Da'ath: A simplified method

August 12, 2017 | Author: Turiyan Gold | Category: Autonomic Nervous System, Anatomy, Animal Anatomy, Wellness, Medicine
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My groundbreaking research into the psychic organ at the core of the six yoga's of Tibet and the 72 spiritual abilit...

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Da'ath: a simplified method

"Hippeastrum equestre (red): Impacts abdominal organs, especially pancreas; assists detox of appendix, tonsils; cleanses mucous lining of lower bowel. Detoxes energy body through clarifying and releasing disjointed energies. Empowers throat chakra." –Source Hummingbird Remedies My quest to offer a simplified and comprehensive methodology to access da'ath or the infernal realms (insert spooky score) has been one of those projects that has taken on a life of its own. It’s been over eight years now give or take. I figured I would finish this basic exposition of a simplified method, *the* only method as it appears, which is the core of the 6 yoga's of Tibet, and the basis for realizing the 72 spiritual abilities. A set of siddhi's specific and exclusive to the system. That being said, Tibetan Buddhism is not Tibetan nor even Buddhist. Its origins are in Bon or Mongolian buryat shamanism, which is the root of Chinese medical qigong. Essentially it is not dissimilar to Thunder magic and the worship of baleful stars. Consequently I will for the time being reference two passages from Naropa's Six yoga's of Tibet which are of interest. This all started a few days ago when I was using google images for structural links and I came across this image: http://education.med.nyu.edu/Histology/coursematerials/syllabus/DT-6.gif When I looked at the image I noticed something that piqued my interest. On the lower right hand side we see the appendix. This relates to a side project that I am finishing up that is a series of several blogs. I decided to finish this first, because it will be uploaded to scribd with All rights reserved copyright. The project concerns Qlippoth and a flower essence for understanding of Western magick, Moon magic, the Quabballah. One of the sephiroth is Yesod. I saw it described when doing research on the shadow tarot, as a "lower throat". Yesod is the Lower throat. The proper structural link to the upper throat, the core of the system. Before I go further into the simplified methodology, let’s review some of the issues concerning esoteric anatomy and western anatomy. We have to go back to "research" done by Mr. Wang. You can luckily find a free text version of the unremarkable document in English here: http://library.uoregon.edu/ec/e-asia/read/anatomist.pdf For those unfamiliar with his work, Mr. Wang is supposed to have taught himself anatomy and physiology by looking at the cadavers mutilated by wild dogs. Which we now understand these days as to mean that there is a serial killer in the neiborhood.

There have already been well established reasons for not looking at real or pictures of diseased organs. Nothing really good can come from that type of method. Drawings and models should suffice. You cannot see the intestinal sub mucosa by looking at entrails. And you cannot look at cadavers and see esoteric or occult anatomy. The Chinese organs are only linked to the western organs because of their sympathetic functions. They are not necessarily mapped to the same organs or bear any resemblance and may even have confusing names. For example, the "blood reservoir" is quite simply the heart. But in Chinese terms, the heart is the pericardium. The image of the Chinese character for heart is used to represent the pericardium sack, the heart is actually below the ensiform cartilage (zhong wan) and inwards, what we know commonly as simply "the spleen". This like the heart differs from the physical organ. The spleen is off to the left. This is pretty common knowledge. They are conventions agreed upon by people that share a certain understanding. The term sympathetic and parasympathic are likewise, merely conventions, postmodern slang terms usually used outside the proper context.

"Langley was principally known for contributing "much to the knowledge of this system, renamed it the autonomic nervous system, placing, because of their functional relationships, the thoraco-lumbar group under the ancient name sympathetic, and the cranial and sacral groups in a new category parasympathetic." --Journal of Physiology, Vol. III, No. 3 In other words, the Chinese organs and the western organs are sympathetic because of their similar functional relationships. The functional relationships of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems are different. One being for stimulation, the other for sedation. The latter is found in the functions of the "stomach meridian", the 10th cranial nerve or vagus nerve. There are acupoints that can be grouped to plexuses, but these nerve plexuses are not meridians. This is why the grouping of points used in martial arts might be classified as DA MAK rather than DIM MAK. DA MAK is hitting the nerve, like when you get a Charlie horse. The stomach meridian and the vagus nerve are not the same thing. Stomach 9 is actually originally right on the jugular. I'd gather it’s more likely the sensor/signaling functions of the carotid body, rather than the artery. Almost all but one or two of the acupoints are transposition anyways. This means they were moved away from veins or arteries or other structures over time as schools of thought developed or needling technology and technique improved. The map is not the territory. On that note look at a fairly common illustration of what was just said. The "cranial" above the thoracolumbar group and the "sacral" at the bottom. I'll go more into parasympathetic output at the sacral region and some of the internal nerve plexuses later on in another exposition (the meridians are by definition channel-

level or surface level). http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f7/Gray839.png Here we have the image of the thoraco-lumbar group. This is the "sympathetic nervous system" or autonomic nervous system. The parasympathetic nervous system, which technically does not exist, is just a slang term if you will for the cranial or sacral group. Usually, most usually, this means the 10th cranial nerve or vagus nerve. But, in special circumstances, which is your sit up and take notice moment, such as the one in this blog. You understand the relation of the sacral group, to its connection to the SEDATION system which the stomach meridian represents in Chinese medicine.

We don’t say they are the same thing. We can see that the slang term sympathetic was coined to describe the sympathetic functions of various systems, which also so happen to be autonomic and be default, stimulatory. We can understand that we can apply this concept to acupuncture meridians and nerves. There are nervous systems and they have dendritic structures, but not all dendritic structures are nervous and not all nervous structures are mylenatated and so on. This is not absolutism where mere peering at cadavers gets you profound insight into something. Mr. Wang was apparently a whitewashed, westernized and forienzied Chinese man who had a bug in his rectum about his fellow Chinese’s "superstitions". We have a lot of those. They are usually self described "Buddhists" and physicists or medical doctors He didn’t have, quite frankly a YELLOW BRAIN. You don’t have to be Chinese to do Chinese medicine. It helps. Not every Chinese has a yellow brain. We can see once again the effects of missionary conversion on the mental function. It’s not just ignorance for someone to say: "How did the Chinese know about these things" "The five elements are just a primitive system of symbolic logic" and so on. Note: I've just edited out some of the more controversial statements on the subject to be spoken about at a later time. I wanted to sum up my thoughts on the subject simply in two words: Immaculate Conception. If you can’t wrap your mind around that concept, that your choice. It’s no wonder you can’t comprehend Chinese metaphysics. Now back to Mr. Wang's observations of anatomy of cadavers and its relation to the concepts of Chinese medicine. This is where we come to our "Where is waldo?" moment.

Where is the appendix?

We have an image here of the large intestine. The passage says clearly, that above is the small intestine and below is the anus. Where is the appendix? Nobody in china ever died of a ruptured appendix? Nobody ever had an enlarged appendix? Nobody ever had one on the wrong side of the body? Come to think of it, I’m saying to myself, I haven’t seen a whole lot of references to the appendix in any of these old drawings. Even in the esoteric anatomy and occult anatomy. Yet we see pictures of Greeks pointing to presumably the appendix, indicating that it’s the original seat of consciousness? Where oh where did they plagiarize this concept from? The 5th century, time time of Socrates was not that long ago.

It had to come from somewhere else. I don’t think the diagram here was drawn by Mr. Wang. I think he was trying to find which organs represented the diagram. Now I already mentioned the thoraco-lumbar group. So we go back here and look at where it refers to the 12 connections to the spine. Let’s assume this is the thoracolumbar group. He says the Yao duct is the Lumbar duct. This would have to be, at best at the bottom if not the end of the thoracolumbar group. If this is true then what organ are we looking at?

I decided to rotate the images sideways and I thought about the structural links between the various systems indicate that this is diagram of an esoteric organ, very similar indeed to the intestinal sub mucosa diagram shown in the link. Something that also came up from my inquiries. The hints come from the structural links of the Delawarr rates for the Vermiform Appendix and other radionic rates as follows: Delawarr, Large Intestine, Vermiform: 03.00 08.00 Appendix balance for intestinal gas (flatulence), typhoid fever, exanthematous viral & respiratory viral diseases, malaria, thyroid Endocrine Disorders, Thyroid Disorders: 81.00 11.00 use of 3.00-8.00 appendix is effective Endocrine Disorders, Thyroid: 81.00 92.00 Disorders, Overactive, Hyperactive or Toxic use of 3.00-8.00 appendix is effective From: http://www.kellyresearchtech.com/articles/krt-radionics-book-3.pdf

If we look at the descriptions of the 7 and 8, as well as 9 and 10, I am tending to think we are getting some strong indicators of this being MAPPED to functions directly or indirectly to the appendix. He tries to hard to match things in drawings to actual anatomy. Problem. How could Mr. Wang have observed the Intestinal sub mucosa with his naked eye? Yet, the "inscrutable china man" with the aid of the perspicacity of molecular clairvoyance, or diagnostic vision or accept that these immaculate conceptions are simply axiomatic..... Right? Now onto the simplified method. You really can’t get more simplified than "merging the root chakra with the throat chakra". This obviously, for reasons we won’t go into, isn’t exactly correct. I've never actually had this method work for me at all. It seems to be influenced by other techniques. For example, the Vajra web. Which is a red beam or preferably a fire emitted from the heart (which one?) that forms a mosquito type net around the body before bed to prevent the Hun from wandering. In Shangqing we might find similar instructions involving a red mist or light enveloping the body before sleep. This is usually highly stimulating and not very conductive to sleep, period. But may help people dream lucidly, but this is not the true method. Let me quote the appropriate passage from Naropa's Six Yoga's of Tibet. "Thinking that thou art thyself the deity Vajra-Yogini, visualize in the throat psychic-center the syllable AH, red of colour and vividly radiant, as being the real

embodiment of Divine Speech. (Midway between the heart psychic-center and that of the throat, in a space about four inches long, a tube-like psychic-organ is said to exist. If the vital force be quiescent within it, sleep ensues; and if the vitalforce be in motion within it, dreams occur. Hence the visualization chiefly concerns the throat psychic-center." We see the exact same error repeated here in the passage from Naropa's Six yoga's of Tibet in that the "heart" is used as a reference in such a way that the issue is confused. Notice that Mr. Wang repeats the same positional and postural error in his notes(!). See below diagram. Isn’t the appendix in fact roughly about four inches long? The heart in TCM is the pericardium sack. The true heart is the spleen in esoteric anatomy. But not the spleen organ as indicated by # in the diagram above (see blog version), but the entire physical, and energetic basis for a large amount of things going on in the abdomen.

The "tubelike organ" is in fact a "lower throat". It is not in the lower throat, it *is* the

lower throat, called Yesod in the Sephiroth. But, in my struggles, I’ve never found the method as described in the sparse references to be effective. I realize now that the idea is to create a structural link between the color red, associated with the root chakra and or the pelvic and or the sacral plexus, and the appendix, the "lower throat"! This then "regulates the regulator" of the throat, producing the basis for manifestation of the skills and abilities associated with the method. This is more commonly known as "Swallowing the Red Sun". I'm forced to cut this short but I am happy with this as a basis. Quick and dirty so to speak. The main issues here are obvious. I am right that this is the lower throat. However, how on earth are we supposed to visualize the visarga in the tubelike organ? It might actually be in different positions in the abdomen. The visarga or AH vowel: http://o.quizlet.com/LXdu-goVGyWFrMzEzCqepw_m.png It seems that only through structural links can the esoteric and occult anatomy be associated with the actual physical organ to produce the results of the 6 yoga's and the 72 spiritual abilities specific to the system. More on this later.

Another thing, it states that when the vital energy is quiescent in the psychic organ, this produces sleep, when it is in motion, dreams occur. This is the main difference between Sleep yoga and Dream yoga, being the quality and type of sleep and dreaming or lack thereof. If anything this shows that the Appendix and the Tonsils are not "useless organs". Quite the opposite. The structural links discovered by Delawarr hint that the "lower throat" aka Yesod has potential to regulates the thyroid and throat chakra and throat psychic center as well as other general functions with the Tonsils for white blood cells, immune system, blood, neurolymphatic, more "common sense". By the way, this is the exact psychic organ that Jung is alluding to. Otherwise known as Archetype. There is another link to esoteric and occult anatomy to the carotid plexus and carotid bodies in the neck to the Zeal point or Alta minor. The so-called Well of dreams. --tgold8888 All rights reserved

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