Well I'm a stranger here in a strange land
But I know this is where I belong
I ramble and gamble for the one I love
And the hills will give me a song

 

yourmaj3sty:

At the Temple Of Horus in Egypt(Edfu Temple), there are something called the Edfu Building Texts. In these texts, it describes a time BEFORE the Egyptians were in Egypt…the ‘first time’ or “Zep Tepi”. In these texts, it talks about how a group of DIViNE beings known as the “Seven Sages” or “the Builder Gods”. They were believed to have settled in Egypt and established “sacred mounds” along the Nile River.   They also talk about that these race of people came from an mystical island…MORE THAN LIKELY Atlantis! These beings were often referred to as the“Shemsu Hor” or disciples of Horus. They were a race of people/beings who dwelt on ten pre-diluvian islands. Egyptian priests also told a Greek philosopher named Solon that Atlantis was real and who they were… 

yourmaj3sty:

At the Temple Of Horus in Egypt(Edfu Temple), there are something called the Edfu Building Texts. In these texts, it describes a time BEFORE the Egyptians were in Egypt…the ‘first time’ or “Zep Tepi”. In these texts, it talks about how a group of DIViNE beings known as the “Seven Sages” or “the Builder Gods”. They were believed to have settled in Egypt and established “sacred mounds” along the Nile River. 

  They also talk about that these race of people came from an mystical island…MORE THAN LIKELY Atlantis! These beings were often referred to as the“Shemsu Hor” or disciples of Horus. They were a race of people/beings who dwelt on ten pre-diluvian islands. Egyptian priests also told a Greek philosopher named Solon that Atlantis was real and who they were… 

(Source: your-maj3sty)

endilletante:


“The mysterious maya”, by George E. Stuart and Gene S. Stuart, photographs by David Alan Harvey and Otis Imboden, National geographic, 1977.

endilletante:

“The mysterious maya”, by George E. Stuart and Gene S. Stuart, photographs by David Alan Harvey and Otis Imboden, National geographic, 1977.

… Even our purest and holiest beliefs can be traced to the crudest origins… . It is painful — there is no denying it — to interpret radiant things from the shadow-side, and thus in a measure reduce them to their origins in dreary filth. But it seems to me to be an imperfection in things of beauty, and a weakness in man, if an explanation from the shadow-side has a destructive effect. The horror which we feel for Freudian interpretations is entirely due to our own barbaric or childish naivete, which believes that there can be heights without corresponding depths, and which blinds us to the really “final” truth that, when carried to extremes, opposites meet. Our mistake would lie in supposing that what is radiant no longer exists because it has been explained from the shadow-side. This is a regrettable error into which Freud himself has fallen. Yet the shadow belongs to the light as the evil belongs to the good, and vice versa… .

Carl Gustav Jung. Problems of Psychotherapy. Modern Man in Search of a Soul.  (via seeyoulateraggregator)