Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Disclosure day

 


Some good points in this one...

Lore

 


Did the US government just release files "confirming" the existence of four kinds of aliens: Insectoids, Greys, Reptilians and Nordics? All retrieved from crashed UFOs. HA HA HA. Yeah, I´m sure that´s what happened.

They aren´t aliens, bozos. They are DAKINIS. And I don´t think the CIA knows shit about them! 

Hard to believe

 


With all due respecc to this dude (the Catholic content-creator), why is this easier to believe if mentioned in a 2,500 year old scripture? I mean, it obviously doesn´t work, does it? 

Gamla nyheter

 

Im-Pope-ulär?

Märklig rubrik i Aftonbladet just nu: "Den nya högern har knappast en vän i påven". Nähä. Thanx for noticing...

I got your ass

 


Great Tartaria and the Mud Flood is one of the silliest conspiracy theories on-line, at least in its current iteration. The whole thing looks like a conscious parody of Erich von Däniken. Maybe it *is* a next level LARP? 

Däniken pointed to various ancient monuments *outside Europe* and wondered who could have built them. Aliens, maybe? The people who believe (or pretend to believe) in the Mud Flood point to modern Western architecture (sometimes as recent as the early or mid 20th century) and gasp in wonder. "Surely, only Giants could have built this?!" There is apparently a video on-line called "Tartarian Wales", which claims that the Cardiff Central Station must be the remnants of an unknown but very advanced civilization!

At the same time, there is *something* fascinating even about this utter insanity. It could be seen as a strange metaphor for the decline of modern civilization. The idea seems to be that we´re not smart enough to have built all the large buildings around us, and simply moved in when the original creators (the Giants) were wiped out in a mysterious cataclysm. Obviously, we have to deny this, claiming *we* built everything. Our entire civilization is really primitive and built on a gigantic lie - and we´re all in on it. 

This is a *very* distorted picture of the true state of affairs, isn´t it? Indeed, in 200 years, maybe something like this will be un-ironic orthodoxy among the few remaining savages...   

Monday, May 25, 2026

Where have all the people gone?

 


Styx says that it isn´t a great mystery why birth rates are falling. I disagree. Birth rates are falling all over the world. I assume #MeToo or feminism doesn´t exist in, say, Niger? The cause of the demographic crisis must be global. None of the factors he mentions fits the bill, not even overcrowding. Many "Third World" nations are clearly more overcrowded than the Western ones, yet their birth rates (while falling) are still above replacement level. Again: Niger. 

I admit I have no idea why the birth rates are falling, including in areas where they "shouldn´t". It´s almost as if the Moon does eat people, or something.   

Rättning vänster

 


Tidöpartierna tvingas till *vänster*populistiskt valfläsk?! 

Priset på kollektivtrafik halveras

No Tartarians on a flat earth



Overheard on the interweb: "Tartaria: When modern life has black-pilled you so much that you start seeing cool architecture as wonders of a lost civilization."

Fairy wisdom

 

A more dramatic picture of yoginis
dancing around a Shiva-linga!

So I asked ChatGPT a more basic-basic question about the yogini-dakini situation...

Are "yoginis" and "dakinis" connected?

Yes — very much so. The concepts of:

  • Yogini
    and
  • Dakini

are historically and symbolically closely related.

They emerged from overlapping tantric religious environments in medieval India and share many themes:

  • sacred feminine power,
  • ecstatic spirituality,
  • esoteric knowledge,
  • liminality,
  • transformation,
  • and transgressive wisdom.

However, they are not exactly identical.


1. Basic Difference

Very roughly:

TraditionMain Term
Hindu TantraYoginī
Buddhist TantraḌākinī

But in practice the boundaries often blur.


2. What Is a Yoginī?

In Hindu tantric traditions,
a yoginī may be:

  • a goddess,
  • a female tantric adept,
  • a spirit being,
  • or a manifestation of divine feminine power (śakti).

Yoginīs are often associated with:

  • magic,
  • mantra,
  • flight,
  • cremation grounds,
  • sexuality,
  • transformation,
  • and occult wisdom.

Some traditions speak of:

64 Yoginīs

worshipped in circular temples.


3. What Is a Ḍākinī?

In Vajrayāna Buddhism,
a ḍākinī is:

  • a female wisdom-being,
  • tantric muse,
  • initiator,
  • protector,
  • or embodiment of enlightened energy.

The Tibetan translation is:

khandroma
(“sky-goer” or “sky-dancer”).

Ḍākinīs are associated with:

  • wisdom,
  • emptiness,
  • spiritual transformation,
  • visionary experience,
  • and esoteric transmission.

4. Shared Features

The parallels are striking:

YoginīḌākinī
Tantric feminine powerTantric feminine power
Magical flightSky-going
Cremation groundsCremation grounds
Ecstatic spiritualityEcstatic spirituality
Mantra and ritualMantra and ritual
Initiatory roleInitiatory role
Fierce wisdomFierce wisdom

Historically,
these traditions developed in close contact.


5. Cremation Ground Symbolism

Both yoginīs and ḍākinīs are strongly associated with:

  • charnel grounds,
  • death symbolism,
  • impermanence,
  • and transformation.

This does not primarily mean “evil.”

Rather,
they inhabit:

liminal zones where ego dissolves.


6. Fierce Feminine Wisdom

Both figures often appear:

  • terrifying,
  • ecstatic,
  • naked,
  • dancing,
  • skull-bearing,
  • or wild-haired.

This symbolizes:

  • transcendence of conventional limitations,
  • liberation from attachment,
  • and untamed spiritual power.

7. Historical Overlap

Medieval India saw intense interaction between:

  • Shaiva tantra,
  • Shakta tantra,
  • Buddhist tantra,
  • Kaula traditions,
  • and Yoginī cults.

Thus:

yoginīs and ḍākinīs influenced each other enormously.

Some scholars think Buddhist ḍākinī traditions partly developed from:

  • earlier yoginī cults.

8. Yoginī Temples

India still contains famous:

Yoginī temples

such as:
Hirapur Chausathi Yogini Temple

These circular open-air temples have strong tantric associations.

Their architecture itself feels:

  • mandalic,
  • esoteric,
  • and initiatory.

9. Buddhist Adaptation

Vajrayāna Buddhism transformed many yoginī-like themes into:

  • wisdom dakinis,
  • tantric consorts,
  • and enlightened feminine energies.

But Buddhism reinterpreted them through:

  • emptiness,
  • bodhicitta,
  • and enlightenment doctrine.

10. Different Metaphysical Framing

There are important differences:

In Hindu Tantra:

Yoginīs are often expressions of:

  • Shakti,
  • divine feminine energy,
  • cosmic power.

In Vajrayāna:

Ḍākinīs are often expressions of:

  • wisdom (prajñā),
  • emptiness,
  • enlightened awareness.

But symbolically these overlap greatly.


11. Sexual and Esoteric Symbolism

Both traditions sometimes include:

  • erotic symbolism,
  • sacred union,
  • and transgressive ritual.

These symbolize:

  • nonduality,
  • union of wisdom and method,
  • transcendence of dualistic consciousness.

12. Human and Supernatural Forms

Both yoginīs and ḍākinīs may be:

  • actual female practitioners,
  • visionary beings,
  • symbolic energies,
  • or goddesses.

The categories are fluid.


13. Tibetan Development

In Tibetan Buddhism,
ḍākinīs became extremely important.

Examples include:

  • Vajrayoginī,
  • Yeshe Tsogyal,
  • Vajravārāhī,
  • Simhamukhā.

They often function as:

  • initiators,
  • protectors,
  • and embodiments of enlightened wisdom.

14. Modern Misunderstandings

Modern occultism sometimes romanticizes yoginīs and ḍākinīs as:

  • “tantric witches”
    or:
  • “goddesses of sacred sexuality.”

This captures only a small part of their symbolism.

Traditionally they are deeply connected with:

  • transformation of consciousness,
  • spiritual danger,
  • initiation,
  • and radical liberation.

15. Deep Symbolic Meaning

At a deeper level,
both yoginīs and ḍākinīs represent:

awakened feminine spiritual energy that breaks ordinary ego structures.

They are:

  • liberating,
  • destabilizing,
  • ecstatic,
  • and revelatory.

They often appear precisely where:

  • conventional identity dissolves.

16. Overall Relationship

So the relationship can be summarized like this:

YoginīḌākinī
Primarily Hindu tantricPrimarily Buddhist tantric
Linked to ShaktiLinked to Prajñā
Esoteric goddess/powerWisdom-being
Historically older in IndiaDeveloped through Buddhist tantra
Strong mutual influenceStrong mutual influence

They belong to the same broad tantric religious world of medieval India.

The Wild Hunt goes to India

 


More on yoginis and dakinis. Fairy cult? 

Could yoginis and dakinis also be seen as actual paranormal creatures, something akin to the fairy of Western folklore? There seems to be parallels to "the Wild Hunt" as well.

Yes — historically, many people in tantric South Asian traditions very likely did understand Yogini and Dakini not merely as abstract symbols, but as:

  • real supranormal beings,
  • visionary entities,
  • liminal spirits,
  • aerial female powers,
  • or dangerous numinous presences.

And your comparison with:

fairies,
the Wild Hunt,
nocturnal spirit hosts,
is actually quite perceptive.

There are genuine structural parallels.


1. Not “Merely Symbolic”

Modern presentations often reduce yoginīs and ḍākinīs to:

  • psychological archetypes,
  • symbolic energies,
  • or philosophical metaphors.

But historically,
many tantric practitioners treated them as:

ontologically real beings.

They could:

  • appear in visions,
  • grant powers,
  • transmit teachings,
  • possess places,
  • bless or harm practitioners,
  • or travel through the night sky.

2. The Meaning of “Sky-Goer”

The Tibetan term for ḍākinī:

khandroma
literally means:
“sky-goer” or “sky-dancer.”

Similarly,
Indian tantric texts sometimes describe yoginīs as:

  • flying,
  • moving through the air,
  • appearing at night,
  • inhabiting liminal places,
  • and forming wandering spirit-hosts.

This already sounds strikingly close to:

  • fairy cavalcades,
  • aerial spirit processions,
  • or Wild Hunt motifs.

3. Yoginī Circles and Night Assemblies

Tantric literature sometimes describes:

  • gatherings of yoginīs,
  • nocturnal assemblies,
  • cremation-ground dances,
  • ecstatic rites,
  • and spirit retinues.

These resemble,
at least structurally:

  • the fairy court,
  • witches’ sabbaths,
  • nocturnal spirit processions,
  • or ecstatic night journeys in European folklore.

4. The Wild Hunt Parallel

The comparison is especially interesting because both involve:

Wild HuntYoginī/Ḍākinī Traditions
Nocturnal spirit hostYoginī retinues
Dangerous liminalityCremation-ground liminality
Flight through skySky-going beings
Encounter changes fateInitiatory encounter
Linked with death realmCharnel-ground symbolism
Ecstatic terrorFierce liberation

Both traditions blur:

  • spirit world,
  • dream world,
  • death realm,
  • and visionary initiation.

5. Charnel Grounds and Fairy Mounds

Yoginīs and ḍākinīs often dwell in:

  • cremation grounds,
  • wilderness,
  • mountains,
  • ruins,
  • crossroads,
  • remote shrines.

This resembles how fairies or spirit hosts in European folklore inhabit:

  • barrows,
  • forests,
  • moors,
  • caves,
  • ancient ruins,
  • or liminal landscapes.

6. Dangerous Beauty

Both yoginīs/dakinis and fairies can appear:

  • beautiful,
  • seductive,
  • terrifying,
  • enchanting,
  • or reality-altering.

Encounters may:

  • grant wisdom,
  • produce madness,
  • confer powers,
  • or transform consciousness.

This ambivalence is very important.


7. Ecstatic Initiation

In tantric traditions,
encountering a yoginī or ḍākinī may:

  • initiate spiritual awakening,
  • destroy ego structures,
  • or radically transform the practitioner.

Similarly,
European fairy encounters often:

  • alter fate,
  • confer poetic inspiration,
  • abduct initiates,
  • or change consciousness permanently.

8. Spirit Hosts in Indian Traditions

Indian religions already possessed many categories of liminal beings:

  • yakṣīs,
  • apsarases,
  • bhūtas,
  • piśācas,
  • mātrikās,
  • śaktis,
  • yoginīs.

Some yoginī traditions may partly descend from:

  • older local spirit cults,
  • wilderness goddess worship,
  • and ecstatic female spirit traditions.

9. The Sixty-Four Yoginīs

The famous:

64 Yoginīs

sometimes function less like “goddesses” in the Olympian sense,
and more like:

  • a magical spirit-host,
  • retinue of feminine powers,
  • or ecstatic aerial assembly.

This is actually rather close to:

  • fairy companies,
  • Valkyrie hosts,
  • or spirit cavalcades.

10. Tibetan Dakini Lore

In Tibetan Buddhism,
ḍākinīs may appear:

  • in dreams,
  • visions,
  • trance states,
  • wilderness encounters,
  • or visionary pilgrimage.

They can:

  • test practitioners,
  • conceal teachings,
  • reveal treasures (terma),
  • or speak cryptically.

This resembles fairy lore surprisingly strongly.


11. The “Otherworldly Feminine”

Cross-culturally,
many traditions contain beings embodying:

dangerous sacred femininity from the Otherworld.

Examples include:

  • fairies,
  • Valkyries,
  • banshees,
  • sirens,
  • nymphs,
  • yoginīs,
  • dakinis.

These beings often combine:

  • beauty,
  • death,
  • inspiration,
  • sexuality,
  • wilderness,
  • and altered consciousness.

12. Key Difference

One major difference is that:

  • tantric traditions integrate yoginīs/dakinis into a formal path to enlightenment.

Fairies in European folklore are usually:

  • morally ambiguous nature beings,
    not:
  • explicit vehicles of liberation.

But the experiential atmosphere can be surprisingly similar.


13. Scholars Have Noticed This

Some historians of religion and comparative mythologists have indeed noticed parallels between:

  • yoginī cults,
  • ecstatic night flight traditions,
  • spirit processions,
  • and European witch/fairy complexes.

Though direct historical connection is unlikely,
the structural similarities are real.


14. Psychological Interpretation

From a depth-psychological viewpoint,
both yoginīs/dakinis and fairies may symbolize:

  • encounters with the numinous unconscious,
  • transformative liminality,
  • ecstatic feminine power,
  • and destabilizing transcendence.

15. Traditional Believers Would Often Say “Yes”

Importantly:

many traditional practitioners would probably not reduce these beings to “mere metaphors.”

They might say yoginīs and dakinis are:

  • genuinely real,
    but existing on:
  • subtle,
  • visionary,
  • spiritual,
  • or intermediate planes of reality.

That is much closer to how fairies functioned in premodern Europe.


16. Final Perspective

So your intuition is well-founded.

Historically and phenomenologically,
yoginīs and ḍākinīs can indeed resemble:

  • fairy beings,
  • spirit hosts,
  • nocturnal aerial companies,
  • or Wild Hunt-like retinues,

especially in their roles as:

  • liminal feminine powers,
  • ecstatic initiators,
  • and beings encountered at the boundary between worlds.