The Stargate
“Where’d I put my keys?” my friend asks.
We’re on the phone. He lives in Eastern Europe. I’ve never seen his face, nevermind the inside of his home.
I answer: “I want to say high up. Above my eye level. I see a shelf — a white shelf. Is it behind a bottle?”
“Yup. You got it.”
It’s not the kind of bottle I imagined. I pictured an empty wine bottle because I have one in my room that I use to water my plants. But the information that got through all the filters — what was said — was correct.
A while passes and after relocating I say: “okay, where am I?”
“Blue room, spiky plants… oak wood?”
I’m sitting in my kitchen. The walls are light blue. Across from me are two aloe vera plants. I’m at a wood table. It’s made of an old tree recently cut down.
“Not oak, the rest is right,” was my reply at the time. I’ve since been informed that the kitchen floorboards are indeed white oak wood.
We went on like this until we got bored of it.
We were testing a hypothesis: that remote viewing is really just a specialized kind of spinal tunneling. If so, we should both be good at it right from the jump. It appeared that we were.
Remote viewing began to be officially investigated in 1977 by the United States Defense Intelligence Agency as part of the now declassified Stargate Project.
Remote viewing is the ability to obtain information about something without having direct access to that information.
Spinal Tunneling is more abstract. It’s something like the ability to consistently “guess” correctly. Of course, it’s not guessing. It’s when you close a teleological circuit by finding an intimation leading to an optimal outcome.
If this is possible, it would seem to be a more comprehensive picture of what remote viewers are doing, and that would explain why they sometimes report “seeing” things that do not resemble the target, but result in accurate descriptions.
This is more like prophesy than science fiction ESP. It would also make remote viewing unreliable for two main reasons:
If acquiring certain knowledge about a particular target will not end well for the viewer, the viewer may fail to obtain it.
If false knowledge will result in a good outcome for the viewer, the viewer might obtain that information instead.
There is no right answer to the wrong question.
This is why it is far better to take an open and receptive stance than to seek out truth claims about specific targets for preconceived objectives.
If the official Stargate story is not disinformation (which it might be), this would in turn explain a few other things. It would account for why the experiments were often successful, but the program proved not militarily useful. The nervous system may refuse to cooperate or “shoot to miss” when it is in one’s best interests to do so.
There is a transcript in which a remote viewer describes a dying Martian civilization in 1 million BC. If we accept the “remote viewing” frame, we must take this seriously.
However, if this was spinal tunneling, and if feeding the US government a cock and bull story about ancient aliens was the best of all possible routes available to the viewer, then that is one way the circuit could close.
You’re probably wondering: how could that be the best route for the viewer? One answer is that some principality working invisibly could artificially ensure that it was if, for reasons we cannot now know, this is what it wants in the record.
We won’t explore that presently though.
Project Stargate was founded upon the bizarre assumption that human perception and congition are impartial, or else, that a primeval super-intelligence with the means to access any information in the universe would be more loyal to the US government than itself.
Experiment, however, consists in asking a definite question which excludes as far as possible anything disturbing and irrelevant… There is created in the laboratory a situation which is artificially restricted to the question and which compels Nature to give an unequivocal answer. The workings of Nature in her unrestricted wholeness are completely excluded.
- Carl Jung
The Watchtower
MARCH 4, 2023 (Active Imagination Session)
The elevator climbs to the top of the tower. I find a large circular chamber with windows all around. She gestures for me to look outside.
I see scores of prismatic obsidian monoliths standing below us in the desert. The multitude extends to the horizon in every direction.
…
"What is this place?" I ask.
"This is the world above the world," she says.
"When did you find it?"
"Two years ago — twenty one months ago.”
This was unusually precise. Zell tends to speak in riddles and cryptic language. This is the only time she has ever answered a question so directly.
Rewind exactly twenty one months from March 4th, 2023. You land on June 4, 2021. My video Apokalypsis: the Architecture of Creation was uploaded the next day.
27 minutes and 53 seconds into that video, this is what you’ll find:
It’s a stock clip from a collection called Solar City on Artgrid which shows a concentrated solar power plant. This fact will be significant later.
From the watchtower, Zell was able to point a finger at a monolith, apparently “activating” it. Then provided me with instructions at Niagara Falls.
These were:
Ride the Niagara Skywheel
Go to the top of Skylon Tower
Walk three circles around the observation deck.
This was the first plainly visible “secret passage.”
These instructions seemed so ridiculous at the time that I almost refused to follow through, but if I had not, later events would not have lined up properly.
I’ve come to believe Skylon tower was used to represent my spine. The elevator ride to the top seemed to be a callback to the ascent of the angel’s pyramid:
…Around then, the angel’s pyramid reappeared. I saw the point move back up to the shining blue capstone, and I felt that same something ascending my vertebrae back into my skull…
I discovered Skylon tower’s resemblance to the djed pillar some time after this.
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It’s not an exact match, but it’s quite similar, and the symbolism checks out:
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The spine is related to the tree of life. It is generally estimated that Christ was crucified at the age of 33. The spine contains the same number of vertebrae (though the lower nine fuse together by adulthood).
According to Jewish mythology, the “luz” is a bone in the spinal column which does not decay and is said to house the soul. The regeneration of the body at the resurrection is said to begin with this bone.
Cross-culturally the spine is related to the axis mundi — often represented as a “world tree” joining Heaven and Earth.
The tree of knowledge, containing the serpent is also probably related.
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