Session 1 November 2025

Thanks everyone for the new session! I’ll definitely be reading it a couple more times before posting impressions!

*on a side note, the images in the session are just boxes with question marks in both Yandex and Duck browsers, at least on my iPhone. That’s never happened before on this site. Guess I’ll have to break out the ol’ laptop (unless @Scottie knows of a setting fix).
 
Thank you for this highly scientific session. It provides a well-established overall framework. For Napoleon, there was no doubt in my mind about his evil intentions. What a joy to see a successful transition; it gives a lot of hope to all those who are working to achieve it. Regarding the war in Europe, the Cs have always emphasized the intervention of an unforeseen disruptive element. Knowing that lies and entropy can accelerate cosmic intervention, a “natural” element could manifest itself. Good luck to all, strangeness is coming.
 
Thanks for another amazing session. We are very lucky to have Laura and the chateau crew in concert with the C's to fill in the gaps in our knowledge. I was reading today that health authorities are expecting this season's flu episode to be the worst for a decade. I wonder if this is just preparing us for something worse....:nuts:
 
Joe) I have one more question. In the last session, they said that things were about to get "stranger than you can imagine." So, since at the time, especially Andromeda, said that she can imagine a lot of strange things, we just have to check that we're not so jaded that we missed it. That things have actually gotten strange.

(L) You're assuming it's already happened.

(Joe) That's what I'm saying, I'm wondering, [laughter] because we normalize things so much.

A: Wait and see!!! Goodbye.
Thanks for another great session. How strange can things get? I wonder what's going to happen. Weather, bleedthroughs, Aliens, comets, world war. Wait and see :headbash::-D
It doesn't sound like we're going to have to wait too long.
 
(Joe) I have one more question. In the last session, they said that things were about to get "stranger than you can imagine." So, since at the time, especially Andromeda, said that she can imagine a lot of strange things, we just have to check that we're not so jaded that we missed it. That things have actually gotten strange.

(L) You're assuming it's already happened.

(Joe) That's what I'm saying, I'm wondering, [laughter] because we normalize things so much.

A: Wait and see!!! Goodbye.
Thanks for the session. It seems that the idea that things are going to get stranger than we can imagine could stem from the ongoing armed conflicts, which could lead the true lunatics who govern us to commit truly insane acts, such as false flag attacks, or something along those lines. OSIT
 
I imagine a model a rotating sun system smasching into mass and grawity of a dark sun. Waves of metors from ouort cloud would be imense runing all sides.
Raptures on land mąses Wokulskiego Add a havoc. Every one tuning for life not war.
 
That Napoleon was an undergrounder was surprising as I had just thought of him as being a psychopathic ruler. I wondered if his insertment influenced entire generations with a ponerized way of thinking which is still influencing the thinking in France today, not least in military circles. Did the Napoleon 'experience' cause a trauma, from which France still hasn't fully recovered from?
Pierre Dujols was one of the key persons behind the plural author Fulcanelli. He wrote several works, still being republished today, under his own name or the pseudonym Magophon (Voice of the Magician). A recent published book, titled Les nobles écrits de Pierre et Antoine Dujols, compiles most of his writings, including the famous Commentaries on the “Mutus Liber:” Hypotipose, and in which the entirety of the Great Work is presented in hieroglyphic figures. He also used these years of relative inactivity to develop and publish Bibliographie générale des Sciences occultes: a general bibliography of the occult in twenty-two volumes, revealing his immense erudition. And this work is repeatedly cited in Fulcanelli' books.

But in his La Chevalerie Amoureuse Troubadours, Félibres et Rose-Croix, he makes a bold comment about the Ultramontanism, the Rosicrucians, and the Templars (and I translate):

This is the Rosicrucian program. They say they have “the mission of restoring all things to a better state before the End of the World arrives.” They claim that, “by their power, the triple diadem of the Pope—who is the Antichrist—will be reduced to dust.” They pride themselves on “having found a new language to express the nature of everything.” This secret language is Tarascan, which we discussed at the beginning of this study, because Rosenkreuz, the personification of the Templars and of Eglantine [Rose of Eglanteria], Grand Master of the Rosicrucian Order, lived and died in Languedoc during the time when the Albigensians were at their height, represented by the Knights of the Rossy Cross, the Red Cross, or the Rose Cross. [...] This insignia [the rosette of the Legion of Honor] was designed by Napoleon, who was affiliated with the Templars. It all makes sense. Although historically destroyed and seemingly extinct, the Order officially survived in the Teutonic Knights. [...]
You will find a complete analysis in the second appendix of the Spanish edition of A Rosicrucian Notebook: “Un Cuaderno Rosacruz.”
 
Pierre Dujols was one of the key persons behind the plural author Fulcanelli. He wrote several works, still being republished today, under his own name or the pseudonym Magophon (Voice of the Magician). A recent published book, titled Les nobles écrits de Pierre et Antoine Dujols, compiles most of his writings, including the famous Commentaries on the “Mutus Liber:” Hypotipose, and in which the entirety of the Great Work is presented in hieroglyphic figures. He also used these years of relative inactivity to develop and publish Bibliographie générale des Sciences occultes: a general bibliography of the occult in twenty-two volumes, revealing his immense erudition. And this work is repeatedly cited in Fulcanelli' books.

But in his La Chevalerie Amoureuse Troubadours, Félibres et Rose-Croix, he makes a bold comment about the Ultramontanism, the Rosicrucians, and the Templars (and I translate):


You will find a complete analysis in the second appendix of the Spanish edition of A Rosicrucian Notebook: “Un Cuaderno Rosacruz.”


list of recipients awarded this honor

 
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