I had a look in the book, and I found something interesting.
Here is the plot:
Odysseus ransacks Ismara, a city, and that's when his troubles begin. When leaving the city, a storm catches his ships.
" Thence we sailed on with aching hearts, glad to be clear of death, though missing our dear comrades ; yet the curved ships did not pass on till we had called three times to each poor comrade who died upon the plain, cut off by the Ciconians. But now cloud-gathering Zeus sent the north wind against our ships in a fierce tempest, and covered with his clouds both land and sea ; night broke from heaven. The ships drove headlong onward, their sails torn into tatters by the fury of the wind."
He wanders and reaches a faeric place, where the mind becomes dizzy:
"on the tenth we touched the land of Lotus-eaters, men who make food of flower ... whosoever of them ate the lotus' honeyed fruit wished to bring tidings back no more and never to leave the place"
He leaves and reaches the Cylops:
"Thence we sailed on with aching hearts, and came to the land of the Cyclops, a rude and lawless folk"
He fights the cyclop, and when leaving in a hurry, the cyclop throws rocks at his boat:
"...tearing off the top of a high hill, he flung it at us. It fell before the dark-bowed ship a little space, but failed to reach the rudder's tip. The sea surged underneath the stone as it came down, and swiftly toward the land the wash of water swept us, like a flood-tide from the deep, and forced us back to shore"
"...once more picking up a stone much larger than before, the Cyclops swung and sent it, putting forth stupendous power. It fell behind the dark-bowed ship a little space, but failed to reach the rudder's tip. The sea surged underneath the stone as it came down, but the wave swept us forward and forced us to the shore"
Here is a session mentioning cometary bombardment + water:
Session 16 April 2016
(Pierre) One last question: about the frozen mammoths. During the last session, we suggested that the cause of the flash-frozen mammoths was a Super Derecho like a giant thunderstorm that deflected the jet stream down towards the Earth's surface, and that's what flash-froze the mammoths. You said, "Close enough." So that's not exactly what happened. What are we missing here?
A: Impact sending enormous stream of heat and matter upward, creating a vacuum, followed by induction of super cooled air.
Precisions:
Session 16 September 2017
(Pierre) Let's shift to a more cheerful topic: cometary bombardments. So we discussed the death of the woolly mammoths due to a cometary bombardment. I would like to know about the transfer of water from Mars to planet Earth, when did it occur relative to this cometary bombardment? How many years before, how many years after?
A: Within 40 years more or less.
Q: (Pierre) So cometary bombardment, and then Mars water transfer?
(L) And how did that happen?
A: Electric arc of cosmic proportions.
A: Mars was much closer temporarily. Tales of gods fighting in the sky and castration of Chronos relate to this event.
Q: (Pierre) So, this massive inflow of water from Mars reaching Earth...
A: Much of it precipitated as snow at poles, and was released into oceans gradually. Water moving through space is not liquid.
(Pierre) Well, that's answered my question I think. I was about to ask is this water transfer why sea levels raised about 50 meters during the Younger Dryas while the temperatures were dropping?
A: Yes
Figuratively speaking, it would match, in the sense of "impact & water". But reality was a transfer of water from Mars, to Earth, manifesting as snow, at poles.
The cyclop episode may be a match.
Session 29 December 2018
(Joe) When you asked years ago about the Clovis people being wiped out and stuff, you asked a few questions about it. Last month they discovered this Greenland crater that they're dating to roughly 12,000 BC that wiped out the I didn't find anything in the sessions where you asked how many space rocks or chunks actually impacted the planet? Do you know?
(L) Oh yeah, but if you read about that, you know that there were several big ones. And there were lots and lots of small ones, like the Carolina Bays. Those were overhead explosions.
(Joe) But it's not accepted that that's what it is.
(L) Not by mainstream science.
(Joe) They're gonna have to start looking at it now with the discovery of this crater.
(L) And the people who've theorized about it, they say that a really big chunk hit the Greenland ice sheet and went into the Hudson Bay or something. Another one went into Lake Superior or Lake Michigan... I forgot which one. So, it seems that there were at least three big ones.
The problem is that the cyclop sends two rocks - and here there is a mention of three main comets.
Was the cyclop episode a representation of the main comets? Or else? Even, nothing?
If correct, who was the cyclop? The last session (November 1st) explains that Odysseus wasn't a real person:
Session 1 November 2025
Q: (Joe) Was Odysseus a real person?
A: No
The standard physical framework, based on a history, stops here. No Odysseus. So... No cyclop? No island?
Who was Odysseus, and so, "what" to frame within "a fight, from a ship, against a cyclop, on an island, sending rocks"?
The Odyssey precisely relates Odysseus' travels - at least from the start, up to after the cyclop episode. It's quite precise and we can count the days. I am taking note of this but it is not over yet. I would hope that we may use this, but I am not sure.
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An interesting perspective is that the events in the Odyssey are relating to a past event, and this is mostly about the destruction of Atlantis.
Session 13 January 2024
Q: (seek10) C's mentioned three destruction events for Atlantis. So does Edgar Cayce. 'Cayce Atlantis' book suggests three destruction event years are around 50K BCE, 28K BCE, and 10K BCE. C's already confirmed the last one is close to 8498 BCE (10 December 1994 session). Are the first two destruction years Cayce suggested, correct?
Atlantis got destroyed in three steps, and the Odyssey thus seems to relate one of those three.
What's interesting is that Indian texts refer to the same events:
Session 18 December 2021
(Sid) What was the real motivation behind the mythological Indian texts of Mahabharata and Ramayana?
A: Record events of great significance.
Q: (L) Okay. And the second part of the question:
(sid) Are there any factual events or just adaptations of Odyssey, etc?
A: Odyssey was part of the same phenomenon.
Q: (L) So the Odyssey was another group of people recording the same sort of events?
A: Yes.
Q: (L) But recording it in their particular way?
A: Yes.
Q: (L) So, you don't have to say that one was the derivation of the other - just that there was something significant enough going on for people to get upset about it and write about it in the only way they could. They didn't have the scientific language that we have. They had to write about things in the way that they were able.
And so, while the Odyssey seems restricted to the last destruction of Atlantis, several Indian texts may be descriptives of the first two events (and the third one of course); here is an example:
https://cassiopaea.org/forum/threads/session-6-july-2024.54848/
(seek10) When were the bits and pieces of information packaged into the Vedas? Was it before the Younger Dryas Event around 16,000 BCE?
A: Yes
Would be interesting to compare the Odyssey with "the Indian text relating the third stage of the destruction of Atlantis" (which one it is, I don't know!). There could be two or three rocks, possibly sent by a "character".
In addition, Atlantis got destroyed, from two factors:
- crystals turning autonoms (and nuts)
- several armies fighting "the Atlantis army"
Can we find this in the Odyssey?
Session 29 July 2023
(Ze Germans) If Russia's karmic role is an adversary of Atlantis, who was playing this role back then before the final destruction of Atlantis?
A: Same locale, different names. Read The Iliad and Odyssey for clues.
Session 23 August 2025
(Navigator) Yeah, just a real quick one. In a previous session, the Cassiopaeans mentioned that we should look into the Iliad and the Odyssey for references to the people that once opposed Atlantis. Are these Phaecians, these guys that were against Atlantis?
A: Close.
To sum up:
1) Odysseus ransacks Cicones, and this triggers a reaction from Zeus. An anthropocosmic connection of some sort? Troubles begin starting here.
2) This starts a storm:
cloud-gathering Zeus sent the north wind against our ships in a fierce tempest, and covered with his clouds both land and sea ; night broke from heaven
Sky is obscured.
3) Then, Odysseus lands in the lotus eaters, where it's kind of like a dream. Kind of drugged, alternative reality etc.
4) After this, he meets the cyclop and two rocks are thrown in the sea.
This would be a short chunk, matching the reality of the Younger Dryas, and the Odyssey. I wouldn't pretend it to be objective, and this could be representative of minor events.
The whole plot is organized around "ship sailing from point X to point Y". If Odysseus wasn't a real person, what were those trips?