Miguel Serrano was a Chilean diplomat, explorer, and esoteric author that studied ancient internal alchemy as practiced by occult orders that flourished in Germany. He also claimed that Aryans originated from extra-terrestrial visitors and that part of inner earth was inhabited.
The Hittites established an empire centered on Hattusa in north-central Anatolia around 1600 BC. In the Amarna tablets, which have been dated to the 14th century BC, the Hittites were clearly regarded by the Egyptians as a major power. In antiquity, the swastika was used extensively by the Hittites, sometimes as a geometrical motif, other times as a religious symbol.
Flood myths are common across a wide range of ancient cultures, extending back into Bronze Age and Neolithic (stone age) prehistory. These accounts depict a flood, sometimes global in scale, usually sent by a deity or deities to destroy civilization as an act of divine retribution. In this episode, I address flood myths from around the world, including lesser known accounts from the Americas. watch the full video below:
Internal or inner alchemy is an array of esoteric doctrines and physical, mental, and spiritual practices that mystery school initiates use to increase vitality, boost health, enhance creativity, prolong life and create an immortal spiritual body that would allegedly survive after death.
According to Carl Jung, who created the field of analytical psychology, we all have an individual subconscious mind, but we each also have access to a greater collective unconscious, which includes our ancestors and Blood memory is one part of, or one way of accessing a part of, the collective unconscious. The entirety of the collective unconscious includes all thoughts, feelings, and wisdom of all people who have ever lived. Blood memory is the thoughts, feelings, and wisdom of the ancestors of one's own specific culture, totem, clan or race.
The collective unconscious is allegedly available to each of us, each living person. Our individual ability to access it depends on our belief system. Those who believe it does not exist have no regular contact with it. Those who believe in blood memory seemingly use that to access part, and perhaps eventually all, of the collective unconscious. Those who have other belief systems likely have other ways to access our shared cultural and universal wisdom.
The Society of Jesus, as the Jesuits are formally known, was started in the 1530s by Ignatius of Loyola, a Basque soldier who compiled a series of esoteric Spiritual Exercises which consist of mental exercises, meditations, prayers, and other internal alchemy practices.