dr. Anderson regarding the alienation of the Self from the parts -- discoveries established through hundreds or even thousands of interactions with clients during their therapeutic work and expressed in the above interviews and in Internal Family Systems, Second Edition -- can be seen as being dramatized in the ancient myths of the world, including the powerful myth of Eros and Psyche.

As Dr. Anderson explains in the quotation cited above, parts experience Self as having abandoned them -- but I have argued that the ancient myths have as one of their central messages the path to recovery of the Self from whom we have been alienated. And this recovery is of course a central aim of the IFS system of therapy as well. 

The ancient myths dramatize the reconciliation of Psyche with Higher Self, as shown in the top image, depicting the famous revival of Psyche by the kiss of the god Eros, who rescues her from actual death (again: for the entire story, I recommend the version preserved by Apuleius from the period we call the first century AD or CE).

It is my belief that the work of forward-thinking therapists, such as Dr. Richard Schwartz and Dr. Frank Anderson, as well as of healers such as Dr. Gabor Maté, reflecting their experience in the field with thousands of patients, can prove to be tremendously helpful to just about everyone living in this modern world, and dealing with even the most urgent issues we face in our lives. 

And, I am equally convinced that this central message of the myths, involving the vital importance of recovering our relationship with Self, also forms one of the central keystones of the world's sacred stories, such that this ancient treasure should be regarded as a tremendous resource for our benefit, even in this very present moment.


Wednesday, August 12, 2020

New conversation with Jennifer of True Divine and Doc Anand of Spice FM in Newcastle!

Special thank-you to Jennifer (host of True Divine) and to her co-host Doc Anand (host of SpiceFM Community Chat) for inviting me all the way over to Newcastle upon Tyne in northern England for a special conversation about Star Myths and their profound meaning for our lives.

It was truly a pleasure to meet Doc and Jennifer and get to know them a little better during our time together, and they were very kind and gracious hosts who made some excellent insights during our discussion and brought out some interesting aspects of the mystery of the myths and their message for us in this very present moment.

Here is the link to the video of our chat, which was recorded on August 09, 2020. 

This was definitely the longest distance over which I've ever recorded a video interview so far, even though I have had some previous podcast interviews with hosts in England and also in Ireland (those previous interviews being audio-only, however). There may be some slight disconnect between my voice and my video due to the long distance, but I very much hope you will enjoy our talk and find some good things in the discussion which will be positive to your life.

I also very much hope you will give Jennifer's channel some positive feedback and check out her Instagram (@thetruedivine) and also Doc's YouTube channel (Doc Anand) and subscribe / follow if you're interested in hearing more of what they have to say.

Thank you to Jennifer for her kind words and insights in her introduction at the start of the video as well: I very much appreciate those sentiments and her message.

Warm welcome to anyone visiting my website for the first time after hearing about my research and work through this latest conversation with Jennifer and Doc! I hope you will take the time to explore all the content available at my primary website, Star Myths of the World, including videos, archived podcasts from the past, book content, the "Resources" page, and of course the blog which now has well over 1,200 posts and is fully searchable. 

You can find a link which takes you to the "Resources" page at the very bottom of any page on the site.

Below are some links to previous posts with additional content related to some of the subjects that we discussed during this memorable conversation with Doc and Jennifer, for those interested in exploring further:

Thank you for your interest, and I hope you will visit again soon!





Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Dhruva and Narayana


image: Wikimedia commons (link).

The story of Dhruva and his encounter with the divine Narayana, who is the Lord Vishnu, contains many lessons for us and is valuable to contemplate for our benefit even in this very modern age and this very present moment. 

The story of Dhruva can be found, among other places in the Sanskrit texts of ancient India, in the Bhagavata Purana, in Canto Four, beginning in chapter 8. One English translation of this text can be found here

In that chapter of the Bhagavata Purana, we learn of a king named Uttânapâda, who as king was strictly charged with "the protection and maintenance of the world" (see verse 7). 

In a pattern found throughout the world's myths, in which we frequently encounter "two mothers" (one blessing, and one cursing, and thus associated with our "two births" -- see for example this previous post discussing a famous story about Solomon's encounter with two mothers), the king has two wives in this story. 

According to the Bhagavata Purana, the king's two wives are named Sunîti and Suruci, and when we encounter the family in the story, each of the wives has a young son by the king. The son of Sunîti is named Dhruva, and the son of Suruci is named Uttama. 

However, the king favors one wife over the other -- he dotes upon Suruci and neglects Sunîti. Suruci for her part jealously promotes her son at the expense of Dhruva in the affection of the king. Thus, one day when Dhruva, the son of Sunîti, attempts to climb up on his father's lap to join Uttama the son of Suruci, Suruci sees Dhruva and rebukes him, telling Dhruva he does not deserve to sit on the lap of his father the king, saying:
"My dear child, you do not deserve to seat yourself where the king sits because, even though you were born as a son of the king, you were not born from my womb. Oh child, you do not understand that, because you are not my own but were born from the womb of another woman, the thing you desire is out of your reach. You can seat yourself on the throne of the king if you want, but only if you, by means of penance, have satisfied the Original Person of God and thus by his mercy have secured a place for yourself in my womb."
The text tells us that Dhruva, whom we later learn to have been five years old at this time, is devastated by these harsh words, and even more so by the fact that his father the king is looking on and says nothing in the face of this rejection. The child is filled with anger and begins to breathe "as heavily as a snake struck by a stick," according to the text, and he runs to his mother, weeping with emotion at the rejection.

Sunîti of course is very sad to see her son Dhruva in such a state, and she comforts him and lifts him to her lap. Not knowing what else to say, the text tells us that she advises the boy to seek out the very Lord of Transcendence himself, the one who is beyond the reach of blunt instruments, and advises Dhruva to fix his mind upon the divine image of the god, thinking of nothing else.

Getting himself under control, we are told, Dhruva leaves his mother and the palace and heads out to follow her advice. On the way, he encounters the great sage or Rishi named Nārada, who is a great musician and carries in one hand a khartal (a percussive instrument resembling a castanet) and in the other a tanpura (a long-necked stringed instrument resembling a lute). Nārada is sometimes known as Rishiraj, or the king of all sages.

Nārada asks Dhruva where he is going, and he is so impressed by young Dhruva's answer, as well as Dhruva's respectful tone and earnest desire to meditate upon the Supreme Lord and to follow the path advised by Dhruva's mother that the sage gives the boy his blessing and directs the child to go to the bank of the river Yamuna in the sacred Madhuvana forest, and to practice pranayama (control of the breath or Prana) and meditate upon the merciful Supreme Lord Vasudeva while reciting a mantra.

The mantra which Nārada imparts to Dhruva, which the sage tells the boy is a "most confidential mantra," is the mantra recited in the video below: Om namo bhagavate vasudevaya.



Having been thus advised, we are told, young Dhruva circumambulates respectfully around the great sage, and performs the proper obeisance to his reverence, and proceeds deep into the forest to the banks of the river Yamuna, where he begins to meditate upon the divine person of the Lord Vishnu. Please note that Krishna is one of the avatars of Vishnu, if you are confused by all the varied names by which the deity is referred in the ancient texts; one of these names is Narayana, by which the Lord Vishnu in his calm and oceanic state is often known.















































image: Wikimedia commons (link).

There, after meditation and recitation of the mantra, and also standing upon one leg, the text tells us that Dhruva was blessed with a visit from the Lord Vishnu himself. You can read the Bhagavata Purana's description of that encounter here, in chapter 9 of Canto Four. If you prefer to watch this story as a video, you can see that embedded below in a version made for children, to whom this episode from the Puranas is still told to this day.

One of the blessings that Vishnu gives to Dhruva during this visit is the promise that, after ruling wisely as a king for the benefit of the people, Dhruva would ascend to the heavens and be fixed in a place where all the stars and constellations would circle around him like bulls circling around a central pole, turning it to grind out the grain (see verse 21). This amazing promise is usually taken to mean that Dhruva is going to become the pole star, but as I write in end note number 443 on pages 855 and 856 of my 2019 book, The Ancient World-Wide System (which explores the celestial foundations of many of the myths of ancient India, among the Star Myths of other cultures around the globe):
The descriptions here seem to indicate Ophiuchus once again, as the great central "churning stick" around which everything else revolves -- and which is certainly the "seat of Vishnu" as well, as we have discussed in this volume in the examination of the celestial correspondence between Vishnu and Ophiuchus. This action of Dhruva raises the possibility that Ophiuchus was sometimes envisioned as "standing on one leg" -- perhaps because one leg of the constellation is within the Milky Way and hence more obscured than the other. 
As with so many of the world's ancient myths, the reader might be forgiven for thinking, "This story is about some extremely blessed and gifted child, who lived thousands of years ago in a place and time far removed from my own -- what can it possibly have to do with me? It is all very good that Dhruva was so enlightened that he could seek out and gain a vision of the Infinite, but that is because he was very special, a child unlike anyone who has ever lived before or since!"

However, we can see beyond doubt that the ancient myths are esoteric and metaphorical in nature -- beyond doubt because we can see that they are based upon an ancient world-wide system of celestial metaphor. This story is not about someone who lived in literal and terrestrial history: as with all the other myths given to the cultures of the world in remote antiquity and for our benefit, this story is about you.

Note that this story dramatically illustrates an episode of childhood trauma -- specifically a type of psychic trauma known to psychologists today as "attachment trauma," in which the child is neglected when he seeks attachment with the parent. And note that, as Dr. Gabor Maté explains in many of his talks and writings (see for example here), trauma is not something that happens outside of us, but rather it is something that happens inside of us -- it is our reaction to something that happens, and that reaction can be described as a separation from our own Self.

And note what the ancient myths tell us is the means of recovery from this type of internal injury: it is to seek out the Infinite, one way of which is through meditation, and which I am convinced is an illustration of our recovery of our own Self, from whom we have become alienated due to trauma but who is in fact always present and always available to us (and the research and experience of some of the most respected voices in recovery today, including Dr. Maté and also Dr. Richard Schwartz, who has developed the Internal Family Systems approach to therapy). As I have explained at some length in my most recent book, Myth and Trauma, the myths teach very clearly that it is through our recovery of Self that we recover our connection to others and to the wider universe, and even to the realm of the Infinite.

Thus, I believe this story has much to tell us for our benefit today, and that it is worthy of careful consideration for our lives, wherever we are right now.



Saturday, August 8, 2020

August 08 - August 09: A Heinous Assault on Human Life, Democracy, Rule of Law, and the Psyche of the World

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

This post continues and elaborates on the subject of these previous two posts: July 27, August 03.

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Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time . . . in Hollywood brings to the screen the events surrounding the horrific murders of Sharon Tate and her unborn baby, along with four other men and women, on the night of August 8th / early morning of August 9th, 1969. Perhaps the most startling aspect of the film, of course, is the fact that the murders are foiled at the end and none of the intended victims are killed: instead, the members of the Manson Family themselves meet a gruesome end.

What could possibly be the message of such an unexpected conclusion to the film? The movie’s title provides the first obvious clue: when we hear the words “once upon a time . . .” we know that this phrase is associated with the telling of a fairy tale, often one which will end with the words “happily ever after.” By depicting a completely false set of circumstances, concluding with a happy ending in which Sharon Tate, her friends, and her unborn child are not brutally murdered, the director appears to be challenging us to reconsider what we have been told about the events of that fateful night in August of 1969 — and perhaps to realize that virtually everything we’ve been told about that event is essentially a fairy tale.

The movie contains many other curious elements which reinforce the conclusion that the Tarantino is inviting us to re-examine everything we know about the awful killings of Sharon Tate, Stephen Parent, Abigail Folger, Jay Sebring, and Voytek Frykowski that night (and by extension the murders of Rosemary and Leno LaBianca the following night). One such curious twist is the decision to give the dark brown, leather-fringed jacket which is very closely associated with Charles Manson to the film’s central protagonist character Rick Dalton (played by Leonardo DiCaprio) rather than to Manson himself, who is never seen wearing it. 

Significantly, Dalton’s character is given this jacket as part of a role in which he is told by the director (portraying the real-life director Sam Wanamaker, who lived from 1919 to 1993) that he wants to give Rick a “hippie jacket,” and that he also wants Rick to have a new hairstyle: “something more . . . hippie-ish!” This emphasis on playing a role which evokes a hippie is in marked contrast to moments later in the film in which we see Rick Dalton’s deep distaste for and animosity towards hippies. 

And, strangely enough, it is Rick Dalton who actually carries out the most actual violence on the night on which the murders on Cielo Drive took place, in Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time” re-imagining: Rick Dalton who is asked to play a role as a “hippie-ish” character and to wear a dark brown leather-fringed jacked, but who clearly despises hippies himself.

What is going on here? What could be the message we are being asked to consider?

In order to help with that question, let’s turn to an incisive and penetrating early analysis of the many anomalies surrounding the official narrative that we’ve been fed about the so-called “Manson murders” of 1969: the analysis presented by Mae Brussell (1922 - 1988), in a broadcast first aired on October 13th, 1971, which you can listen to this archived version that was re-broadcast on Bonnie Faulkner’s Guns and Butter and which also has a complete text transcript published here.

In that broadcast, Mae presents abundant evidence to suspect that aspects of the Manson killings indicate involvement by “clandestine” and “secret” forces, and says that the reason such covert actions are so difficult to detect is that these secret forces like to “disguise certain persons and send them into roles to influence: they become actors on a stage and they influence our minds in a way that is not real but effect a reality that will touch us later.”

Among the arguments she makes in that broadcast is the well-known fact, articulated by Manson himself and attested to by those who knew him, that he was not a hippie and that he hated being called a hippie: it was a role he was being told to play, Mae argues. 

She also recounts details of the brutal murders that took place at the house on Cielo Drive that night, in which five men and women lost their lives (one of them over eight months pregnant, thus adding up to six lives taken), and indicates that according to her analysis, the elements add up to something more akin to a military operation than to anything that could have been carried out by the nomadic band of drugged-out followers Manson had assembled around him. Mae says: 

“It was described by people later as a military ambush. And for the reasons as this: these many people were slaughtered; nobody heard a sound; there were dogs on the grounds that didn’t say boo; there was a caretaker in a guest cottage who didn’t hear one gun go off — and guns went off; they didn’t hear any screaming; nobody saw a getaway car; the place was completely destroyed; there was time to put hoods over the people, ropes on their neck, leave signs and symbols that would come down on a particular group in our society — two groups — and split. And no, not a dog was killed or barked. The fellow that lives on the grounds said he slept through it. And they shimmied up the telephone poles, cut the wires, left all this obvious evidence, and split. And the way the wires and the lines were cut I felt that it had to be a military-type ambush.”

During the same 1971 broadcast, Mae also points out that Manson himself and Charles “Tex” Watson appear to have had access to high-powered lawyers, well prior to the killings of August, 1969, and she also notes that it is extremely questionable that Manson and his throng of followers could have supported themselves for so long, able to own a bus and drive it all over the state and even up to the Canada border and down to Mexico, paying for gas and food not to mention weapons, ammunition, and military gear as well as massive quantities of drugs including LSD, without any ostensible source of funds, unless they were being supported by elements which have remained hidden to the general public.

In a remarkable book published in 2019 entitled Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties, author Tom O’Neill presents overwhelming evidence to support the conclusion that the story we’ve been asked to believe about the Manson Family, and the murders of August, 1969, is indeed largely a fairy tale which portrays the murders as the spontaneous and arbitrary act of a fringe group of acid-drenched hippies, when in fact powerful forces appear to have been involved in the murders themselves and in the subsequent cover-up of the facts surrounding the case. 

Mr. O’Neill’s book is the result of twenty years of painstaking and often frustrating investigative journalism in which he criss-crossed the country conducting personal interviews, and in which he consulted original files and boxes of records and evidence, some of them never-before-examined by previous researchers. 

His research is thoroughly documented and the book reaches to 500 pages of absolutely stunning evidence which reveals that Manson committed violations which should have caused his parole officers to revoke his parole, but that instead these violations (many of them serious crimes) were inexplicably overlooked time and again — and that Manson can be shown to have been moving in circles that put him in contact with leading elements of the CIA’s MKULTRA mind-control operation. 

While presenting more than enough evidence to demolish the conventional narrative surrounding the Manson killings, Tom O’Neill’s book does not force the reader towards a decisive conclusion as to what might have actually been going on, but rather leaves the reader to draw his or her own conclusions from the matrix of evidence presented — but he provides evidence which suggests that Manson was taught effective mind control techniques to use on his followers, in conjunction with the administration of large and repeated doses of LSD; that government-backed psychological and behavioral researchers were in regular contact with Manson during the “Summer of Love” of 1967 in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco during which time Manson was provided with copious amounts of acid as well as an apartment in the Haight; that a professional clandestine operative or operatives were surveilling the Tate residence on the night of the murders at the Tate home and that it is very likely that someone came back to the scene of the grisly murders to rearrange the bodies prior to their discovery the next morning; that the connection of the Manson Family to the Tate and LaBianca murders, as well as to an earlier torture and murder of Gary Hinman in July of 1969, were already known to certain elements of law enforcement but were kept quiet for months, during which time other murders by members of the Family (possibly including murders by Manson) probably took place; and that powerful political forces worked to obscure the actual scope of the events surrounding the murders and to replace the truth with an elaborate and false narrative which would be presented to the public and which continues to be maintained to this day, despite evidence which should have long ago revealed the fact that this narrative is unsustainable.

In an important chapter of the book, entitled “Neutralizing the Left,” Tom O’Neill provides evidence which indicates that powerful elements of the establishment felt extremely threatened by the growing youth movement centered at Berkeley and in San Francisco which was actively demonstrating against the war in Vietnam and for rights such as Free Speech, as well as by the growing Black radical movements demanding equal rights and justice, such as the Black Panther Party which originated in Oakland, and that both the CIA and the FBI launched aggressive operations (entitled CHAOS and COINTELPRO) to infiltrate and subvert these movements and to instigate suspicion and splintering within the movements themselves, turning them against one another from within — as well as actively working to discredit these movements in the eyes of “middle America” and cause them to appear violent and dangerous.

From the evidence presented, it is almost beyond doubt that the Manson Family and the horrific murders of July and August 1969 were deliberately employed as weapons in that campaign, with paw-print symbols being painted in blood on the walls at the scenes of the murders in order to try to implicate the Black Panthers, as well as the use of hoods and ropes placed on the bodies of the victims. 

Mae Brussell in the broadcast referenced earlier from 1971 points out that one of the first articles to be published after the horrific killings of Sharon Tate and the others on Cielo Drive was written by Ed Butler (Edward S. Butler III, 1934 - 2005) who had been an associate of Clay Shaw in New Orleans and who had participated in the infamous radio interview of Lee Harvey Oswald that was intended to portray Oswald as a Marxist prior to the assassination of President Kennedy. Entitled “Did Hate Kill Tate,” Butler’s article implied that the gruesome murders were the work of Black radicals.

Tom O’Neill’s book also provides abundant and disturbing evidence which reveals that local law enforcement already had indications that the torture and murder of Gary Hinman (a music teacher with whom Manson had previously stayed in Topanga Canyon and whose address Manson in fact gave to his parole officer at one point as his point of contact) over the period of July 25 to July 27 was linked to the Family: Manson Family member Bobby Beausoleil had been arrested after being found asleep in Hinman’s Fiat station wagon on the side of highway 101 on August 7th, prior to the Tate-LaBianca killings. He had placed a call to the Spahn Ranch from jail on August 8th, which call had been tapped, and had told whoever answered to “tell Charlie” he had been picked up by the police and needed help. When the description of the murder scene at Cielo Drive became known on the subsequent days, the men who arrested Beausoleil recognized the similarities to the Hinman slaying (including paw-prints designed to implicate the Panthers, and the words “pig” or “piggy” scrawled in blood at the scene) and tried to alert their superiors to the connections: their analysis however fell on deaf ears.

Despite these connections being perceived within days of the August 9th killings, the Manson Family was not brought in for the crimes until December of 1969, after one of the women was arrested for another crime and bragged about her involvement in the Tate killings to a fellow inmate. In the interim, local law enforcement did launch a massive raid on the Spahn Ranch later in August, involving hundreds of officers, multiple vehicles and even helicopters, only to let everyone go. We have been told (and Wikipedia still declares to this day) that the raid was unfruitful because the warrant was misdated, but O’Neill provides incontrovertible evidence that this excuse is false. Despite the presence of weapons, stolen vehicles, underaged girls, and stolen credit cards (some of the credit cards in the pocket of Manson’s shirt, in fact), no one was arrested and Manson was not charged with violating parole. And a week after that raid, O’Neill shows, Manson actually had yet another encounter with law enforcement, this time for possession of cannabis and for contributing to the delinquency of a minor (he was in an abandoned cabin with a seventeen-year-old girl), but was again released inexplicably.

By deliberately not pursuing the obvious leads pointing towards Manson and his followers at the outset, it appears very likely that the murders of the beautiful movie star Sharon Tate and her companions were intended to turn public opinion (and Hollywood insiders) against the ongoing Civil Rights movement, if the killings could be successfully passed off as having been the work of the Black Panthers. Tom O’Neill points to actual FBI memos which expressed a desire to diminish “vestiges of sympathy for militant black nationalists” among “liberals” including Hollywood actors. Mr. O'Neill notes that Abigail Folger, who was murdered at the Tate home on the night of August 8 - 9, had actively campaigned that year for Tom Bradley, the first African American candidate for mayor of LA, and that Folger was “an outspoken civil rights activist” (219). 















































image: Los Angeles Times (link).

Based on this and other evidence, the plan appears to have been that, if and when that false storyline (of Black Panther involvement in the killings) could no longer be maintained, then the murders could instead be used to discredit the youth and anti-war movements and cause a backlash against “hippies” and everything they represented, even though (as Mae Brussell observes regarding Manson in her broadcast from October of 1971), “He was not a hippie or a part of the youth culture.” 

And, as quoted earlier, Mae Brussell perceived that these murders which shocked the world were designed from the outset to be able to be blamed on either of the two movements that so concerned the national security agencies responsible for Operation CHAOS and COINTELPRO, saying, in her discussion of the anomalous aspects of the murder scene at Cielo Drive, “there was time to put hoods over the people, ropes on their neck, leave signs and symbols that would come down on a particular group in our society — two groups — and split.” The fact that she says that blame could be made to come down upon either of “two groups” indicates, in the context of the rest of Mae Brussell’s analysis in that 1971 broadcast, that she already perceived that the killings were designed to be used to turn the general public against either or both of those two powerful movements.

And so we return to the message that director Quentin Tarantino might be suggesting through his 2019 film, Once Upon a Time . . . in Hollywood. In his “fairy tale” re-imagining of the events of that awful night, it turns out that Manson’s followers don’t end up killing anybody: instead, Rick Dalton and his double, Cliff Booth, dispatch Tex Watson and his two female companions, with Rick torching one of the girls with a flamethrower. The implication we may be intended to consider is that these horrific murders were not actually the product of “hippies” at all, but rather that they were a manifestation of an active element within the establishment itself which is quite willing to perpetrate violence in order to achieve its objectives. Indeed, as we have already seen, it is Rick Dalton in the film who wears the distinctive jacket associated with Charles Manson, and who is told to play a role that is “hippie-ish,” even though Rick (like Manson) actually despises hippies. 

The actual evidence which has come to light through the work of researchers over the intervening decades (including the monumental research of Tom O’Neill in his recent book) indicates that the killing of Sharon Tate and her unborn child, Stephen Parent, Abigail Folger, Voytek Frykowski, Jay Sebring, Leno LaBianca, Rosemary LaBianca, Gary Hinman, and other victims of the Manson Family (possibly numbering dozens more, as Tom O’Neill reveals) may well have been actively enabled by elements of the burgeoning national-security state (and its illegal mind control program), national security elements whose leaders despised the hippies and the youth movement and the antiwar movement and the Civil Rights movement and all that they stood for, rather than the murders being the organic spontaneous actions of a group of “anti-establishment hippies” acting on their own, the way we have been led to believe.

By switching the role of who actually does the killing, and by having Rick Dalton being the one who “plays a role” and who wears the iconic jacket, and who actually inflicts the most horrific violence in the film, the director may be asking us to reconsider just what aspects of our society were really responsible for the events of that night, which forever turned the majority of “middle America” decisively against the hippie movement and the youth culture that was questioning the war in Vietnam and the intense commercialization of modern “consumer culture” (as Mae Brussell also articulates in her 1971 broadcast).

Rick Dalton is not an unsympathetic character, by any means, but he certainly acts throughout the film as a troubled, self-doubting, and disconnected individual. His internal “division” and angst is dramatized by portraying him as one half of a “twinned pair” or set of “doubles,” alongside his partner Cliff Booth (who is in fact his “stunt double”). While much more could be said about the use of “twinned pairs” in literature, such a device can often be seen as dramatizing the division present within a single individual, metaphorically divided into two halves. In light of the theme we are discussing here, this division could actually be extended into a commentary on the society itself which produces Rick and which is in a way represented by him: an agonized and deeply divided society, and not a healthy society (Rick himself chain-smokes throughout the film and is given to frequent extended fits of hacking and coughing).

Indeed, Rick Dalton’s character is most well-known in the movie for being the star of an earlier television show called Bounty Law, in which Rick plays Jack Cahill, a bounty hunter. The show’s opening credits feature a narrator who declares: “Whether you’re dead or alive, you’re just a dollar-sign to Jake Cahill on . . . Bounty Law!” Here, Tarantino seems to again be emphasizing one of his consistent themes throughout many of his previous films — the reduction of human life to a “dollar sign” through the metaphor of the “bounty hunter.” The commodification of men and women by a violent and oppressive society could not be more succinctly represented. It is the agents of that commodifying and debasing system which saw the antiwar movement and the Civil Rights movement and the hippie rejection of consumer-culture as a threat, and which weaponized Charles Manson as a means of neutralizing that threat: those forces can be blamed for the murders of July and August 1969, which were intended to terrorize the people of the United States (and indeed of the world), especially through the murder of Sharon Tate and her companions on the night of August 8 - 9.

The decision by Quentin Tarantino to completely upend our expectations at the end of the film, then, can actually be seen as a brilliant (if shocking) way of calling our attention to the lies we have been told, and that we have allowed ourselves to accept, about that momentous and tragic night.

The conclusion that Tarantino is deliberately calling our attention to these details by inverting the events at the film’s end is supported by the fact that Rick’s guardian angel stunt-double, Cliff Booth, is first alerted to the intruders by a signal from his pitbull dog, Brandy, who hears someone creeping around outside the house. Is possible that this detail was deliberately worked into the plot as a reference to the actual lack of dogs barking during the military-style operation on the night of August 8, 1969, in which phone lines were silently cut and in which the dogs on the property were not killed but were somehow kept from alerting anyone to the impending invasion?   

Even the date of the film’s original release appears to support the conclusion that Tarantino is urging us to consider the anomalies in the conventional accepted narrative surrounding the Manson killings: Once Upon a Time . . . in Hollywood made its official theater debut on July 26, 2019. We have already seen that this particular date is tragically significant: Gary Hinman was being held prisoner in his own residence and tortured from July 25th to July 27th, 1969, fifty years earlier. His murder was the first in which a rag was used to gather his blood and write “piggy” on the walls and make paw-prints intended to implicate the Black Panthers. Manson appears to have participated in the torture, slicing Hinman’s ear in half with a long knife or a sword. Hinman’s killer, Bobby Beausoleil was captured in Hinman’s own car on August 7th, and placed a phone call (which was being tapped by the police) back to the Manson Family at the Spahn Ranch on August 8th — both events taking place before the murders of Sharon Tate and her friends.

The decision to release Once Upon a Time . . . in Hollywood on a date with such significance to the murder of Sharon Tate is almost certainly not a coincidence.

The decision to make this movie, one which powerfully evokes the events of that awful period, seemingly so far in the past, and to bring them once again front-and-center in our minds, is no mere act of nostalgia: Quentin Tarantino is quite clearly telling us that we need to think about the message that this “fairy tale” is trying to convey.

National security forces are in fact necessary for any society existing in a world in which there are real threats, but they exist in order to protect the people (all the people) -- and in the United States, they are strictly enjoined to support and defend the Constitution of the United States, which details a system of democratic control answerable ultimately to the people. The events of July and August, 1969, and the horrific killings surrounding the Manson Family provide unmistakable evidence of the existence of elements within the national security state operating outside of democratic control, with reckless disregard for the safety of the citizens — indeed leading directly to the horrific and brutal murders of citizens (including the murder of an innocent child less than a month away from being born). 

The events surrounding the subsequent investigations and trials, and the crafting of a deliberately false narrative regarding the events of those killings, provide unmistakable evidence of disregard for the rule of law, and subversion of the criminal justice system by those same unaccountable and anti-democratic elements. 

The ongoing obfuscation surrounding these events tells us that these conclusions are not confined to history — they do not belong only to 1969 and the “bygone era” of the sixties and early seventies: they describe the world in which we are living today. 

And until we face the facts — and the  implications — of what took place so many years ago, things will not get better, and in fact they will continue to get worse.

image: Wikimedia commons (link).