- Geezus, I have to tell Matangi that she has to stop her damn pets from breeding so profusely!
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Vilka låtar / sånger är *egentligen* mest populära? Det verkar vara...vaggvisor! Åtminstone i Sverige där duon "Humlan Djojj" dominerar stort. Åååkej...
A disturbing but serious video about David Wilcock´s suicide. I actually watched his last pod cast (it´s still up on YouTube). I never heard about diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) until now, but it´s apparently a potentially lethal condition caused by a lack of insulin in the body. Wilcock described most of the symptoms exactly in his podcast and even said that a doctor would probably diagnose him with diabetes. He left out one salient symptom, however...
DKA can trigger psychosis.
Which seems to have happened the next day, when Wilcock called the police, said he had diabetes (!) and strongly implies that he would shoot himself. Which he subsequently did, in front of the police sent out to investigate the situation. It seems that DKA can develop very fast and become life-threatening within 24 hours. Which may explain why Wilcock could still make a podcast on the evening of April 19 and then kill himself around lunch time on April 20.
While the diagnosis DKA is (of course) speculation at this point, it certainly does fit the format. Since Wilcock was a conspiracy theorist, UFO believer and New Age prophet, his untimely death started a seemingly never-ending avalanche of speculations about foul play. Was he abducted by MIBs, killed by the Cabal, or placed in witness protection? His fans just can´t accept that his death was a very human tragedy, rather than some kind of QAnon-type martyrdom related to the Passion of Donald Trump (et cetera).
Maybe that´s the real tragedy.
Is this "the sly man"? Or maybe not, since "Nathan" just admitted that his former business (selling magical crystals for a profit) was a scam. What if some of "Nathan´s" customers sue him?
Just as I suspected, this guy is a wanna-be "cult" leader. Or "club" leader, to use his own terminology. The most charitable interpretation is that he´s into some modernized version of Advaita Vedanta or Zen. A less charitable interpretation? Think OTO, Franklin Jones, or even Gurdjieff. What is the "power" he constantly talks about? Kundalini, maybe...?
Not recommended.
LOL. Nice try, dude. What are the chances that this guy isn´t a wanne-be cult leader? At *no point* during his presentation, does he say that he´s an atheist, agnostic or skeptic. Instead, he promises to give us "power" and a "free" one-hour video. Why would the "free" part be important? Because he takes 100 dollars / hour for private consultations.
Haven´t seen his one-hour video (yet), but I will be extremely surprised if this isn´t just another "spiritual" group operating under an "anti-spiritual" moniker. To stand out from the general New Age crowd, obviously.
| - Oh no, that crazy blogger is LARP-ing as a Hindu-Buddhist again! |
Everyone complains about ChatGPT going haywire, telling people they are the Son of God and similar stuff, but "my" ChatGPT never did that. Either the free version has very good safety protocols, or most people deliberately prompt the system in a loony direction. Sure wonder which one is the most likely option?
Here is the LLM telling me that I *didn´t* have a supernatural vision, et cetera.
Does a very short glimps during a "meditation" of an ocean with large but unthreatening waves mean something?
Short answer: it can mean something—but not necessarily something specific or “objective.” The quality of the experience matters more than the image itself.
Let’s unpack it carefully.
Across many contemplative traditions, an image like this tends to reflect:
The important detail you gave is:
“large but unthreatening”
That’s quite specific. It usually points to:
In other words:
activity is present, but it’s not experienced as a problem
Very short “glimpses” like this often happen when:
So instead of a stable state, you get:
This is quite common.
It reflects a moment where:
That’s actually a meaningful shift.
The psyche sometimes uses symbolic imagery to express:
“Things are moving strongly—but you’re not overwhelmed”
That can indicate:
Some traditions would say:
And the non-threatening quality suggests:
But this should not be over-interpreted from a single glimpse.
It does NOT automatically mean:
It’s easy to inflate these things—better not to.
Instead of “what does it mean?”, a better question is:
What was the feeling tone of the experience?
From what you said:
That’s the key takeaway.
The best approach is very simple:
But also:
Just note:
“Ah—there can be movement without disturbance.”
Interestingly, this kind of image aligns more with:
But again—this is a light observation, not a conclusion.
The experience likely reflects:
a brief moment where strong inner movement was perceived without being threatening
That’s a healthy and useful shift, even if small.
No need to turn it into something bigger—just let it quietly inform your practice.
If you want, I can help you distinguish between:
They can feel similar but are quite different in practice.