Chronos Chronicles


February 1998 Part Three

Digest 71

Date: Wed, 11 Feb 1998 12:36:26 -0800
Subject: "Garden", a verb.

Hello.

On Gardening, not all plants like fertilizing material added in preparing the ground, nitrogen actually retards the flowering of Salvias, and if not the same with Artemisias, at least seems inconsequential. A New Zealand gardening program featured a gardener whose approach to silver plants in general is to water once when putting them in the ground, and that was it, no fertilizers. He had many Artemisias and some Santolinas and things. I'm still not sure if this is true of Lavendars.

And of course if you can provide adequate light, it is Never too soon to start things indoors, some small trial and error can delay the growth by many weeks.

So here is one, of all of those things that I said about the yew tree, to single out it's way to propogating itself by spreading and rooting branches and all of the sacred stuff that this symbolizes, this trait is also true of the genus Ajuga (Bugleweeds). I have no ideas on how bugleweeds are to be used, or the peripherals, and their chemistry is disturbing, the molecules look ostensibly foriegn to the human body, which isn't usually a good sign. It passes in the Artemisias a lot, but I have no business without digging in my reference books to say Ajugas are made for ingestion not incense. For what it's worth, a lot of the molecules in question that look so tangled may be scarce, and may be responses to insect attack. I'm still not sure what kind of signature that is in this context, often the specific insects is the signature, and of course a lot of Asian traditional medicine is built on all creatures, and minerals, having signatures as well as plants.

At any rate, the Ajugas have some interesting traits, and possibly the leafs can tend to be lyrate, which would connect Salvia lyrata, called cancerweed, which look either a little like a lumbering bear, or like it was squeezed by a bear's hug. The appellation by the way comes from a stauch reputation for curing or treating cancer, again like the yew.. So that's a bit peculiar, a cure for cancer regarded as a worthless weed! Cultivation of it technically carries a $5,000 fine in my state. Not like they fly over in helicopters looking for it, but really...

So whatever it is that the yew is trying to tell us in a less than descript way, may be enunciated by the sprawling Ajugas, and maybe even extending to the the sprawling of the tiniest, low growing popular and commercial dead nettles (genus Lamium). Also scarcely known well enough to constitute anything for ingestion, they are quitely evocative, and I have previously on Occulthaven, especially back near the beginning, elaborated on them quite a bit.

Integrating all of these features that wish to merge into this context will be challenging, perhaps; then again, a few moment's good rapport with a muse can explain it all. Right now, I'm tripping over it, fuzzy bunny slippers, a signature of the Lamiums, scarcely seem like they are significant to the issue of past life regression. Then again, maybe I just haven't found the connection... moon in Pisces? Dust, static, allergies? All of the above?

Hmmmm...

Chroni // http://www.oocities.org/Athens/Olympus/6581

*****

Digest 72

Date: Wed, 11 Feb 1998 23:26:46 -0800
Subject: OH-Re: Ghosts and Baking Soda

Hello.

Well, that's it, ghosts are attracted to the catbox, and baking soda banishes them... (giggle) Actually, You may have hit on something here, what I think of is how I don't really understand how something absorbs odors in the first place, it took fractional quantum statics for me to think I understood how some odors run riotously and anomalously rampant, and I'm still not certain. Could that 1,700 year old cedar closet still pumping out aroma be still living at the cellular or chemical level?

But I am thinking of the cultures who make offerings to "feed" the ancestors, they offer things that are often aromatic and they know the gift has been received if the offering has lost it's aroma or flavor or has gone stale. I've known living people at least to be able to destabilize amino acid suppliments, somehow, I Should find the l-glutamine that went bitter and have it analyzed, it may be DLPA now, and someone, here or departed, bittered some foodstuffs too. And living women at moontime have been accused of souring milk and staling or spoiling bread, and...

Our binding or maybe more appropriately, Manifesting herbs may be called upon to provide substance from their aromatic presences, I'll still want to go into fractional quantums on this though.

Anyway, maybe when I quit digging though seed boxes hoping that I safely recovered everything and get all my plants going and get caught up on sleep after yet another six months of deprivation for x years in a row, I'll be able to tackle such questions at will instead of waiting for inspirations...

Speaking of I got a Poim off the Muses today:

I am Temperance
Washing dishes
In remembrance
Of bright wishes

Sure I know what it means, I know everything, but who can answer this riddle? (hee hee hee)

Chroni, buried beneath Calendula, Cosmos, Cladanthus, Calliopsis, Centaurea, Cacalia, Chrysanthemum, Chaenactis, Cirsium, Cichorium, Corymbium, Cotula, Crepis, Cynara, Coreopsis, Conyza, Chrysopsis, Chrysothamnus, Cenia, Cephalipterum, Chrysanthemoides, Calotis, Catananche...

*****

Digest 73

Date: Thu, 12 Feb 1998 18:56:18 -0800
Subject: Miscellaneous The Next Generation
Hello.

Winter bruises? Rats, where are my biology and biochemistry books, and why have I never read them? I found nothing yet that associates brusing with a nutritional deficiency, I'm about to hit up a search engine.

On top of my approach to medicine is to stay as simple as possible (meaning I know nothing about it basically) which Does remain a good compliment to oversimplification, my intuition may be having a bad hair year, normally I would be able to tell you something. "Um, pop-tart deficiency?" is about my speed at the moment...

I'll be thinking of near-ever green herbs who purple in the winter, catnip is one, but don't try it at home, eh?

After that I'll break out Cornell on astrological medicine. My smart money's there. Oh wait, I don't have any money, I'm living solely on "top ramen" again for yet another month after what just hit me. Er, anybody wanna start a commune?

Today I got my potting soil, perlite and the washed aquarium sand I often case the top of the trays with to delay algal & fungal growth so the seeds, especially the tiny ones don't suffer "damping off". This sounds pretty boring but it's a big party for me, even after getting soaked in the rain and packing the stuff on a bus (Zeus, is there ANY patron of public transportation so manly as I? (giggle)).

So I was looking through two hundred thousand dollars of trashy seeds (Thompson and Morgan wants SIX BUCKS for a mix of five kinds of basil... Christ I've stashed thirty kinds of basil including the lovely New Guinea, and I'd be happy to unload a good mix for $2.50. It's a bad year there...)

But one of their fancy photo packages had a picture of this "Mole Plant" thingie... normally I wouldn't touch a spurge (family Euphorbiaceae) with a ten foot pole they're so toxic and I don't even Care what it looks like, but they have this lovely picture of a mole and some arrows on it to illustrate this lovely property, and it does go good with the perfoliate leaves, why the plant has little arrow on it to, couldn't find the picture of the mole...

So perfoliate or sagittate leaves would be, come to think of it, a plausible signature for repellant properties... looking for the long list of snake repellants again, hmm, how many have forked tongues? There's a plant in "Plants of the Pacific Northwest Coast" (Pojar and Mackinnon) that looks convincingly enough like a snake's head to have earned it the name, "snake liverwort" (Conocephalum conicum), which emits a "pleasant odor". Most aromatics repel something, anyway. Just because snakes spit, you'd think it maybe an eye medicine? The Diditdaht used it that way.

Worth some flap if Water plantain is amongst those that repels something, this is clearly sagittate and in fact the star of the Ryder deck's level of herbal medicine campaigning as a traditional anti-rabic. Being a high coincidence of reputation for certain plants both repelling various creatures and treating the venomous or infected bites, the underlying logic may be that they shun what could either knock out, or is already made immune to, their "defenses". In the case of rabid creatures, they theoretically shun what might improve their condition simply because it might.

Twenty-three years of esoteria and weird science up on some of these creatures, and I suppose a suggestion as simple as a red-end light deficiency is going to meet the same brick wall.

And another look at cup plants, in case anyone can see themselves in them. Otherwise, I would wonder why we shamans are here when we don't get to do anyone a damned bit of good.

Well, anyway, it all makes for some interesting digging through Scott Cunningham books, including what he forgot to index, and wild wonderings about wild lettuce, which like the toxic "Mole Plant", has in some specie the perfoliate leaves and an unrelated milky latex sap. Soon I'll be throwing peppercress seed at virtually every creature in creation no doubt, milky juice or not... but hey, weird science marches on.

Now, does the "arrow" kind of leaf sign also mean that these make the oogie-boogie things move into the spare bedroom? Hmm, yet another night's deluded diversions in some moldy college library... no wait I have my own moldy library...

Well, thanks for the kinds words, everyone, I'll try to be worthy of them one of these days. Wow, a real science person Likes my posts? I'll have to try to use terms like "benzene-saturated myopic pinhead" far less unilaterally from now on. I had no idea!

Chroni // Chronos Apollonios' Piss-Off-A-Senator-A-Monopolistic-Religion-And-A- Major-Industry-On-The-Same-Day-Say-Too-Much- Web-Page: http://www.oocities.org/Athens/Olympus/6581

*****

Digest 74

Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 01:13:54 -0800
Subject: Weird Science Daily

Hello. (gawd what a lack of enthusiasm. read, Hello!!!!!)

So what's new and far out? I dunno. You ever see that thing in Time-Life's "Mystic Places" looks like a "schmoo" from "Li'l Abner" or the lingham from that certain Tarot deck done in the 1900's by some fellow "Comte de St. Germaine" who "isn't" the famous Count (Comte) but typically probably is? Much as Crowley himself would be no more generous than Page's vignette in the Led Zeppelin movie?

My "lingham" has no wings personally.

What the hell is that thing? The ghost of some duck who died of the flu and decided to possess my liver into mortality via magnetotaxes?

So really, when Francis Hitching is it or John Mitchell goes on about how the snail shaped Silbury Hill attacted snails in the olden days, what is this saying? That the power of signatures, sympathy and antipathy, were employed to power a teleporter between these sites on Earth and identical sites on Mars, likely sympathetic resonance?

I remember a past life regression I had once where I was not only heaving some grand excess of wine into a stream, but I had the distinct impression that That was a process of reconditioning the body to go to and live on the moon. I know that sounds totally nuts... then again there are some Major underlying this-and-thats... Yeah, and guess what the Mayan regression turned up? Flying off the world and being sicker than a dog...

So about those ghosts in the living room... I asked my dentist today about chronic halitosis problems (why does this word have the "salt" root in it?) and an Acid Reflux problem may be likely. And just when I was ready to believe the Japanese version, that the dogsh*t smell was a sign of slight possession by a bereaved woman ghost who either mourns lost children or children not birthed, called a "Tengu", wandering around the aethereal plane all unkempt like I-and-I's previous semidreadlocks. Call it a "tangle" and wave knotgrass if you like, hint hint.

So between the sunflower-and-parsley-seed oil treatment for that, which, like flax seed and milk thistle really pisses off my liver, tis it a wonder "only the wicked grow parsley" (sage, rosemary and thyme, giggle lavendar's blue, dilly dilly (two more There) same theme as Rapunzel, missed opportunity of procreation)

Er, that and sunlight antagonizing one's stash of aetherial fluidum, often mistaken as the infringement of sunlight on the magickal dreams of the night... or that and the dead guy with the ulcers wandering around... or neurotransmitter lost to the battle against bioacidity? (depleted ATP compensated by depleted neurotransmitter of phenethyl type, not new that one. Biochemistry of love, that one...)

Er, that and -orange at that chakra, antisocial aspect. Dodgy to rest it, but someone's less than nice in such a picture.

Magickal geniuses behold, I have spelt out common threads, of possible great worth, and hopefully I'm not just full of sh*t. Only here in the holocosm...

Temperance tarot mystery of the week #3:

My teeth are the bone that is outright, the bridge between land and water.

#4: I have one foot in the night, and one in the day.

darn those muses anyway.

Choni, hopefully in peak generous but challengingly evasive form once again, damnable old goat thing that he am. Crowley, be proud!

*****

Digest 76

Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 16:49:30 -0800
Subject: A Deep Mystery

Hello.

I'd like to do Valentines a little, the three Charis and the heart as an assymterical magnetic feild, and all of that.

But you all know where I've been right? I told you about Dalmatican toadflax with the little honeysuckle spurs full of a nectar jackpot, I wondered what does a diamond leaf like a diamondback and a stem like the spine of a snake have to do with gambing when I thought what Vegas would sound like if a snake had put out your eyes, if all of it is enough like a snake's rattle to trigger the fight or flight, the addiction factor in gambling is adrenalin. A shaman's rattle could make a good substitute. Sticking you fingers in your ears could let you walk out with the shirt on your back. Thus a Medicinal Philosophy embodied by a plant.

And the later down the same alley, not ten feet from where some poor bastard has spent his rent on a pile of pulltabs a foot high, was a barnyard grass with a seed that looks like a football, a horseshoe on it and an antennae bent in half. 50/50? When you feel lucky you do the lottery, a million to one against you. 50/50 you don't really feel lucky do you, why are you betting?!?!? And the grass itself is a cyanogen, toxic, deadly, just to drive it home.

So for repeating, some of the Evening primroses rattle a little. We try to keep the Artemisias and adrenal things away from pregnant women, we witchies have old lore about not even stepping over a carrot and all of that if one is with child. I'd not shake my rattle either. But any wonder that several members of the Evening primrose family have recieved citations as antiabortives? Between that and the Evening Primrose oil, and looking for species that may be even more medicinally valuable, I'm collecting them right down to the Fushcias. Baby rattles is another expression of the signature. I have some lovely Native American lore bridging several tribes about Blue Beetle and so on.

Here's the deep mystery: Imagine how far They got with this!

I did this until it ran into Oranges. no surprise, they're packing glutamine.

This is probably all a re-run, but if I have to think for my monkey mind that any attention deficit thingie is a little to rattly for it's own good, where does the signature thing fall in? Toadflax and flax too might yeild deadly brews, but that don't stop one from looking at it's cousin Mullien.

Meditation does elude those who fight it, and from my point of view as a wallflower, people's lives make no sense to me. Is a telescopic carrot going to treat short-sightedness? How many times Are physical conditions euphemisms for attitude badness? Seems I was taught That kind of thing as long as I can remember. Me, the doctors marvel at my general health, and I haven't told them my lifestyle yet (grin)...

Welcome to the macrocosm and the microcosm at once...

Something to wonder on...

Chroni

*****

Date: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 12:39:41 -0800
Subject: Re: Occult Haven Digest, digest #76

Hello!

What a lovely and fascinating disgest. Thanks! I still think it's one of those "tengu" things (grin) but is that not lovely or what? I just learned more in one post than from twelve dentists in ten years. I, um, have this friend... with a highly developed gag response... okay I give up, how to they get away with brushing their tongue?

Thanks, all, for the additional ADD/ADHD info, I've been too spacy to dig into it, but what I've seen here really does register.

Some of this is typical indeed for people who function strongly on the 6th and 7th chakras (7-chakra system), a lot of not following through with ideas is that to a certain degree, the imagining of it is tangible enough that it is in fact perceived as already done. Or something very much like that. Some of the medications may cause people to tend to function at the 2nd and 3rd chakras more? I wouldn't be surprised if magickians are more succeptible, and our "spacey, flakey new-agers" may be a result of these.

Ah, yes, the feild day diagnosing every kid who likes to run and play with ADD. I have several nephews who were in that category, and probably the person diagnosing them was more typical, restlessly firing that diagnosis at anything that moves. In the end, they backed off of this. Thus must be happening constantly a lot of places from the sound of it.

Being we're into faeries and things and all that, I'll repeat something I must have posted previously, about how my *teachings* treat faeries as symbols for various functions, and they're pretty well clustered, too, being a coordinate of the remarkable popularity of the concept. Doesn't mean there Aren't some out there, but generally the references seem to concern magickal reproduction, and the inevitable associated threads of population, longevity, and so on. And magick in general. Alot of "fractical particle motion" or some interesting thing seems to be archetypically depicted around them clear up to Disney, all that twinkly stuff. Wouldn't be much awry if that twinkly stuff really was blatantly present a lot of times someone makes a tangible magick. I still have trouble linking all of that elsewhere, a peacock might be a good Euphemism for such splashes of color, or the rainbow...

So anyway, you could take that cluster and start guessing a lot of things in faeries lore. One I still like is the reference in Shakespeare that Titania (is that a Greek travestic if I ever heard one?- He may Have gotten this from Kallimacho's "Kynopion" epigram) is "of knotgrass made", keeps one from fainting when one reads of knotgrass' formidable medical reputation in the Orient. Obviously, that 100-year-old knotgrass root putting 3rd set of teeth (James A. Duke, "CRC Handbook..." quoting Varro E. Tyler) in one's head ought to be cheerfully suspect of any other remarkable regenerative (time-reversing?) effects. How to age the knotgrass artificially is another time issue that surrounds the theme, worthy of the time concepts associable with this "fractal particle motion" business, much as it was presented on Star Trek. And Magnetism manages to be a strong, if subtle, recurring theme as well. Especially for having thrown in a knotgrass.

They can also go in a weird little Cupid class, the times the unborn might have to take deliberate intervention so that their stubborn and uncooperative parents-to-be actually get them created. I figure failing that they'll give someone a weird fascination with creating offsring by magick. I don't know why I got that myself exactly come to think of it.

BTW, speaking of legendary forest denizens*we* do Robin Hood as a materialization gig, too, something like the conical Omphalon things, drawing up an energy through a circle, something like that. Especially as much as some very common motifs are recycled into it. It's possible that distorting an earth feild like that is one assurance that only the ground is targeted for matter, as the minimum that it means. Red may be used to imply heat, thermodynamics, a flexible antagonism of magnetization--- some popular Palingenics themes.

Of course somehow I seem to think my studies in this area are already finished... and I really can't remember much of the last study I made.

Chroni // http://www.oocities.org/Athens/Olympus/6581

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