Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “esoteric knowledge”

Shifts Through Wrinkles Of Time

Here, Greg Reese explores the cycles of the Great Reset, particularly those adopted by the Hindus and Mayans as well as how the Zodiac was viewed by the philosophers of  ancient Greece. The elusive Black Sun adds esoteric and occult components, many focused around the planet Saturn. Reese explains a few of the figures who delved into the Black Sun, including Helena Blavatsky.

We are nearing major changes in the Kali Yuga cycles, and those are shaping the great upheavals we are seeing around the globe — not only economic strife and war, but also great physical transformations as well.

The First Esoteric Knowledge

What was the first hidden knowledge humanity had? How could we even know such a thing?

Well, sit down for a tick and I’ll tell you why I think I can tell you, what that knowledge was, how it contributed to another major human innovation, and more. Here’s a different slant on esoteric knowledge from DeDunking.

Mysticism And The Occult

The word occult is from the Latin occultus (clandestine, secret), referring to “knowledge of the hidden”, and is not inherently evil or negative.

Every culture, from Egypt to India to the Norse, preserved teachings about unseen forces that shape consciousness and reality itself.

Here, author and anthropologist Robert Sepehr takes us on a journey to a museum of the occult — the Mystic Museum –in Burbank, California.

Secrets Of Sacred Geometry

Many of history’s greatest minds shared a universal secret that facilitated their genius expressions in art, engineering and architecture. An underlying esoteric tradition that spans back through pre-history, which they applied to their modern inventions and theories, that centers on number, harmony and cosmology that exists at the core of mystery school religions.

Geometric ratios were employed in the designs of ancient Egyptian, Indian, Greek and Roman architecture. This includes churches, temples and mosques, believed to have a sacred, divine significance. Here’s more from Robert Sepehr, author and anthropologist.

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