The Vanguard of a Perpetual Revolution

Baby, black sun, butterfly, and bindu over New York(3).jpg

Brian George, Baby, black sun, butterfly and bindu over New York, photogram, 2004

Preface

This essay is intended to be viewed as a kind of political/ cosmological landscape; I do not write about politics, as such, and have little interest in advocating a particular position. On the one hand, there has never been an election since 1972 in which I have not voted. For me, politics is the "art of the possible" -- as reductive as this seems. On the other hand, my imagination must have room to move, and I believe that the future is -- even now -- being created far outside of the framework of contemporary debate.  

I will, when all is said and done, most probably be voting for Obama -- unless he is challenged by a more courageous Democrat in 2012. But this will be only one scene out of one act of a play that is being performed at the forefront of a microscopic stage -- lit by arc lights that switch on and off -- behind which stagehands move throughout the wings and passageways and catwalks of an inconceivably large theatre.

1

Full disclosure: During the last election season I was a Hillary supporter, and was none too pleased by the way Obama treated his opponent. Since he took the oath of office, I have been pleasantly surprised by his sense of presidential bearing. For the most part, however, he has followed the course -- the course of happy-face "corporatism," tweaked now and then by timid lip-service to ideals -- that I foresaw in 2008.

In 2000, before the Supreme Court handed the election to George Bush, and the media chimed in to proclaim that the coronation was "inevitable," I had the sense that I was watching a kind of time-lapse train wreck -- whose first casualties would be unspeakable, and whose ring of disaster would continue to expand. In 2008, this sense of almost physical dread once again took over. Still, it is not for me to judge, since there is no way to determine what is actually going on, and the president, too, may be no more than a bystander.

He is the headlight that illuminates a prescribed cone on the tracks. It is not a job that I would wish upon anyone -- not even my worst enemy, or a god.

Once, on the dark horizon, a light no bigger than a pinhead had appeared. That light called memories, like a force-field, from the past.

Mile after mile, past the freight-yards of abandoned factories, past the Quonset huts of those who dream of a new Ice Age, past hermetically sealed databanks and armed compounds of the superrich, past the silos where a way of life was murdered: the light from the horizon grew steadily larger as it came. It had promised to be all things to all people. Until, in the final act, the light that spilled from the pinhead was enormous -- but it had no power to turn left or right.

Resources are finite, energy is not free -- not yet! -- and the USA should no longer be regarded as a "commonwealth." It is a soon-to-be post-industrial wasteland, still leaking plumes of smoke from its oil rigs, dump sites, and reactors, in which seeds have now been bioengineered to yield only one year's grain, not more -- in a frontal assault against the past 4.5 billion years of evolution -- and that is ripe for plunder by the top one percent of investors. It is the plaything of a network of oligarchs who do not need any government -- as they have been, for three decades at the least, a law unto themselves. The supposed "New World Order" is a stage-set, made from cardboard, and as disposable as any other.

Obama, as the shadow inside of a cone of light that was once projected by an ancient pinhead, is perhaps even more of an image than an actor -- even now. His options are limited, but he does possess one form of potentially catalytic power: the power of the Bully Pulpit. He can speak, and then later on do what he says -- and not the opposite, so that, as the Mongols in the time of Genghis Khan said, "His word is iron."

Such iron words may yet allow him to forge a weapon for the Kali Yuga.

He has the power to speak honestly, to stand up for what he believes (whatever that might be), to fight -- not only when it is practical, but also against overwhelming odds -- to take the initiative in framing every issue, and to then sell his vision to the American public.

At a time of converging crises, he could use this power far more effectively than he does.

Brian George, Irradiated smokestack, solarized print from x-rayed negative, 2004

2

Below -- in sections three and five -- you will find two comments that are connected with the posting of my essay "Four Scouts to the New World." The first comment is from "Reality Sandwich" forum for the essay, just before the election of President Obama in 2008, and the second is a reflection on why I chose to re-post it on "Modern Mythology," just after the earthquake, tsunami, and subsequent atomic disaster in Japan in 2011.

In 2008, I could not help but wonder: How is it possible for so many well intentioned people to not see that Barack Obama is just another actor -- a kinder and gentler apologist for Wall Street and closet advocate for the Military-Industrial Complex -- onto whom a part of the American public had projected its own dreams?

Do the crowds at an Obama rally not know that they are intoxicated -- with an energy more appropriate to a televangelist's studio -- or see the glazed eyes of other members of the crowd, or hear that they are chanting to give birth to a savior? Why do his supporters not pause to notice that he has no actual record, that he went out of his way to be absent for key votes in Illinois? Do they not hear when he speaks in glowing terms of Reagan, or see that, on those few occasions that he does speak truth to power, it is only so that he can substitute speech for action? As with the wave of a magician's hand, an incandescent city has appeared upon a hill.

It is now 2011, and I cannot help but wonder: How is it possible that, in the 1960s, GE didn't realize that there might be earthquakes in an earthquake zone, and went full-speed ahead to build a chain of atomic power plants on a fault line? Since then, why has no one stopped to think that an earthquake might knock out both the power plants and the backup systems, and why were the spent fuel-rods stored underneath the plants?

Then too, when radiation levels of 1000 millisieverts per hour have been detected 50 miles from the Fukushima plant -- i.e., four times the maximum safe level of exposure -- why have people only been evacuated throughout a radius of 20 miles? So far as I understand it, this is just the level that is judged to be safe per hour.

As Kurt Nimmo points out, "A year has 365 days, a day has 24 hours; multiply 365 by 24, you get 8760." And finally, if you multiply 1000 by 8760, you get 8,760, 000 times the normal dose per year. If the total projected yearly dose is not yet so astronomical, neither could it be regarded as anywhere close to safe. The exact figures could be debated, and keep changing hour by hour and depending on the source of information -- but you get the general idea.

And so, we must ask: Could the Japanese government be driven by an agenda beyond that of the well being of its citizens -- an agenda of which even the key actors may, at best, be only partially aware? On what ring of an interdimensional theatre are the benches on which the audience for the current play is seated -- calmly staring out of eyes that do not close, and with their thumbs poised to flip up or down?

To ask these questions is not to assign blame -- whether to the overly idealistic supporters of Obama, or to Obama himself, who probably has far less actual power than we think, or to the brightest of the brightest in the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, and on through to the present decade, who failed to anticipate and then prepare for a disaster that was 100% predictable, and certainly not to bureaucrats without backbones. No, I am pointing to these things in order to highlight their peculiarity.

"Life is a dream," wrote Renaissance playwright Lope de la Vega, and a host of other writers and philosophers. A four-syllable sentence -- as simple as an add slogan. For years, I had assumed that this was a metaphor -- an accurate one, yes, but no more than a figure of speech. No such luck! As I look out over the derelict empire that is now the USA, and beyond that at the world -- at the bizarre sense of unreality that prevents us from clearly seeing or confronting even the most urgent challenges -- I often feel, quite literally, that I am looking out over a dream.

The more familiar a peculiarity in our world view is, the less we tend to see it. Our capacity to be blind to the facts beneath our noses has, for me, now taken on an aspect of the supernatural. It is possible that we are being swept -- for better or for worse-towards a collective near-death experience. If we are paralyzed in the face of the large-scale clockwork of the time-cycle, it is possible that this presents us with a kind of initiatory test: We must find a way to act without being able to move.

Brian George, Child looking at globe, photo, 2004

3

Okantomi-you wrote, "It is pretty clear that your tongue is planted firmly in your cheek, but were you inspired somewhat prosaically by those 'little red book' waving Maoists of the late 60s and their latter-day wanabees? Were you maybe also casting an eye about over the political landscape of the last several years as you formulated this imaginary epic? The 'revolutionary purity' of the carefully chosen scouts is creepily reminiscent of a current 'perpetual revolution' in the making."

Yes, events that we thought long and safely past have a way of circling around and reemerging -- with all of their elements subtly rearranged. But who can tell if we are seeing the same thing in a somewhat different form or a different thing in a somewhat similar form? My head spins as I examine the most recent crop of slogans. For example: "Change We Can Believe In." "Yes We Can." "Our Time for Change." "'Change' versus 'More of the Same.'" "Stand for Change." "We are the change we've been looking for." "Change can't happen without you." "A leader who can deliver change." "It's about Time. It's about Change."

And yet all of this is somehow contrary to the magical power of the word. The word can also kill, and perhaps all of this talk about change is designed, as I have said, to lead us in a circle. Then again, we must also ask: Are those who believe themselves to be leading us in a circle also pawns in a projected mass-hallucination, from which the living -- upon pain of death -- are no longer allowed to exit?

For the exit always seems to be somewhere else. Signs point to a multitude of sharp turns in a labyrinth -- a centrifugal one-which, as it spins, stretches far beyond the edge of the known world. The true exit is no different than the entrance, and opens out beyond the circuit of the stars. Or, in other words, to a place no bigger and no smaller than one atom.

A friend said yesterday that "Four Scouts" reminded him of some utopian literature that he had read, without quite fitting into that category. You speculate that my "tongue is planted firmly in (my) cheek," and ask if "Four Scouts" should be read as a critique of current politics. A second friend asked why I couldn't speak more directly about the issues that I raise.

All of these statements point to a mode of argument that is complex in its movements, a kind of verbal capoeira, which attacks by indirection, and presents a different face to every reader.

As in Mesoamerican myth, an act of creation is simultaneously an act of destruction. I set up a vision to knock it down, not in favor of skeptical reductionism, but from the vantage point of a larger and even stranger reality.

As a child who flirted with concepts of revolutionary violence in the latter days of the counterculture, and who, luckily, did not act on the more extreme of his views, I have ever since been cautious about being swept away by enthusiasm. Bad eyesight can be contagious. Enemies are not obstacles to be eliminated, and means have a way of turning into ends. It is important for us to embody at each moment the end we would pursue.

The main character in "Four Scouts" is not me, but rather someone who resembles me in certain respects -- who plays a doctor on the screen of hyperspace. The Earth is at a crossroads and he and his planning group have some big decisions to make. As the ocean redraws the outlines of each coast, as the oil rigs stop pumping, and, on the highways of every country in the world, the trucks just stop where they are, as families move out of houses and into cardboard boxes, as opened hydrants take the place of showers, as street fights serve as substitutes for Nautilus machines and rusted bridges take the place of gyms, as stupor becomes the new normal, as a wave throws even the largest of nuclear reactors all over the place like toys, as the sky cracks like an egg, and everything is far brighter than it should be, before turning black: The suspicion begins to dawn on a few misfits here and there that the status quo has, perhaps, been suspended, and that the laws of nature may be the next to go.

Data rich but memory poor, the time scheduled for the post-industrial shadow play is up, and they must find a way to transplant the past eight thousand years of civilization.

The main character is critical of the illusions of others, but he has his own tendencies to blindness and grandiosity. At times, the reader is entitled to wonder if this character is going a bit crazy. He is not. He is only giving free rein to the forces that he and the rest of the planning group must constellate. As solar flares knock satellites from their orbits and the continents begin to tilt, they must reach a consensus on what four scouts will be sent to a new planet-a planet far distant from but in most ways an exact duplicate of the Earth.

Once there -- I thought as I was writing -- having been deposited in a last gasp of technology, would it even be possible to determine that such a voyage had occurred? So too: Had this happened once before, in some long forgotten age, or an infinite number of times? I saw planet after planet, each the almost exact image of its predecessor, stretching back into the fullness of one point.

Almost natural giant works pointed to their counterparts on a stage set that preceded the Big Bang. There, sitting in concentric rings around the fire -- the bird tribes to the left and the snake tribes to the right -- we once spoke of the transparent cities we would build. We then argued over the proper number of dimensions in the ocean. How long would each take to dig? It was difficult to determine, as was the number of throats it would be necessary to cut.

The approach that I take in this exploration comes more out of vision than ideology. I do feel that we are under a kind of ultimatum to imagine and then put into practice new ways of interacting with each other and the world. I am not, however, naively utopian, any more than I am trapped by the use of modernist irony, or by post-modern strategies of appropriation. "The I is Other." Irrevocably. The Fates may play a joke on us -- as in the past -- at which they will laugh. We do not know what the day will bring, or what the arc of the story is that we must follow to the end. It is also necessary to sleep.

Most utopian projects are corrupted, early on, by an unacknowledged shadow element; love's practitioners are driven by the shards of past creations, from behind. My goal is to consciously incorporate this element into the very structure of the vision. "We should learn from the skeletons that the gods keep locked in their closets." The movement here is twofold: I do mean to present a radical vision of the future; on the other hand, I also want to subvert the militant concern for purity and the absolutism that can follow the intoxication of a visionary experience.

The tone of "Four Scouts" might best be described as "polyphonic"; many frames of reference intersect within the language of the essay, whose form functions as a kind of interdimensional stadium. The terms of each contradiction in my nature are encouraged to compete for dominance. Any goals, however, must be moderated by the principle of uncertainty. As I have said: "The one year plan will fall by the wayside." "Species will devolve, allowing the new gods to play."

The last survivor is a non-Darwinian.



Brian George, Girl underwater with turtles, photograph, 2004

4

At Fukushima, in his almost non-protective suit, a volunteer from the cleanup crew surveys the uncertain outcome of his work. As the representative of an industry that I hate, he is one out of a long list of potential enemies -- and yet. My attitude is little more than a mechanistic program. He is one of the "Fukushima 50," who, as he struggles to prevent a total meltdown of the fuel rods, will sleep on a blanket on the concrete floor, and will almost certainly die. His hands are clean, as are those of any servant of a cause.

He did not intend to send free energy in a cloud that with its glow would power the factories of the Northwest USA, there to prompt a boom in sunglasses, and to circulate throughout the udders of each cow. If only in terms of the logic of the Hypersphere, each cause can then be made to correspond to an effect. Beam technology from a lab in the Northwest USA can then be bounced from a great height down to Libya -- in the latest of anti-terrorist experiments.

There, even as we speak, a fault-line has just started to crack open. And from there, after being dropped on chutes, droids will transmit geothermal data to the engineers who dream about a pipeline to Afghanistan-an archeological relic, dead from the word "go."

The five media conglomerates have decided to join forces. Their goal: To preserve our Way of Life. There is no reason for the phrase "military contractor" to be used. Nor will there be "collateral damage." It is perhaps no one group's fault that the time-cycle is indifferent to our safety and our comfort. Learning nothing from their experience in the Gulf, a small oversight by BP on an offshore rig will soon turn the Atlantic black.



Brian George, Aeonic theatre, photogram, 2004

5

In "The Real," Parmenides said, "And thus it remains constant in one place; for hard necessity keeps it in the bonds of the limit that holds it fast on every side. Wherefore it is not permitted to what is to be infinite; for it is in need of nothing, while, if it were infinite, it would stand in need of everything...

"Since then, it has a furthest limit, it is complete on every side, like the mass of a primordial sphere, equally poised from the center point in every direction; for it cannot be greater or smaller in one place than another." --Adapted from a translation by John Burnet

"Four Scouts to the New World" was written several years ago, but I have chosen to re-post it now because of its connection to the crisis -- i.e., the earthquake, tsunami, and subsequent near nuclear meltdown -- that is unfolding in Japan. One of the central themes of the essay is that any and all "perfect systems" have an innate tendency to self-destruct. The Tao Te Ching says, "The greatest perfection seems imperfect," and "That which approaches perfection will soon end."

People tend to use the words "tragedy" and "disaster" as if they were interchangeable; they are not. A "disaster" is an event that appears to happen by itself, that is thrust upon us from the external world -- although this may or may not ultimately be so. A "tragedy," on the other hand, is an event that directs us to reexamine and to probe the highly peculiar nature of human action in the world. The key point is that the actor has done nothing wrong.

It is sad, then -- if each actor is free to act as badly as he wants -- that I am somehow disallowed from hating all of my enemies! And after I worked hard for so many years to perfect my occult point of view. In the end, my perspective is no better and no worse than yours.

Although faceless, perhaps GE executives from the 1960s are the true and unsung heroes of the story, for it was they who built the atomic plant at Fukushima -- without which our general state of anxiety would have no point of focus. Conversely, although billions no doubt recognize his face, we should not assume that Obama's role is of any great importance -- not yet. Time will tell, as will we. There are no bad parts, only actors who are not prepared to take advantage of the moment, and who have not probed deep enough.

If the actor is to cultivate an other-than-human viewpoint, he must first confront the origin of his fear. Death calls the actor towards his own face in the mirror, at the same time that it warns him to immediately stay put.

There are those who feel the energy of unknown eyes on their backs, and attribute all sorts of motives to this interest. Conspiracy theories multiply like new strains of bacteria. The main characters are ill at ease. They would like to account for this sense of being watched. They wait for some objective explanation of why stagehands have been granted so much power. If we ask who is in charge of moving scenery around, we will find that there is no way to even begin to count the candidates -- nor does it matter much.

It is difficult enough to determine what we ourselves should do next, and to remember how we have acted in the past. Why, for example, when we used our tongues to dismember the first gods, did we put this spotlight here and that shadow over there?

From one point the whole of the rest of space expanded. Quite oddly, it does not grow any larger than it was, nor, in principle, can it. Thus the splitting of one atom can destroy the Pacific Rim. One actor can speak truth to power -- against overwhelming odds, and even at the cost of his defeat -- and thus forge a weapon for the Kali Yuga. Thus great oaks grow from acorns, as cities spring from an antediluvian bird's nest -- now a crater -- and one fertilized egg can repopulate a world.

At the edge of space, as I have said, in a manner of speaking sit the 8-armed and the 12-armed "Aeons," those living libraries, who have seen this all before. They have seen it both backwards and forwards, and experienced it from the outside in as well as from the inside out. It is a puzzle why they hang on each small gesture of the actor -- and yet, breathlessly, they do.

A crisis has arrived, which demands that the actor act; in order to do so he must choose between two equally impossible alternatives. We are left with no choice but to empathize with the actor -- for any choice that he/she makes will be simultaneously both right and wrong. The daily bureaucratic and scientific and political business of the world may be little more than the slow-motion clockwork that gives form to this tragic arc.

If the actor could view his projections from all of 360 degrees, it might be possible -- for some period of time, and only just -- to keep his actions in alignment with the whole.

If he launches a pet project -- whether an essay called "Four Scouts to the New World," or a boat made from the bones of gods, or a genetically engineered species, or a form of government, or a chain of nuclear reactors -- he will tend to see it in a positive light. To act well, he must keep his focus; it is natural that he should block out any dissonant information. But reality is always vaster and more unpredictable than we think.

New posts every 2-3 days on my blog Masks of Origin

http://masksoforigin.blogspot.com/

Comments

Thanks.

Brian, this is inspiring and beautiful. I look forward to reading Four Scouts.

-Bryan

The Eternal Return

Hi burnur,

Much thanks for your generous comment!

In section 3, I had written, "Yes, events that we thought long and safely past have a way of circling around and reemerging -- with all of their elements subtly rearranged. But who can tell if we are seeing the same thing in a somewhat different form or a different thing in a somewhat similar form?"

This is very much true for me creatively as well. Things have a way of circling around, and then going underground for some period of weeks or months or years, and then reemerging at unexpected moments and in unexpected ways. For example, explorations that may have first presented themselves as myth making or as futuristic theory--as in "Four Scouts to the New World"--might suddenly pop up as the daily news.

Such exchanges between the subjective and the objective world seem to be happening at an escalating rate. The time cycle seems to be playing games with our heads--wherever those may be! These reversals of self and world, past and future, are a source of great fascination to me, and yet more than a bit unsettling.

The Vanguard of a Perpetual Revolution

Great artwork and eerily accurate parallels to recent world events. Is Brian George the next Edgar Cayce? Really though, I think reviewing his past work may shed light on future ‘happenings’. We look forward to more…..the stage is set.

The ghosts that gather at the the Maginot Line

Hi Sphinx, 

I have just finished revising a piece called “Transplantation of the Seed Stone.” The reference is to the ancient Egyptian tradition of removing a “seed stone”—quite often the phallus of a god—from a temple that was about to be ritually dismantled. This seed stone would then be used as the seed from which a new temple was constructed, and through which it was activated. Below, you will find two of the sections from “Four Scouts to the New World” which acted like seed stones in the creation of “The Vanguard of a Perpetual Revolution.” 

1) “Our allegiance is to a sun that has long since disappeared. We are exiles, with no place to go. We are the citizens of a city with no physical location. 

“Casting shadows from an aviary that was swallowed by the deluge, our technological genius has again come home to roost. We should learn from the skeletons that the gods keep locked in their closets. These were the brave. A personality type is as stable as the ocean that it walks on. As the story requires, we must put our total hope for transformation in the actors, who are pure, since they do not yet exist. Our four scouts are the vanguard of a perpetual revolution. 

“Soma- flow for Indra; hallucinatory energies will soon harden into facts. Each dogma will be overthrown.” 

2) “A bunker stocked with drums of radioactive waste will not be subject to the laws of chance. It will not be disturbed by the drift of continental plates. A computer simulation has assured us that no leakage will occur for 50,000 years. 

“As children of the industrial revolution, we are eager to put our faith in complicated systems. We believe that a design can be perfected in advance. For this reason, I would next nominate for the voyage an army engineer, who would know that such fantasies do not come true. He trusts an expert only as far as he can throw him. A disaster waits around every corner. An alien craft is hiding in the silver lining of the cloud. No good deed will ever go unpunished. The victim will get blamed. The guilty will hang the innocent from trees. 

“He trusts that good luck will turn into bad, if not today, then at least by tomorrow.  “If something can go wrong, it probably will. To him courage is not a virtue. It is just a part of the job description, a way of thumbing his nose at death, a daily requirement for the survival of the group. A fan of history, he will remember the Maginot Line, and insist on planning for the camp not one but a multitude of defenses.”

reversals

Yes Brian, and it was appropriate of you to quote that passage from section 3, as I enjoyed that very much and laughed out loud when I read it. I have the same impression about the exchange between what would more comfortably be understood as subjective and objective, within and without. Even my own experience seems to exemplify this, often enough. Ever since I realized that my perceived "inner" and "outer" compensated for eachother, and that I was like a mirror, I've gradually found that I move with time like an undulating wave of synchronous circumstance, as I tend to describe it to my friends and family. Whenever I've happened upon what I think of, in retrospect, as the highest point of that wave, I am enmeshed in seemingly constant coincidence. I hadnt looked at this website in awhile til I stopped by and read your essay, but when I created my login here a couple years ago, this was my end-comment tag line:

"eclipse the golden mirror and that reflection is set free"

It's a quote from Meshuggah's Catch33 album. How silly of me to remove it, when it was automatically included in the text field for my previous comment! Have a nice day.

The uncertainty of the quantum cherry tree

Hi Burnur,

I wrote, “But who can tell if we are seeing the same thing in a somewhat different form or a different thing in a somewhat similar form?" In regards this interplay of substance and appearance, which can drive us mad:

From the time that he first appeared on the public stage, I have often wondered whether Barack Obama was a hardcore Republican in Democratic clothing or a “community organizer” who had decided on a plan of systematic compromise and was biding his time before acting on his actual agenda. I still don’t know, but—odd as it may seem—I am not sure that it matters much. It is possible that Obama himself is not sure of which of these descriptions is correct.

Let’s look at this in terms of the wave/ particle duality in quantum physics: It is possible for an electron to manifest as either a particle or a wave, and the questions that we ask and how we choose to look at it and measure it will determine how the particle-wave is projected into reality. You might argue that the laws that govern atomic structure do not translate exactly into everyday experience. I began as a poet rather than as a prose writer, however, and this type of metaphorical correspondence is good enough for me.

We do not live our lives according to Newtonian physics, either, whose laws were formulated to predict the movement of physical objects rather than the dynamics of a living system. We are the masters of negentropy, and, with every breath, we violate the Second Law of Thermodynamics! Newton’s Three Laws of Motion are no different in kind than Heisenberg’s Uncertainty principle: Each are frames of reference—sometimes useful, sometimes not—that allow us to bring a complex web of relationships into focus.

So, this is how I would interpret my sense of uncertainty as to Obama’s actual nature and intentions: That Obama the corporate puppet and Obama the great leader are simultaneously present. That we are more familiar with how the present is determined by the past, and tend to focus on the formative details in the childhoods of great leaders—to the extent that these can be known. Or we simply intent them, as with George Washington and the chopping down of the cherry tree—an action about which he could not tell a lie, even though it did not happen.

We are less familiar with the ways in which the present is determined by the future, and in relation to things that do not seem to have happened yet. Looked at in this way, great leaders—Washington, Lincoln, Roosevelt—are not born, but rather made in response to the overwhelming pressure of events—and are defined by what they do in key moments of transition, during which even they do not know how they will act. 

The Eternal Return

Hello Brian, in reference to the passage below: 1) “Our allegiance is to a sun that has long since disappeared. We are exiles, with no place to go. We are the citizens of a city with no physical location.

 Are you speaking of an alien race or ET intelligences now inhabiting human bodies? This is compelling and I suspect many RS readers have felt this way at various times in their lives. Also, the first photo- is that a black sun? Was the child / doll emitted from it or is it being pulled into it?

Sobek wants an autographed copy of your hardcover coming out this summer....

The splitting of the atom of consciousness

Hi Sphinx,

The photogram that you asked about is from a series that I did in 2004. The layered images may look like they were done with Photoshop, but I used my own variations on the technology that Man Ray was using in the 1920s, which was itself a throwback to the technology of the 19th century.

If you are not familiar with the technique: A photogram is a photograph made without a camera or a negative. You need a light source—in this case an enlarger—a piece of photo paper, and whatever objects or images on paper that you want to place on the photo paper.

(One liberty that I took was in the use of a copy machine, Quite often, I would blow up the images that I planned to use in a series of five percent increments. This gave me a far greater range of choices when I was playing around with the interference patterns, and trying to figure out how to generate a single image from them. In the best of the photograms, and especially as the series went on, conscious planning became less important as synchonicity began to play a major role.)

A traditional photogram usually involves a single exposure of the layered objects and images to a light source. I developed a technique of using three or four exposures. The timing is very tricky—it must be planned down to a fraction of a second—and the photo paper can easily turn black. I would often go through 15-20 sheets to get a single print. There is something very alchemical about the process, however, and it is fascinating to see how the layers of imagery come to fit, bit by bit, together.

In this photogram, the layers are as follows:

1) A photographic overview of New York.

2) One or two cosmological illustrations from Robert Flood.

3) A plastic doll and butterfly.

It is up to every viewer to come up with his/ her own interpretation, of course, but I don’t think that the baby is being drawn into the black sun. The baby is perhaps throwing its arms up in surprise as some catastrophe is taking place above New York, or is simply exclaiming with its arms “Here I am!” The bindu—the small sphere of light at the top—is the point of origin, the butterfly is a symbol for the soul, and the baby should most likely be read as a symbol of rebirth—kind of like the baby at the end of “2001; A Space Odyssey.”

For me, this piece has always had the feeling of being an image of a kind of atomic explosion—but a good atomic explosion perhaps, like the splitting of the atom of primordial consciousness.

Let me respond to your other question a bit later.

Also, please tell Sobek--who I assume is still a crocodile god--to behave. It is nice to hear that he has developed literary interests, but he would probably just eat the book when it comes out.

Life is a dream—as opposed to what? Death is a reality?

Hi Zezt,

I am pleased that you picked one of my favorite passages to quote. I have always been fascinated by the various formulations of this statement that “Life is a dream,” but have also found it a difficult statement to comment on directly. This is the kind of simple statement that is actually quite opaque.

It presents the reader/ listener with an ultimate conclusion, but does not inform him of how the writer/ speaker arrived at it, or present him with instructions as to where he should go from there. In this way, it is something like the ancient Greek injunction, “Know yourself,” which is attributed to Socrates and about a dozen others. What is the self, and what does it mean to know it?

Such statements lead around in circles, becoming, with each repetition, less and less self-evident in both their frontal outlines and their implications. It seems likely that they intended to understood as “koans.”

The almost accidental public service of the Archons

Hi Zezt,

After reading Miguel Connor's current RS post "'Gnostic' Is an Open Question: An Interview with Elaine Pagels," I decided to revise an essay that I wrote two years back called "The Reconstruction of the Primal Lion," which grew out of my rediscovery of and reengagment with the Nag Hammadi manuscripts.

I just came across a section on the Archons, which has, I think, a direct bearing on this relationship between politics and the dream. The excerpt reads:

On the "Hypostasis of the Archons"

Putting aside all fear and judgment, perhaps we can say, about Earth’s rulers, that they do what they were made to do. The Archons are the Archetypes that hold the energy of the field in manifestation. That we not, too quickly, return into empty space. 

It is clear that they do not love us. At each turn, they do harm instead of good. 

In this, like tyrants everywhere, they are performing a kind of public service: by inciting the otherwise unconscious Body Politic to revolt. 

Already, they are dead; they just don’t know it yet, nor do we. And the teacher, who again resembles us, almost, has removed the last of the bandages from the astronaut, lifting Him/ Her from the fluids of the cybernetic tank.

If History were not a dream, then we would not have any symbols to interpret in the morning.

 

(Also, Zezt, if you haven't seen it yet, I have a new blog called Masks of Origin, on which I post every 2-3 days. http://masksoforigin.blogspot.com/ )

In with the new boss, same as the old boss...

It's interesting to see my words incorporated into one of your pieces, Brian. I think I understand where you are coming from.I often feel like I can see what is happening in the world and it's like no one else sees what I am seeing. It's eerie, shocking and finally depressing. I don't hold the POTUS particularly responsible; it's just that in order to be able to be POTUS, it seems that you have to be prepared to play ball with whoever is really running the show. That's all far above my pay grade. Anyway, it will continue to be quite interesting to watch events unfold...hang on for a bumpy ride!

The snare of distance and the sunglasses of the seer

"And, spread across solemn distances, your smile entered my heart."—Rilke

Hi Okantomi,

People do have visions of the future, both individually and collectively. Hollywood blockbusters, for example—Star Wars, Terminator, Lord of the Rings, Avatar—strike me as one of the most potent forms of contemporary mythmaking. People also give form to the future through their fears, by all of those things that we know but go out of our way not to think about—that reserves of oil will almost certainly run out in our lifetimes, that the US doesn’t manufacture much of anything anymore, and that there is very little locally grown food—not enough to sustain a major city in the case of a real emergency. There are many things that it seems better not to know.

The problem is, of course, to separate and categorize these alternate versions of the future—in simplistic terms, to discriminate between the more false than true and the more true than false. Fear and hope pump out an almost impenetrable fog, crackling with static, which makes every level of the process difficult, and tests our ability to read what is beyond our imagination.

Through the years, and especially in the early 1990s, I have frequently found myself projected into the future—both in terms of specific images and by wider visionary overviews. References to the destruction of the World Trade Towers popped up five or six times in poems from 1992.  “A monster stalked his head through the air vents of the World Trade Towers.” The World Trade Towers for a fourth time fall; their shadows stand.”  There were other lines from this period that possibly pointed to the Gulf oil disaster: “The sea has met its death by accident.” And to Fukushima: “You have thrown a wave at the reactors of the Nephillim.”  

There were dozens of references in my books “To Akasha/ Parts 1 and 2” to the idea of a 1-mile wave or a mile-high wave. “To Akasha/ Part 1” was structured around this image, and it was a phrase that I never expected to hear in the news. But, during the Gulf oil crisis, reporters began to speak about what would happen if the vast lakes of methane under the Gulf were to explode. Once consequence of this would be a mile-high wave that would wash over two thirds of North America. 

As you suggest, prophesy may have less to do with the prediction of the future than with the ability to see clearly into the present—to boldly recognize patterns that are just beginning to be formed or to probe into patterns that have long been in existence, but which, for whatever reason, have not yet become visible. For the most part, this involves a set of classical virtues rather than a bag of supernatural powers. Among the most important of these virtues are the ability to step back, a willingness to stand on your own as you free yourself from the force-fields of the common wisdom—from the advice of experts, from the emotions roused by the desire to see your side win and the other side destroyed, and from the hypnotic fixations generated by the media. 

As we free ourselves from the common wisdom, paranoia  may be the most immediate of temptations. All conspiracy theories may be true, or none of them, or a fact from this one and an overview from that one, but in the end such labyrinthine exploration may not lead to greater freedom. The trap is this: We are always the good guys, and someone else is always to blame for every evil in the world.  

Appearances to the contrary, it is possible that the things that matter most are actually very simple, and, as grounded citizens of the greater city of the cosmos, it is our job to remove the layers of obfuscation that cut each person from the core of his/her power, so that each may again serve as a kind of movable Omphalos. Gently but persistently, we must bring our attention back to what I will call the Boy Scout (or Girl Scout) virtues. Among these are love, honesty, courage, compassion, industriousness, curiosity, a sense of proportion, a sense of justice, generosity, self-awareness, a willingness to take responsibility for one’s actions, and what Hemenway called “a built-in bullshit detector.”

We do not always have to be picked up and transported to view one dimension from the vantage point of another A state of clarity will sometimes to the trick. Bypassing the need for hallucinatory display, we can glimpse just how the dimensions fit together, and why they interact as they do.

The world is almost infinitely complex, as is time, and human nature, but we should start by drawing a circle on the ground immediately around us—a circle that will be powered by our breath, and whose centripetal vortex will gather up what it needs: Visions are allowed to visit, but fears and traumas and hatreds and projections will be required stand a few feet off. We must start from where we are, and trust in our own direct powers of perception. If we know that there will be earthquakes in an earthquake zone—with close to 100% certainty—then we will know that this is not the ideal place to build a chain of Nuclear Power plants, and we will stare in wonderment at the expert who has dared to disagree.