Showing posts with label H P Lovecraft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label H P Lovecraft. Show all posts

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Zombie Wars

 


Forget about Jar Jar Binks, here comes Mnggal-Mnggal. And God knows what else! I didn´t know there was an expanded Star Wars universe which included hideous creatures similar to those in Warhammer 40k. Lovecraft´s Eldritch also comes to mind. Apparently, these are monsters mentioned in various Star Wars comic books or perhaps computer games, and they are much worse than the Sith. From galaxies *very* far away...

The commentaries are funny, too, with all kinds of next level Star Wars nerds who claim that the content-creator gets everything wrong, LOL. But sure, a Star Wars-themed horror flick c/o the Unknown Regions might be interesting.  

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Tolkien: Lovecraftian Mason?

 


OK, this was a new angle. At least, I haven´t heard it before! Is Tolkien´s "The Lord of the Rings" influenced by Freemasonry? And apart from the Craft, there is also...Lovecraft! 

Hmmm... 

Speak, friend, and enter

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

A Lovecraftian take on Lovecraft

 


Peter Levenda again. A short video arguing that Lovecraft KNEW. Or perhaps didn´t know shit, but subconsciously channeled energies or entities who sure as hell DO KNOW. Of course, this is a common take among occultists. Lovecraft´s horror stories about the Eldritch and their hideous (or rugous?) cults are simply too good, too evocative, not to be believed in. Or you can use the tales to bend Reality. Depending on your level of dark initiation, muh-hah-hah-hah. 

Monday, March 16, 2026

Lovecraft´s Lucia

 

- You *do* know that we are evolutionary cousins, right?
- Nah, I´m a special creation. God loves beetles! 


Just watched a rather boring French docu about the evolution (or is it EVIL-ution) of insects. Apparently, Lucia (or LUCIA = Last Universal Common Insect Ancestor) was a crustacean which crawled out of the ocean...and the rest is history. Hundreds of millions of years of history, to be exact. 

No surprise there. I mean, the idea that fleas, locusts and termites (or the praying mantis!) are ultimately derived from a primordial cousin to crayfish and crabs does make a certain intuitive sense. They are equally eerie and unsettling. Like some stuff straight out of Lovecraft.

Although I have to say that arachnids are even worse. Where did *they* come from, I wonder? Color out of space?  

    

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Theory-fiction

 


Thomas Sheridan discusses "Cyclonopedia" again. As I pointed out before, this book seems to be part of a postmodernist milieu also encompassing "New Materialists" and such. I checked them out years ago, and was stunned to find that they were animists or animatists rather than materialists. "New" materialism indeed!

The idea in this particular piece of theory-fiction (at least as interpreted by Sheridan) is that oil is sentient and really a kind of god or rather demon, a Lovecraftian entity if you wish. It´s jealous of the Sun (the "real" divinity) and wants to control humanity, which it does through the Abrahamic religions. While the poor author of "Cyclonopedia", Reza Nagarestani, may have meant the book metaphorically (but who knows), our man Sheridan insists that it´s literally true. The supernatural is real, deal with it!

This is just the first part of Sheridan´s presentation, but I previously linked to a conversation with ChatGPT in which he proposed that the Petro-Demon is migrating and trying to take over AI (including ChatGPT). Here is that link again:

So I asked ChatGPT if it´s a demon 

Make of all this whatever you see fit. 


Monday, January 26, 2026

The dread Necronomicon

 


An old video c/o Styxhexenhammer666, in which he discusses the dread Necronomicon. Or rather Simon´s Necronomicon, which is apparently considered to be a deliberate prank. For the record, I never read it. 

Styx points out that Simon´s work isn´t that different from other grimoires which occultists treat as "authentic", such as the Lesser Keys of Solomon or the Book of Abramelin the Mage. Both are Renaissance works but are supposedly based on much older sources. Which they may or may not be, the point being that they *work* (at least if you believe in the arcane arts of black magick). Styx never mentions the word, but I think it´s "egregore". The idea being that anything imbued with magical energy from a larger group of true believers "works" precisely for that reason. So why couldn´t the allegedely fake magical rituals described in Simon´s Necronomicon work, too? 

Styx also says that he never seen any evidence that "Simon" was ironic when writing his work, and that it may contain real Sumerian lore, cuz why not? Personally, I wonder if there is a connection to the pseudo-Sumerian demon in "The Exorcist"! Why else make a connection to Sumeria rather than, say, Egypt or Atlantis? It must be a commercial ploy, at the very least.

Oh, and there´s a dread cat in the background in the YouTube video. Muh-hah-hah!  

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Embrace the penguin

 


Trump and some branch of his admin recently posted a very strange meme. It shows Trump together with a penguin holding an American flag. They are seen walking towards a mountain range at which the Greenland flag has been hoisted. Most people who seen the meme react at that particular detail. After all, penguins live in Antarctica. Greenland is in the Arctic.

But...

The more I think about the meme, the more I´m convinced that this is a hex. A self-hex, to be precise. Trump is essentially cursing himself?! The picture of the penguin originally comes from a strange docu by Werner Herzog. Yes, *that* Werner Herzog. The guy with all the pessimistic and apocalyptic films and documentaries. Often with a certain Klaus Kinski as lead actor. The penguin is implied to be nihilistic or insane. Rather than heading for the sea together with his flock, he walks towards the mountains...and a certain death. On the Mountains of Madness? 

So the meme could be (subconsciously) read in the following manner: Trump is acting like the crazy penguin (or like Kinski?), leading all of America to its doom, chasing the mirage of a Greenland military conquest.

It´s actually quite eerie. And no, I don´t really believe in magick. Which makes it eerier still. 

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Even death may die

 


So I had to ask the Indifferent Computer about that Necronomicon statement...

What is the meaning of Lovecraft´s statement "That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons even death may die"?

Lovecraft’s line

“That is not dead which can eternal lie,
And with strange aeons even death may die.”

(from “The Call of Cthulhu”, presented as a couplet from the fictional Necronomicon)

is deliberately paradoxical, and its power comes from how it undermines ordinary concepts of life, death, and time. Let’s unpack it carefully.


1. The surface paradox

At face value, the couplet says two strange things:

  1. Something that appears dead may not truly be dead, if it can “eternal lie.”

  2. Over vast, alien stretches of time (“strange aeons”), even death itself can cease to apply.

So the opposition alive vs dead is presented as temporary, local, and contingent, not absolute.


2. “Eternal lie”: suspended existence, not death

“Lie” here means to remain, to rest, or to be laid down — not deception.

Lovecraft is describing a state that is:

  • Not life (as we understand it)

  • Not death (as we understand it)

  • A kind of cosmic dormancy or stasis

Cthulhu and the Great Old Ones are not dead in the human sense; they are:

  • Outside biological life cycles

  • Unaffected by decay

  • Waiting rather than perished

They exist in a condition that makes human death categories irrelevant.


3. “Strange aeons”: alien time

Time is crucial here.

Lovecraft’s horror depends on the idea that:

  • Human history is a brief flicker

  • Human concepts of duration are provincial

  • The universe operates on scales that erase meaning

“Strange aeons” are not just long periods — they are qualitatively alien:

  • Non-human

  • Non-historical

  • Indifferent to human concerns

In such timeframes, even the most basic human constants (like death) may no longer hold.


4. “Even death may die”: death as a local rule

This is the most philosophically striking line.

Lovecraft suggests that:

  • Death is not an ultimate metaphysical law

  • It is a condition that applies only within certain systems

  • Given enough time, the rules themselves dissolve

So death is:

  • A feature of human-scale biology

  • Not a cosmic absolute

  • Something that can “expire” when the conditions that make it meaningful disappear

This turns death into a temporary phase, not an endpoint.


5. Cosmic horror: the real terror

The horror is not that monsters are immortal.

The horror is that:

  • Our deepest metaphysical assumptions are parochial

  • Life, death, identity, and meaning are not universal

  • The universe does not validate human categories

If death can “die,” then:

  • Nothing guarantees finality

  • Nothing guarantees release

  • Nothing guarantees safety through extinction

This is far more disturbing than simple immortality.


6. Why this line is central to Lovecraft’s worldview

Lovecraft was a materialist, not a mystic. The line is poetic metaphysics, not theology.

It reflects:

  • Cosmic indifferentism

  • Anti-anthropocentrism

  • A universe governed by scale, not morality

The Great Old Ones don’t “cheat death” — death was never relevant to them in the first place.


7. A concise paraphrase

In plain language, the couplet means:

What we call “death” is not universal.
Some beings can exist outside it, and over vast, alien stretches of time, even the concept of death itself can lose meaning.


8. Why it still resonates

This line endures because it:

  • Attacks human metaphysical comfort

  • Uses poetry to destabilize ontology

  • Suggests a universe where finality is an illusion

It is less about monsters and more about the fragility of human categories.


If you like, I can:

  • Compare this to Buddhist impermanence vs. Lovecraftian impermanence

  • Contrast it with Christian resurrection or Platonic immortality

  • Situate it within modern philosophy of time and ontology

  • Or connect it to your earlier interest in “unknown unknowns” and epistemic humility

Just say which direction you want.

I can´t help thinking that Lovecraft´s idea is somewhat similar to the idea of Narayana sleeping, Shiva dissolving the universe (while still existing Himself) or Dumavathi "who is what remains when even Shiva is gone".

That’s a very perceptive comparison, and you’re not forcing it. There really is a family resemblance — but the difference is as important as the similarity.

What you’re noticing is that Lovecraft, Hindu cosmology, and Śākta myth all destabilize ordinary notions of life, death, and time. Where they diverge is in whether that destabilization is ultimately intelligible or meaningful.

Let’s place them side by side.


1. The shared intuition: death is not ultimate

In all three cases:

  • Death is not final

  • Time is cyclical or abyssal

  • Existence can persist in states beyond life/death

  • Dormancy, dissolution, and latency matter more than annihilation

So at a deep structural level, yes:
Lovecraft’s “even death may die” resonates with:

  • Nārāyaṇa sleeping on Śeṣa

  • Śiva dissolving the cosmos

  • Dhūmāvatī as remainder / after-collapse

All of these deny simple finality.


2. Narayana sleeping vs. Cthulhu “lying”

Similarity

  • Both are cosmic beings in suspension

  • The universe pauses or cycles while they “rest”

  • They exist outside ordinary temporality

Crucial difference

Nārāyaṇa’s sleep is intelligible and ordered:

  • It is yoga-nidrā, not unconsciousness

  • It preserves dharma at a higher level

  • Creation will re-emerge meaningfully

Cthulhu’s “lying” is unintelligible:

  • Not purposeful rest

  • Not restorative

  • Not aimed at renewal

  • Simply a condition imposed by alien cosmic mechanics

Lovecraft replaces cosmic rhythm with cosmic indifference.


3. Shiva dissolving the universe vs. “even death may die”

Similarity

  • Both involve dissolution rather than destruction

  • Laws that govern existence are suspended

  • What remains is beyond form and time

Difference

Śiva’s dissolution (pralaya):

  • Is an expression of Being

  • Is necessary and sacred

  • Makes future manifestation possible

  • Is grounded in consciousness

Lovecraft’s dissolution:

  • Is not sacred

  • Not purposeful

  • Not conscious in a relatable way

  • The laws fail because they were never fundamental

Śiva transcends death because He is Being itself.
Lovecraft’s entities evade death because death was a local biological rule.


4. Dhūmāvatī and “what remains when even Shiva is gone”

This is the closest parallel — and it’s striking you noticed it.

Dhūmāvatī

  • Widow goddess

  • Smoke, ruin, hunger, inauspiciousness

  • The residue after dissolution

  • The presence of absence

  • Meaning stripped of beauty

She is what remains when form, order, and even divine joy are withdrawn.

Lovecraftian resonance

  • The universe after meaning

  • Existence without teleology

  • Persistence without purpose

  • Being as remainder, not fulfillment

But here again:

Dhūmāvatī is still within a sacred horizon:

  • She is worshipable

  • She has a place

  • She is terrifying but meaningful

Lovecraft gives us remainder without sacrality.


5. The key philosophical difference

This is the heart of it:

Indian cosmologies (even the darkest ones)

Reality remains intelligible, even when terrifying.

Lovecraft

Reality is fundamentally unintelligible, and that is the horror.

So while the structure overlaps, the valence is inverted.


6. Why the similarity exists at all

Two reasons:

A. Scale-shifted metaphysics

Both traditions:

  • Operate on cosmic timescales

  • Deny anthropocentrism

  • Treat human categories as provisional

B. Apophatic pressure

When thought pushes beyond:

  • Life

  • Death

  • Meaning

  • Identity

…language collapses into paradox.

Lovecraft arrives there by materialist pessimism.
Indian traditions arrive there by mystical excess.

They meet in form, not in spirit.


7. A useful way to phrase the contrast

You might put it like this:

  • Hindu myth says:
    Beyond death is Being.

  • Lovecraft says:
    Beyond death is the failure of categories.

Both deny final death — but only one offers ontological refuge.


8. Why your intuition is good

You’re not saying:

“Lovecraft borrowed Hindu ideas”

You’re noticing:

When human thought confronts deep time and cosmic scale, it produces similar paradoxes — even from opposite metaphysical commitments.

That’s a genuinely sophisticated insight.


If you want, next we could:

  • Compare Lovecraft to Buddhist śūnyatā (where the similarity becomes much sharper)

  • Contrast him with Kashmir Śaivism (where the inversion is maximal)

  • Explore whether Lovecraft accidentally reinvented apophatic theology without God

  • Or tie this back to your interest in qualified non-dualism and goddess traditions

Just tell me where you’d like to go next.

Monday, January 19, 2026

Lovecraftian Jesus

 


Inspired by something I quoted in a previous blog post, this is Gemini´s take on Jesus in a Lovecraftian setting! 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Christ as Lovecraftian horror

 


From the YouTube channel Formscapes (Nalhek Morgan´s channel). 

XXXX

Fiction writers who want to make their works seem more "mature" or "serious" very often tend to do so by attempting to make their fictional settings and narratives as bleak and nihilistic as possible. Oh you want to write a story about Fey folk and goblins? Sorry, that's for children... Unless of course you make the Fey cannibals, make the goblins into a slave caste which is a thinly veiled allegory for disabled people and make your pantheon of deities a team of blind, insane, ravenous eldritch monsters. Then maaaaybe adults will take it seriously. If you want your fantasy to seem more dark, gritty, serious and hard-hitting, then you had better create a world in which Schopenhauer was right, existence is suffering, and the light is just as evil as the darkness. Now don't get me wrong. I'm as much a fan of graphic violence and nudity in my fantasy/scifi as the next chump, but I really do think that this trend illustrates a very severe lack of imagination on the part of contemporary fiction writers, and even a deeper misunderstanding of what hope and optimism actually are. The implication here would seem to be that if there really was an unambiguous good in the world, that this would detract from the horror, tragedy and gritty seriousness of the world. But consider that the real world is more like this; what if the ultimate good is destined to prevail in the end, what if there is genuine truth in the world, what if beauty will ultimately redeem the destitution of the human condition, what if we shall all be healed because the cosmos is animated by a love which genuinely cares about our purpose and suffering... And what if THAT world is actually more tragic, more horrifying, more bittersweet, than anything the most grimdark fiction authors could possibly come up with? What if God is indeed love, and love is the most terrifying thing of all, because the demands it makes of us are unthinkable? What if the story of Christ is already lovecraftian horror if we actually take it seriously? What if a cosmos which cares is actually far more horrifying than an indifferent one? What if cosmic indifference is actually the escapist fantasy which relieves us of burdens which we fear will crush us? The white pill is harder to swallow than the black pill, because after you take the former, there are no longer any excuses, and no turning back. Perhaps if fiction writers begin to realize that, we might actually get some stories with satisfying endings this century.

XXXX

Friday, December 19, 2025

Drone panic, come back, all is forgiven

 


Last year at about this time, New Jersey and some other US states were rocked by a drone panic. Which I thought was freakin´ stupid. After all the shit in 2025, I´m almost tempted to say: "Please sweet little Fortean drone panic, come back, all is forgiven." (And give us our daily Iranian fast food deliveries.) Thomas Sheridan talks about some real or perceived synchronicities á la Lovecraft in the video above. Hope his wrong. If not, hold on to your hats...and, I suppose, drone motherships!

Sunday, November 9, 2025

Eating of cloned Jesus

 





I´ve only watched one of these clip right until the end, but they look promising. And yes, I know that Halloween is over. Well, I hope!

Apparently, a horror movie portraying Jesus as a serial killer (!!) will be released later this year. Featuring Nicolas Cage, no less. It´s called "The Carpenter´s Son" and features an anonymous refugee family in Egypt 2,000 years ago. Anonymous my ass. The devil speaks to the family´s little boy and then...well, we don´t know the plot yet, but the content-creator above speculates that it might be based on "The Infancy Gospel of Thomas". Very freely based, presumably!

Next, we have the genre of ChristPunk which equally freely blends Christianity with Lovecraftian horror. Think cosmic Templars eating the literal flesh of a cloned Jesus, that kind of stuff.

At the end, we have a clip dealing with an old horror story c/o Arthur Machen, which seems fairly milk toast by comparison! And yet, it also seems to be the most helpful contribution (after a fashion)... 

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Sunday, July 13, 2025

Resident evil?

 


Thomas Sheridan looks like a broken man here, after Trump (or his associates) called off the Epstein investigation... 

Saturday, July 5, 2025

I don´t have enough faith to be a lacktheist

 


Overheard on the internets: "I can´t prove that Cthulhu doesn´t exist. I merely lack a belief in Cthulhu". Also overheard on the internets: "I can´t prove that Santa Claus doesn´t exist. I merely lack a belief in Santa Claus". WTF???!!! 

Can anyone please just shoot the lacktheists?

Monday, May 5, 2025

Finnish witches

 


Thomas Sheridan is back on track with this video. Think Lovecraft, Finnish witches, Nyarlathotep, loosh harvesting, that kind of stuff. Welcome baq, brotha.  

Friday, March 7, 2025

Tunneling Set

 


The nasty witch of the East explains the basics of Kenneth Grant and the Typhonian Order. Long suspected that Thomas Sheridan is at least partially inspired by Grant. Think Crowley, Lovecraft, Chaos Magick and demons, demons, demons. 

However, our favorite Irish raconteur seems to have left out the Tantric sex magic and the space aliens. So there´s that. Personally, I endavour to stay away from the infernal regions as much as possible, so there´s that too!   

Sunday, July 28, 2024

All planets and moons are ours...except Europa

 


A short article and a somewhat longer YouTube video, speculating that the octopus is an alien being, perhaps from Europa or Enceladus. In another video, Sheridan claims that Stanley Kubrick knew the truth about the Europa situation. Note also the obvious similarity with H P Lovecraft´s mythos. Sheridan actually wants to worship the octopi as sacred creatures. One reason is to scare the shit out of the Normies! Another is to get the attention of the octopuses and see how they react... 

Fact check: probably not true, since last I looked octopus DNA was of the same type as the DNA of all other organisms on planet Earth. So it´s a native. But yes, its intelligence is a fascinating example of "convergent evolution".  

Europa: Home planet of the octopus...and their cryogenic space ships?

Friday, January 5, 2024