RedTailHawk

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RedTailHawk
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***Zapper may be working again...testing soon*** Mathematician, elite math teacher, & energy engineer. Researcher, writer, and mystic. Chaser of rabbits. Solver of mysteries - see links below: Discovering Bitcoin #147 (my background): https://fountain.fm/episode/xFWL4gtmJ2cfF4v4U5tw Paradigm Drift #5 (research): Short: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/kVP13d5MZe0 Bookmarked Full Episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-OA5CHQTfOA&t=2255s Paradigm Drift #6 (research): Short: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFB_FSanru8 Bookmarked Full Episode: https://youtu.be/rLYsN3SMJ-o?t=7258 Once Bitten #562 (research): https://fountain.fm/episode/xJhmGJwLayW0ADEwmU2L Illegitimate Scholar 074 (research): https://youtu.be/-ksbeU4InZM Link below to Flight Club: a Sunday spiritual study group on Clubhouse. Sessions are recorded and will be released as podcasts. https://www.clubhouse.com/house/flight-club-aeg58h1l7sb6?chs=QKlU4Z4pWa%3A162m6aw2UBc-Y_38pxL36vmjIQ78UBQVqgi1qMuq7KQ Suspended X Accoun
image Join us tomorrow, approximately 26 hours from now (12 noon US east coast time), as we continue studying "The Law of One” which is a series of 106 conversations that occurred from 1981-1984 between a physics professor & the entity known as Ra who had previously tried to spread the Law of One in ancient Egypt with mixed results. Last week, we covered: - The formal logical fallacy known as “Affirming the Consequent", - The second half (pages 95-98) of chapter 10 from “A Channeling Handbook”, - The first half of Session 78 of the Law of One, - Personal research updates from study group members along with discussion. This week we plan to cover: - The informal logical fallacy known as “Appeal to Hypocrisy", a.k.a. "Tu Quoque", a version of "whataboutism", - The first half (pages 99-102) of chapter 11 from “A Channeling Handbook”, - The second half of Session 78 of the Law of One, - Personal research updates from study group members along with discussion. Link to join the "Flight Club" study group Clubhouse: Link to RSVP for the upcoming study group session:
image Join us tomorrow, approximately 24 hours from now (12 noon US east coast time), as we continue studying "The Law of One” which is a series of 106 conversations that occurred from 1981-1984 between a physics professor & the entity known as Ra who had previously tried to spread the Law of One in ancient Egypt with mixed results. Last week, we covered: - The logical fallacy known as “Guilt by Association", - The first half (pages 92-94) of chapter 10 from “A Channeling Handbook”, - Session 77 of the Law of One, - Personal research updates from study group members along with discussion. This week we plan to cover: - The formal logical fallacy known as “Affirming the Consequent", - The second half (pages 95-98) of chapter 10 from “A Channeling Handbook”, - Session 78 of the Law of One, - Personal research updates from study group members along with discussion. Link to join the "Flight Club" study group Clubhouse: Link to RSVP for the upcoming study group session: https://www.clubhouse.com/invite/6d7u0KXjeozn0Xr7dYdLvX719l3XuENEYnz:1Mm-pr5RmrZb4VP4inzqQZ8zjtaJdbT8u7MsIFKoEF0
FACT: If you've only studied one religious tradition, your religious opinions are incomplete and distorted. Some religious traditions are more complete and less distorted than others, but they are all distorted and they are all incomplete.
New etymological connections unlocked: image Lavender seems to be the etymological ancestor of a number of words: the English words "lave" (verb, wash, bathe), "lafian" (to wet, make wet, bathe something in fluid/liquid), and "lavatory", the Spanish "lavar" (to wash) and "lava"(noun, the act of washing), the French "laver" (to wash), and the Latin lavāre (to wash). Also, "lavender" was used as a label for "washer women" and "launderers" who would lay laundry out to dry on lavender bushes. Given the Latin connection, it's germane to point out that the Romans used to use lavender in their bathhouse baths. Roman soldiers would carry lavender to dress battle wounds. Pliny the Elder wrote that a pound of lavender blossoms could cost up to a month's worth of wages. Being economically minded, it's worth pointing out that there was perhaps a distorted or possibly downright nonsensical superstition that poisonous asp vipers nested in lavender bushes, which drove up the price of lavender. Christians would hang crosses fashioned from lavender over their doors to ward off evil spirits. In Spain and Portugal, it was thrown into bonfires on St. John's Day for the same effect. It was a key ingredient in love spells. Tudor girls drank lavender tea to dream of their future husbands. Queen Elizabeth 1 appointed an official "Purveyor of Lavender Essence". During the Plague, lavender was burned in sick rooms and doctors would stuff their masks with lavender. Grave robbers would also use it to protect themselves while plundering the homes of plague victims. Lavender oil was famously used in 1910 as a healing agent by Rene-Maurice Gattefosse for burns that had developed gas gangrene. Gattefosse would go on to coin the term aromatherapie which titled his 1937 book. Modern science says that linalool is believed to enhance activity of GABA receptors which calms the nervous system similar to anti-anxiety medications. When the scent is taken in through the olfactory system, the thalamus is bypassed on the way to the limbic system where the amygdala (emotional processing) and hippocampus (memory) are located, explaining why a whiff of lavender can so swiftly impact mood and stress levels. Lavender also increases both alpha and theta wave activity. As research has shown, theta waves are kind of important as they relate to past life memory exploration, healing, and activation of dormant chakras. Given the relationship between activation of dormant chakras and the kundalini serpent and the Egyptian asp hieroglyph, the Roman superstition about asps and lavender begins to seem like a distorted reference to the connection between kundalini, theta waves, and lavender. The next time you're at the store buying hand soap, dish soap, dryer static sheets, or laundry detergent, and you notice that there's always a lavender scented option, you'll know why.