HotGuano.com shit that matters  
About getting in tune with the organic rhythms of life.


Contents

On the Right Hand of God
   History of the Sacred Fungi
      Part One
      Part Two
      Part Three
EOI
   Earthlings of Integrity
The Luce Gravel Chronicles
   What am I doing here?
LifeOS
   Manuscript in Progress
LifeOS
   It's all in the code
Who are the gods?
   What are they up to?

It is impatience, this site:

      A sink trap, before the sewer.
      A test tube full of wriggly things, naked.
      A net still in the water, so the fish can come and go.
      A dinner plate, mopped clean with a piece of homemade bread, ready to be filled again.
      A a sluicebox with black sand trapped along with the nuggets.
      A bladder and colon.
      A seismograph, turning tremors into harmless virtual ink.

      It is my report card
                      and my school.

Friends

Gila HotSprings Ranch
   Wilderness Outfitters
DesertWest Auctions
   Mimbres, New Mexico
Full Moon Design
   Wire Wrap Jewelry & Supplies
Fogg Productions
   Lighting Design & Celebrations
High-Lonesome Books
   New, Used, Rare, Out-of-Print
McKenna Publishing Group
   Writers Contest
CommunityPoll
   Write your own surveys
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Spirit/Earth Network
MoonGate-Poetry
SGHS Alumni

Hot Guano is:

  • a philosophy
  • a website( featuring a collection of seemingly unrelated information)
  • a community (an open secret society in progress)
  • excellent fertilizer
Please don't get them mixed up!

It all started back when I was doing a gig as a bat guano distributor. I had a notebook labeled, " Hot Guano". That's where I jotted down my best ideas and diagrammed plans and relationships for the project. The whole thing was seriously organic, including the business model.

Well, the warehouse full of bat guano burned down and the guano biz choked, but the notebook survived. The basic organic business model evolved into some sort of mandalic philosophy of living action and soon filled the notebook. Then it became a folder and then a cardboard box full of folders. Along the way, bits from many diverse subjects found their way into the box. It was where I put all the good stuff. It just kept growing.

For years I dragged that box with me from one place to another, occasionally stashing it with friends or relatives for safe keeping. Now, it has fallen off the back of a cyber U-haul and spilled out on the highway for all to see. Pick through the debris carefully... hot guano can be messy.

jim


News

Gnostic Media is happy to announce the summer-2008 release of a new book by Jan Irvin:

The Holy Mushroom:

Evidence of Mushrooms in Judeo-Christianity;

A critical re-evaluation of the schism between John M. Allegro and R. Gordon Wasson over the theory on the entheogenic origins of Christianity presented in The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross

By J.R. Irvin, © 2008

Preface

Beginning in the 1950s a serious theoretical disagreement regarding art interpretations emerged within the fields of theology and entheobotany. Entheobotany is the study of how certain cultures use plants and fungi for religious purposes. The question at the heart of this disagreement concerns the study of the origins of religion, and more specifically Judeo-Christianity. Gaining an insight into the core issues of this disagreement is of utmost importance to anyone with an interest in understanding the origins of religion.

The question: Were psychoactive drugs involved in the foundation of Christianity?

This question has caused a schism within theological studies, and especially within the field of entheobotany itself.

One side argues that the use of psychoactive substances can be traced only up until, and their impact is limited to, the earliest writings of Genesis, about 1000 BCE – which excludes Christianity.

The other side argues that the use of psychoactive substances was more widespread and persistent. It has been central to the foundation of nearly all religion, including Christianity, and evidence of this usage can be found into more modern times.

It is important for biblical theologians and entheobotany scholars alike to understand the cause and effect of this schism if open dialogue is to continue. Until this issue is resolved and faced head on, scholarship, in regard to Judeo-Christianity, is at a standstill.

Foreword  by Judith Anne Brown Author of John Marco Allegro: The Maverick of the Dead Sea Scrolls

Why should we be surprised or shocked by the idea that people of all eras and cultures have used hallucinatory drugs to attain exalted states of consciousness, which they take to mean divine understanding?  In The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross John Allegro tried to show that this idea was built into the language and thought of religion from the very earliest times, and was still evident in the language and thought of the first Christians.

When survival depended on the fertility of the earth, and fertility was a gift of the gods, people sought to promote fertility by appealing to divine power. The swiftest and surest way to know the mind of god was through the use of herbal drugs. Throughout all ages and across all continents, priests and shamans have used entheogenic drugs in religious rituals. One of the chief sources of these drugs was fly agaric, Amanita muscaria, the sacred mushroom.

John Allegro believed that Judaism and Christianity were no exception. He held that many biblical stories and sayings derived from earlier fertility cults based on the use of the sacred mushroom. He discerned mushroom epithets behind many stories, names and phrases in the Old and New Testaments, either elaborated into folk tales or deliberately hidden in names and incantations. Embedded in different contexts, and often misunderstood in translation, they still carried messages for those who would look for them.

His evidence was linguistic. Starting with Greek and Semitic names, phrases, themes and stories from the Old and New Testaments, he followed them back through Phoenician and Akkadian to the earliest known writings – those of Sumer in the third millennium BCE. Although the precise form and interpretation of words changed with inflection and context in different languages, he found that the basic phonemes, the building blocks of words, carried their root meaning from one context to another. So by tracing the development of words we can trace the intertwining evolution of language, culture and religion.

The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross met outrage and derision. Part of the problem lay in common revulsion at the idea of linking Christianity to primitive fertility cults. The idea that the New Testament was a cover story, deliberately designed to transmit occult knowledge to a particular sect without the authorities realising it, seemed improbably complicated. Also, Allegro based his evidence almost entirely on language study, and not enough was known about Sumerian to make a solid case. Had he given more attention to investigating the surviving cultural and artistic expressions of ‘Christian’ fertility cults, he might have convinced more people of the strength of his argument.

But now other types of evidence are coming forward to show that elements of the ancient religion survived at least into medieval times, where they were widely accepted in pagan and Christian folklore and religious practice, if not openly condoned by the established Church. For example, a fresco in a thirteenth-century church at Plaincourault, France, shows Amanita muscaria as the Tree of Life. Allegro used it as an illustration to The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross, but in the outcry against the book even this obvious reference to mushroom veneration met denial.

Starting with the Plaincourault fresco, Jan Irvin sets out to justify John Allegro’s stance and to explore the objections to it. As I explained in the biography John Marco Allegro: The Maverick of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the main doubts about Allegro’s theory are whether the New Testament could deliberately conceal a secret code about mushroom usage, and the need to further substantiate Sumerian word connections. In the light of Irvin’s findings, there can now be little doubt that entheogenic drugs were used to attain divine understanding in Christianity as in other religions. I also think it is worth questioning whether mushroom lore was as secret as Allegro assumed it to be: lost in translation, perhaps, but not lost on the early followers of the cult, for whom the symbolism of the holy mushroom was a guide to revelation. In this book Jan Irvin subjects both sides to courtroom-like scrutiny, and adds powerful new evidence to help fill the gaps in our understanding of the origins of religion.

Academic endorsements for The Holy Mushroom:
Christianity and the Piltdown Hoax share many similarities: In both stories the information was constructed and then salted into the information stream, and, through the word of noted scholars, presented as fact, the truth. Scholars have egos and once committed to their ideas through scholarly publications, faculty meetings, and conferences, have difficulty seeing, hearing, or even appreciating an adverse view. To waver from a strongly held opinion could spell academic ruin and withdrawal of acclaim. This leads to lively debate, counter stories, and even character assassination if one side or the other is being out trumped in the symbolic mêlée.

   Jan Irvin (The Holy Mushroom) has captured what we might call an “anthropology of clarification” regarding whether or not mushrooms, and mind-altering substances in general, played any role in the development of not only Judaism and Christianity but the total culture in play at that time. It is now recognized in many academic communities (anthropologists, sociologists, psychiatrists, psychologists) that sufficient evidence exists of the importance of these substances, both textual and visual, to say “yes” in very large letters. It is no longer theory. The questions Irvin asks is this: “If mind-altering substances did play this major role, then how would this affect our interpretations of the Bible and the Qur’an? Would this shed light on the origins of mystical experiences and the stories, for example Abraham hearing voices and Ezekiel’s convenient visions? What would this suggest about the shamanic behavior of Jesus? What impact would this have on organized religion? These are bold questions. This is a very useful volume for those interested in the Holy Mushroom, Amanita muscaria, and the politics of truth. Detailed and wonderfully illustrated; great bibliography.
~ Professor John A. Rush, Sierra College

   John Allegro's revelation of the sacramental role of a sacred mushroom in the ancient religions spanning the agrarian region from Mesopotamia to the Near East was immediately and unfairly rejected by a chorus of scholars less competent than him, but continuing research into early Christianity and the mystery religions of the Greco-Roman world and their perpetuation in alchemy and European folkloric traditions has vindicated the correctness of his discovery.
~ Professor Carl A. P. Ruck, Boston University

   Jan Irvin has produced a most thoughtful and valuable account of debate around the use of hallucinogenic mushrooms in early Christianity. Irvin's careful account of the main protagonists, their sources and intellectual motivations shows the importance of continuing research on this significant moment in early Christian thought, as well as how academic research itself is affected by the cultural attitudes of the day. In adducing new textual evidence and showing the iconographic prevalence of the mushroom motif Jan Irvin is to be warmly congratulated - all serious scholarship for the future will have to take account of his achievement.
~ Professor Neil Whitehead, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Check out www.theholymushroom.com for more information regarding The Holy Mushroom’s release.

All content copyright 2008, Jan Irvin

The Guano Philosophy

The basics of Guano are that Life follows cycles that produce rhythms and counter-rhythms that living organisms use to regulate their metabolism. The goal of Guano is to understand how all of this works so that we can act in harmony with these rhythms. Guano is a combination of many ancient traditions seen through the eye of desperate environmental survivalism.


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Featured fiction from The Luce Gravel Chronicles by jim cranford

History of the Immortals

Back before the last great extinction, the Earth was ruled by an advanced race of people who called themselves, The Immortals. Their technology was very advanced, even by today's standards, including ships that could travel in space and orbiting satellites and space stations. They claimed to have come to Earth from the stars.

Their immortality came, not from some supernatural power or highly developed spiritual skills, but that they had perfected the technology to rejuvenate cellular tissue. They used a combination of a beneficial electromagnetic field with nutrients and growth hormones ported directly into the bloodstream. With a backup power source and emergency nutrient supply, the unit was self contained within a nearly indestructible capsule about the size of a coffin.

They could stay alive indefinitely if they spent a percentage of their time sleeping in one of these special rejuvenation chambers. Just a few hours in the chamber would restore their cells to their optimum condition, completely eliminating aging. The chamber could handle very serious physical damage, as well, so as long as there was a chamber available within a few minutes after a trauma, their immortality was assured.

Immortals tend to look farther into the future than the rest of us. Their long range vision warned them that the surface of the Earth was not a very safe place to live over the long haul. Or maybe they knew that all along, but it makes sense, even to this mortal.

A close look at the Moon's many craters shows that BIG chunks of something are flying around out there and smashing into us from time to time. Besides falling rocks, there are volcanoes and earthquakes that seem to occasionally wreak havoc. A peak into outer space reveals a violent universe who's extreme conditions eventually threaten to engulf our peaceful world. These periodic catastrophes have the power to destroy centuries of careful construction not to mention blow holes in anyone's claim to immortality.

Their rejuvenation chamber technology also gave them the capability for longterm hibernation. All they needed was a relatively safe place to park their chambers and they could survive any catastrophe.

They also perfected a larger and more efficient version of the technology that allowed them to hibernate large numbers of ordinary, non-immortal people. The subjects were suspended in giant bladders, filled with a womb fluid which supplied the nutrients instead of individual ports, as with the rejuvenation chambers. The womb fluid system didn't produce any healing in it's subjects, just preserved them as they were. These new citizens were chosen for their varied physical attributes and skills in world wide competitions. They planned to use these bags of humans to jump start civilization, as soon after the catastrophe as the Earth became inhabitable.

They built a space station to house the immortals. The bladders, housing their army of refugees, were strung out on tethers in all directions. They also developed a wide range of specialized robots and automated vehicles to transport and support the system. The Immortals lived and worked in the command center of their space station. From there they monitored and directed their machines.

As they detected the approach of the last big extinction, they gathered their army of new citizens, and moved them into their hibernation bladders. Then the Immortals settled in for a long sleep in their own private chambers.

When their sensors detected the surface of the Earth was once again suitable habitation, the Immortals were awakened and preparations begun for the return. The hibernating army was revived and an automated physical training regimen was instituted to get them all in shape to function on the surface. It didn't take long, but if it was not done, the citizens would be nearly helpless at full Earth gravity.

As the new citizens were ready, the transport ships carried them to the surface and deposited them in strategic positions around the globe. There they set up outposts and began building small cities. At first, everything went well.

They were surprized to find that some human beings had survived the great extinction. Not only had they survived, but they had flourished. Although they were very primitive, these small bands of hunter/scavengers were scattered across all of the continents. The Immortals paid little attention to these savages as they were deemed only a curiosity and not considered intelligent enough to pose any problems to their resettlement of Earth. How wrong they were.

Before any real fortifications could be built the barbarians began to raid the settlements. At first they were easily repulsed, but more and more of them kept arriving to join the raids. The raids escalated into full scale attacks. The Immortals countered with improved armaments for their outposts, but each escalation was met with a greater improvement in the tactics of the barbarians The barbarians were especially tough and resourceful. And there were an awful lot of them. They soon threatened all the settlements.

The long hibernation had not only diminished the strength and stamina of the new citizens, but it had also dulled their resolve. On the other hand, the years of struggle for survival had made the barbarians strong on all counts. Some of the settlements lasted quite awhile, but eventually, they all had to be rescued and the few survivors returned to the space station. The resettlement was a failure.

This caused a change in the strategy. The Immortals decided to take advantage of the strength of this new breed of human and use them to build their civilization. They began a program of infiltration and propaganda to train the new humans in their ways. They captured and chipped many of these new humans to use as their agents. Lucifer Stone(aka, Luce Gravel) was in one of the first groups to be abducted.

To be continued...

Find out more about The Luce Gravel Chronicles

If you haven't read On the Right Hand of God, yet...


©2005 jim cranford