11 Comments
Sep 30, 2023Liked by Cameron M. Bailey

I’ll be there today! WOW what a cool, and hilarious read this morning. I really missed something when I missed Jamie Paul Lamb’s performance. See y’all at 9! 💝✨

Expand full comment
author

That's great! I look forward to seeing you and chatting with you!

Expand full comment
Sep 30, 2023Liked by Cameron M. Bailey

Olaf’s what a great place, and great hallway! I’m looking forward to heading over there with you next month!

Expand full comment
author

Yeah, it was a lot of fun!

Expand full comment

It is not well known that sounds and influences of planets do in fact effect every living thing, including us. Shortly after Albert Einstein's death, it was reported that one book was found opened on his desk titled, “Worlds in Collision,” by Immanuel Velikovsky (1950). This book in part outlines the planetary effects recorded in mythology and world religions, which further expanded into the electric universe theory.

Velikovsky elaborated that there was something more than the week power of gravity that held our planets together working like a grand clock. Just like electrons of an atom, planets were attracted and repulsed equally towards each other in a circumbabulation motion. Some critics called Velikovsky a midcentury pseudoscientist and was scoffed at by other scholarly credited scientists in the astronomy field. This could be in part because he involved catastrophes recorded in the Bible, Mythologies, and other ancient cultural recordings to astronomical events. Even though Velikovsky’s theories were not commonly accepted by the scientific field, some of his other predictions came true when NASA confirmed that the moon has remnant magnetism, radioactive hot spots, moonquakes, and audible sounds. He also predicted that Jupiter emits noise (vibration), the earth's magnetosphere reaches at least to the moon, the sun has an electric potential of approximately 1e+19 (over a trillion) volts, and the rotation of the earth can be affected by this electromagnetic field.

Velikovsky was in some ways self-taught, and heavily researched taboo subjects such as the Venus Tablet of the Mayans Dresden Codex, and the writings of the Assyrians and Babylonians regarding the destructive forces of Mars, which he explain as the negative effects of electromagnetic plasma occurrences. What these ancient priest and astronomers wrote down he viewed it as actual events and planetary influences. This could possibly explain the implications of astrology, and how the planets effected the psychology of people on earth.

Here is a link to planetary sounds recorded by NASA: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWq_sfQedmU

Expand full comment
author

Thank you for this Brother! I plan some follow-up study when I return home.

It was great seeing you on Friday evening, and I look forward to seeing you again tomorrow.

Expand full comment

Great seeing you as well brother. Will see you shortly

Expand full comment
Sep 30, 2023Liked by Cameron M. Bailey

“Bartender hands me some lucite thing with a QR code, says it’s the menu.

I says, ‘hey bartender dude, I’s from Lewis County, we don’t believe in no technology. We’s a bunch of Luddites, I don’t know how to operate this nonsense.’”

Being from Lewis County, I hear what you’re saying, but even so, I agree with you for other reasons.

Generally, I like the concept of QR Codes, but I’m not fan of looking at a menu in a dark restaurant on my phone. I HATE scrolling. Using a tablet works better, but not many of us are carting one around, at least for that purpose. I agree that having the whole menu in front of you that you can read like a book is much more convenient.

There’s a lot of cool things that modern technology brings us that makes things easier, but no matter how much I try to “get with the times” and use my phone for things, the more I find that a lot of those things are much easier to do on a laptop or tablet. This is one of those things.

“Brother Jaime Paul Lamb leads us on a meditative, upward quest through the orbits of the seven planets known to the ancients, with ritualistic use of incense and music. It was a completely unique and wonderful experience.” That would be cool.

Dive Bars? ...No. Not after the last time, thank you. (And no, you weren’t involved!)

Expand full comment
author

Yep. Menus on phones was the dumbest damn idea ever. Had the same deal for lunch today. Luckily VW Mike just told me what to order, so I was set!

Yep, very cool. Next year you should come to this event. You would really, really enjoy it!

Just remember, The Limit is still the world's greatest Dive Bar. I don't even have to worry about the menu there, they just know what I want. Perfect!

Expand full comment
Oct 2, 2023Liked by Cameron M. Bailey

Remember as Lon said - buy the books, you don't have the read them.

Expand full comment
author

I may have to follow Troy's lead and steal that line for myself!

Seriously though, thank you for all that you did to make this a truly extraordinary experience again this year. It is appreciated.

Expand full comment