Archive for the Uncategorized Category

Cosmic Trigger-finger.

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , on June 11, 2009 by skyscraped

Just found this excellent link to some audio books and other meta information from the vaults of the late Robert Anton Wilson. I personally just got the first audio book of the Illuminatis! Trilogy (one of my favorite books of all time). I regret that I don’t read as much as I used to; while the exponentiation of novelty increases, the brain must find suitable ways to adapt, to take in more information at a time. That being said, I could literally read this book twenty three times and not see all the angles the same way each time. Such is the probability of chaos.

Also in true RAW fashion, I stumbled across this interview with Robert Bauval in which he says he realized the connection between Orion and the Giza pyramids while camping in the desert of Saudi Arabia. I found this clip on my Youtube subscription updates the day after I’d just gone into a tangent in my 11th grade class about the Milky Way and my parents’ experiences camping in the Arabian desert (which actually happened during the same period Bauval was also in Saudi, although I don’t think they knew each other).

I plan on visiting Egypt next year if I return to Saudi. There’s just nothing like seeing things for yourself to solidify your grasp on reality, and unfortunately mine never seems to be satiated. I could be standing on top of the entrance to Shambala in the Himalayas talking to a glowing 9-foot tall snake man named Osiris and I’d still have to ask for his license and registration. Curiosity killed the…woman, right? Or was it female incarnation of the cat essence? I’m sure that has nothing at all to do with the original face carved on the Sphinx.
Giza and Orion's Belt

Orion Giza

Shafts pointing to Stars at Giza Pyramids

Wavy Gravy once asked a Zen Roshi, “What happens after death?”

The Roshi replied, “I don’t know.”

Wavy protested, “But you’re a Zen Master!”

“Yes,” the Roshi admitted, “but I’m not a dead Zen Master.”

In other news, I need a back rub.

Go on, Babylon

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on January 29, 2009 by skyscraped

Go on, Babylon
I don’t need you
To tell me I’m not worthy
of your heart
Go on, telethon
callin for my dollar
On these empty streets i walk alone
the pictures of your daughters
all skin and bones on every lamppost
Billboards to the Holy Ghost
tell me how I can be the most
beautiful one with a beautiful pose
Tell me, how many girls did you kill today?
Starvin themselves to look that way
We could’ve used what their hearts had to say
But their minds kept deep inside

So go on, Babylon
I don’t need you
To tell me that my words
are no good
Go on, Page One
There’s no time to court you
My heroes, what is left of them
didn’t heed your disapproving lens

To change the wind and change your plans
To sing what their souls spoke to hem
To insist that they breathe real air again
Cause all of it is an illusion
The company car, the Mercedes Benz
the COINTELPRO false flag events
The cross, the priests, the Vatican
only have the power you give to them

So go on, Babylon
I don’t need you
I’ve found the love I needed to
Break down all your walls
Go on, Zion
You are not my Promised Land
I know Eden and she’s running fast
To get away from your bombs
Oh this is not the end, this is not the end,
As long as I live I will not repent
What my heart says we gotta bring
back to this planet
Give Love, Please give Love, Please give Love,
Give Love

I see you dying, Babylon,
Going underwater
With your son of Sam
Sirhan Sirhan, pullin the trigger
Back on you, Babylon
But you cannot hypnotize the ones
who refuse to bow
Who learned how
to stay closer to their center

To change the wind and change your plans
To sing what their souls spoke to hem
To insist that they breathe real air again
Cause all of it is an illusion
The company car, the Mercedes Benz
the COINTELPRO false flag events
The cross, the priests, the Vatica
only have the power you give to them

Performance of “Go on, Babylon” from Art Love Magic’s GirlShow 2009

Note: I was wearing the abaya to show everyone what traditional women’s dress looks like in Saudi Arabia on the first night of GirlShow 2009, held in Dallas by Art Love Magic. It was meant to both honor and inform women of all faiths and to be a metaphor for perception; we so often judge everything by what we see, and unless we look beyond initial impression, our reality will be imprisoned by that impression. All things must be studied deeply to further our understanding of them.

School Without Walls

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on January 29, 2009 by skyscraped

We are the stones that the builders refused
We are the Revolution rising through the Fourth Reich roof
We are the Constitution built upon the hidden truth
We are an institution you can’t see and you can’t prove
We are the students who teach the classroom
We are the builders of the last transparent toomb
We are the rose lines laid out for all the world to see
We are the rabbits on the moon
WE are the School Without Walls
The children of the fall
Rising up and saying, We will follow our hearts
With the knowledge you have kept
We will rise again

At the pyramid’s end you see the tetrahedron
Opening again the Waking of Babylon
A nuclear whore rising like Venus through the flames
But we grow up through the Sepheroth
Walk the path infront of us
Until we reach the desert where we were born
And though the sun is burning us
and though our eyes betray us
We are students of Lazarus
Waking up the dead

We are the ones we’ve been waiting for
We are the kids who hold the keys to Eden’s door
If we could just get our hearts up off the floor
We would pierce the all-seeing eye
We are the knights who reject the Templars
We know this power given to us ain’t ours
To hold anymore
And gold only comes in bars of music notes
sung from the heart

We are the School Without Walls
The children of the fall
Rising up and saying We will follow our hearts
With the knowledge you have kept
We will rise again

The Wake

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , on January 10, 2009 by skyscraped

To be screamed from the rooftops, with emphatic rage:

Wake up, everything you’ve been told
is a lie; I had to see it first
with my own eyes
the cries of Palestinian children, generations wiped out
with depleted uranium
buildings bombed out, not a single gun in em
And if I told you why—Could you ever look again
at the sidewalk’s end as you crawl again
through the day, a slave
to the institution
that’s selling weapons of Mass Depopulation
to the bloodiest blind Anti-Christ I’ve seen in my time?

You know, Christ is in Islam, too,
he’s a gentle guy, who turned the money changer’s tables on their ends–
there is no difference, in my opinion.
Whether you believe and follow
Jesus, Buddha, Mohammad, Vishnu
Quetzaquatl or the Goddess–I know that NONE of them
would condone this mess. So tell me. Is it genocide?

For a people without a land found a land
With a people–
where only 400 years before,
there were mosques, synagogues, and steeples,
side by side without thought to the pride
of a Promised Land. So tell me,
Was that kid born with a gun in his hand?
Did he threaten you, when you kept food from him?
When you caged him, did he throw a bomb?
Is he deserving of a war crime?

Because those phosphorus shells you use so well
to cloak your planes and reign down hell
ARE a war crime, when you drop them on civilians–
and Gaza is a human time bomb
of 1.5 million. Half of them are children.
My, sounds a bit like a pogram, if you ask me.
A place where members of a single race
are rounded up like cattle and left to face
life with no aid, and God forbid they blow up your blockade
to let food, water, shelter, or medical aid come in.

You’ll just remind them.
Air strike them again, like you did
on November 4, 2008–send in those planes,
Yahweh, while the whole world was looking the other way.
You took the chance, seized the day.
But your strength is one of fire and shells.
You think you can rebuild the Temple, bring back hell?
Don’t you think it’ll be a lonely place?
Without the ideas and songs of another race? I do.
I hope I never see the day
when we can’t remember that there were different ways to pray
in some lost life we knew,
before the wake.

Child of Light

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on January 10, 2009 by skyscraped

Well you know you’ve been told so many lies
you don’t know what to do with your life
how do you take a bullet when you’ve only got a knife?
and it’s drawing ink right from the page

Well you carve your name in the Tree
of Life write your history despite
the media alchemists, the propaganda priests
your story will survive

Child of Gaza, child of Rwanda, child of Katrina, child of Light
you are braver for being born so that we may open up our eyes
to this stratosphere of lies and fear that keeps us from transcendence
you may never have a family of your own
but you have so many descendents

Phosphorus shells reigning down hell in the pogram of the Arabs
Uranium in the ground you walk on, Gaza and Lebanon, it won’t scare us
We say the words, “Never again,” but how could you be so heartless?
I think there’s something deeper here, this is gonna come back to haunt us

Child of Gaza, child of Rwanda, child of Katrina, child of Light
you are braver for being born so that we may open up our eyes
to this stratosphere of lies and fear that keeps us from transcendence
you may never have a family of your own
but you have so many descendents

Is that you in the Garden?
Is that you under the Tree?
Is that you in the water?
Looking up at me?

Well I’m just gonna go on and say it
You were sacrificed for the way that you pray
And for being born to a family
that didn’t control the state

I know that this is the Kali Yuga
The time of death and change
I just hope that we can wake up
before the whole world goes insane

Child of Gaza, child of Rwanda, child of Katrina, child of Light
you are braver for being born so that we may open up our eyes
to this stratosphere of lies and fear that keeps us from transcendence
you may never have a family of your own
but you have so many descendents

PEACE BE WITH ALL THE INNOCENTS WHO DIE IN GAZA
Namaste
We will not forget you

The Longest Day of Night

Posted in Uncategorized on December 22, 2008 by skyscraped

It’s the solstice, 2008. Four years until that fateful alignment, whatever it may bring. One year to the day from when I realized I was on the wrong path, and systematically destroyed everything normal about my life in order to find the one I’m supposed to live.

So here I am, one year later in Saudi Arabia. Why did I give up an active music scene life, the freedom to drive, the freedom to wear whatever I wished, say what I wished, and hang out with whoever I wished in exchange for a monklike apartment in a second-rate private school? Why did I leave those I love? Why did I do this to myself? I don’t really know how to answer other than to say that I had to. I’ve never felt something so urgent or pulling in my life. I felt it and just knew. And jesus christ bananas I’m certainly not always grateful.

But I have never, in all my life, been able to feel as much as I do right now. I hope to carry this lesson, above all else, back to me. To never forget what it feels like to read the headline, “U.S. Drones strike Pakistan, Kill Seven,” and then get into a taxi in a strange part of town, having not been spoken to as an equal by ANY man other than a coworker for five minutes three days ago, and then be joked with and talked to like a person by none other than a young Pakistani driver. That happened today. That happened today after I got back from taking the tiny, starved kitten I found two days ago to the vet. After being told that the kitten, who I’ve named Oliver and who just yesterday seemed to be improving, would be very, very lucky to make it through Christmas. This, in a city where children regularly beat cats because they aren’t taught to love them, and because they get beaten too. This is not Islam doing the beating, it’s ignorance and it’s part of the veil of destruction that gets swept over this part of the world. Create an obscenely rich class and an obscenely poor one; give them no reason to love, and give them every opportunity to create violence, and you have the perfect recipe for madness.

Then, a smile, a kind word from a young Pakistani. I wonder if he knew about the bombings. We didn’t talk about it. Instead, he asked me about the kitten in my lap. He talked about how much he missed Pakistan. I told him how much I missed Texas.

This, after I sat in a room with 16 eleventh-grade girls who want to talk about politics all the time, and read them Brave New World all afternoon.

This, after three undersea cables were cut, shutting of Internet access to India and Pakistan. Hmmm. This, after finding out that McConnell’s plane was sabotaged. And that Patton was probably assassinated. After days of learning more and more that our “Heroes” who bring “Change” and promise “Hope” are nothing more than pawns for the same regime that’s been oppressing us for centuries.

Why do you think the greatest storytellers have told the same story over, and over, and over again, exposing the truth in fiction? Why do you think we continue to bleed for ideas we don’t believe in or condone? Why do you think they make us fear the Unknown, the Other?

Part of me shakes my head at our stupidity. But the other part raises her fist with the hope this will FINALLY make us realize what a sheer force of power we truly are. That we are more than just our bodies in this time and place. That we are every member of a Tradition that has resisted, time and again, a total eclipse of power. That we are light that rises, and remind us of a slow birthing spring, on the longest day of night.

They think we had wings

Posted in Uncategorized on November 13, 2008 by skyscraped

We were starving, you know. We lived so well for so long that we’d forgotten how to plump ourselves on the earth that we’d tilled with our own hands. But the war changed all that, and those of us who survived learned how to adapt or we died. My first son died. My daugher, Eve, lived, a strong little tree of a child, so small and so quiet. Our mysteries, our history, and our religion, if you could call it that, we had to weave into our planting stories. Our technology, once so renowned for its speed, its likeness to thought and seeming weightlessness, we had to hide. It stayed underground for so long that few thought it would even work again and that our travels to other worlds would never resume as they once had during the golden reign of the Queen. But then again, we were starving. The Predators never ceased their demand for sacrifice of earth, blood, and spirit.

I would not see my daughter become their feast through starvation, or through blood ritual. So we left. One day when the stars were right for travel, when our beautiful home was spinning in just the right way and when the winds commanded flight, myself, my family, and the last of the tribe of Eloah boarded ships out of our world, never to return. My daughter was only six. Like your immigrants, we sailed across an ocean charted only by legend, our navigation a fairytale, a promise unmet.

It was ten years before we reached the New World. Our ancestors had left us metaphors rather than maps, but our technology helped us more than we thought. A climate we could adjust to, water, shelter, and food, and yes, inhabitants—it was at least free of the predation we faced back home, for the time being.

I’ll never forget flying in over the land. We reached the one-mooned planet at sunset, while the white crescent in the sky mirrored the green one down below. Two great rivers formed the cleft of the land’s womb, lush and thick with vegetation. One to the south, the thickest, looked like a great silver snake with a giant splayed head expelling mercurial oceans into the gulf. The young planet’s rotation was such that we had to enter just right, or our ships would streak red through the sky, our pyre and our fate sealed in a false golden dawn in the cusp of night.

We spun, wildly, into the atmosphere, thirty three degrees and spiraling, till the cleft of the crescent rose up sharply and engulfed us in its thick forestation. My daughter, now sixteen and having lived most of her life among the artificial, inorganic world of the ship, was silent with awe. Her dreams, I knew, had told her of this place; that unspoken world between us told me she’d seen legions of her destinies in the cold years on the ship, surrounded only by a net of stars and the heartbeat of the Dreaming at the center of the galaxy.

We were not alone, of course. They looked like us, only smaller, not as bright. Well, some of them were. The stories of our ancestors which spoke of seeding this world talked of its inhabitants and the tools they’d given them. Mostly though, it was the water creatures they’d taken time to develop, according to their stories, they spliced their seed with the largest mammals to create a race of peaceful beings who would teach the rest of the planet our ways, and so prevent the cycle of madness we’d come so far to escape. The creatures we found, however, were still trying to make fire. They understood time and death, but not eternity. They swarmed about us with their chanting and their stilted speech. Enak, my husband, and the leader of the fleet, said that we should teach them, and that we should always strive to live in peace with them, rather than dominate them as we ourselves had been dominated for so long.

A year passed. We built our homes from the world’s fresh land. We taught its people about form and function, how star maps could be used to build long lasting city streets, aqueducts, and shelter. Much of it was lost on them, but they tried very, very hard. Eve even grew out of her shell-shock, and loved teaching the little children our language and writing. They looked at her long, thin limbs and beautiful blueish skin without judgment. The youngest female of our company, she had no other companions, and as a girl becomes a woman she develops her heart on the companionship she creates. But I could see the sadness in her eyes, the loneliness sinking in. She would never find an equal as she would on our world, where love chose its recipients unabashedly and unashamed.

Another year passed. The cities ran smoothly, as all major decisions were made by a circle of six of us and six of them. They almost always deferred to our judgment. We taught them about our world, and Toth, our scribe, wrote our histories in the soft mud tablets that we entrusted to the brightest of them. Our lives almost began to look normal again, and my husband and I would smile at each other once more at sunset, and love each other again under the sky.

Then one day, a stranger came. He was one of them, but not, at the same time. Adem, they called him, meaning Tall Red Earth, or Red Mountain. He was from the North, and he had ruddy hair that shown like a halo around his thick frame. He claimed he’d walked from a place where the sky froze and fell to the ground because of a dream he’d had of winged gods landing in the navel of the world. He spoke with Enak and I at length.

“My people claim that our gods came from the sky many, many eons ago. They taught us tools for building, for keeping food, and for summoning the elements. We in the North have kept much of their tradition, what we can make of it. The writing is lost, however. We travel once a year to the sacred places where they left their writings in the belly of the earth, and our shamans divine Their Will from deep inside, through fasting and eating strange herbs. When I began getting these dreams, of a great white winged chariot filled with our gods of old, I told my father, the shaman of our tribe. He went to the belly of the earth and was told to wait for a sign. We saw the star fall two years ago, and on that night my father bid me to follow it. I’ve come to offer my service to the gods.”

“Adem, son of the star watcher, we are grateful for your presence,” said Enak. “I will personally teach you all we know, that you may teach your sons and your sons’ sons, so that this story will never be forgotten again.”

And with that, the tall, thin, blue man took the hand of the red one in the corridors of our great ziggurat. From the corner, I saw Eve, entranced, behind a pillar; her eyes met mine, and she disappeared into the shadows.

I knew she loved him like a woman knows she’s with child; Eve glowed when he was near, and though she cast her eyes downward, I could feel his desire for her returned in sideways glances. And who could blame them? Misfits, cast out of their world for the sake of dreams, they were perhaps the only ones in the world with any bond to be forged. He was predisposed to architecture and mathematics, and studied it daily with Enak, and Toth taught him the glories of the written word. Adem picked up everything we gave him readily. And like any bright pupil, in the beginning his will was open and his mind fresh for planting. But as time went on, he began to learn too quickly, and grow too impatient with our more tedious tasks. Our kind is one of extreme patience; everything done by the spiral of the first leaf of spring, but not a moment before. And this frustrated him to no end.

We accepted his frustration only with openness and love. His kind was young to our ways, and we all thought he would come around.

I knew she’d gone to him one night as I woke up, startled from dreams of violence of the Old World. I hadn’t dreamed of that place in so long that the blood and screams of the devoured pierced my gut like a cold wet knife. Eve wasn’t in her room. I went out to the porch of our home and scoured the city for any sign of life, but all I heard was the distant cry of an owl screaming down on its prey.

After that, things began to change. Eve was headstrong, and declared she would marry Adem with the dark moon. Adem got even more overconfident in his quest to synthesize our teachings too quickly, without any attention to the simple passage of time. Enak chastised him, and the people began to fear him. When he’d oversee his architectural projects, he began to strike out at the first person who showed signs of ineptitude. His quest for perfection didn’t stop there, however. He believed he could, by marrying Eve, discover the secrets of our kind’s longevity. And marry they did, despite protests from Enak and I.

Toth picked up on it first. The planets were telling of a great crime, a great sacrifice. Regime change, he said. None of us knew what he meant. But it happened so fast that even he didn’t realize the enormity of the situation—until Enak was found, body hacked to pieces, sacrificed on top of the great ziggurat.

I thought my lungs would collapse from screaming. I knew in my heart of hearts who had done it, and I ran, blood covered from clasping the remains of my beloved’s body to my breast, to Adem’s house.

He emerged with more power and presence than I’d ever seen him with in all our time together in the Crescent. He looked like one of our predators, back home, who’d just had his fill of life essence. Blood cracked at the corners of his mouth, not from a struggle, but from consumption. Eve was no where to be found.

I beat my hands against his chest, “WHY WOULD YOU? HOW COULD YOU AFTER ALL HE’S GIVEN YOU, AFTER ALL THE LIFE WE’VE GIVEN YOU, HOW COULD YOU? I LOVE HIM, I LOVE HIM, I LOVE HIM YOU WORTHLESS MORTAL! YOU WILL BE BANISHED! UNFORGIVEN! YOU ARE CURSED FOREVER!” my sobs became shouts, and soon the whole city was awake and surrounding us.

“I am the First Man, the God of Men, and you are just messengers from your world, sent to teach us your ways so that my people may surpass you. You are not creators, like I am. You merely hold your teachings for eternity, and do not try and improve on them. I have devised a new method for farming this land, and for building, and I intend to create my own city in the South to do so. I’ve built a ship, and tonight I am taking my wife and the first fifty most willing souls, those who wish to strike out and forge a New World, a world where Man rules the earth as God, where our creations become reality, and where our lives are grander than any you had in the heyday of your world. I will take my immortal wife and our children will populate this planet, and we will live forever in creation and peace,” Adem proclaimed as the masses gathered round.

But it was of no use. My compassion towards the natives was greater than his, and to see my heart so broken sent them into such a fit that I had to stop them from ripping Adem limb from limb. Anub, the judge of all goings on in the city, he who held court for civil disputes, was brought forth. A trial was held, with a jury of six native elders and six immigrant elders. It was decided that Adem should be banished from the Crescent and sent to live in the south, where the air is dry and there were fewer inhabitants to manipulate and corrupt.

He was supposed to go alone, but Eve was already with child. He used this on her to tie her to him, and she, humbled, not skilled in the ways of our women who break from men who abuse them, lept up onto his ship at the last minute, unable to stand a lifetime alone among family. We never saw them again.

I blame myself, really. I should’ve made sure that she knew the ways of a woman’s strength. My relationship with Enak was so tender, so patient, and so fluid that she never saw conflict. And I know a woman’s heart, and how it loves that which is most volatile. That which she can try and tame. But Adem, nothing could tame. Not after he’d drank the blood of an Eloah. They craved our blood in the Old World for its powers of longevity, because it made them feel like gods. Nothing can stop that kind of mad power.

But something in me tells me to hope. That Eve landed in a place where Adem had to realize he was not a god, just a man gifted with foresight and long life. Where he had to realize that to survive, he and Eve would have to work as one, as equals, in harmony. I hope her firstborn learned the lessons of his father and the innate wisdom of his mother. I hope she is grandmother to a nation of wisdom, of curiosity tempered by patience. I hope, and I pray, but in my heart of hearts, I cry for her.

Josh Reeves interviews Delphi…

Posted in Uncategorized on October 21, 2008 by skyscraped

Conspiracy of Roses OUT NOW AND FREE!

Posted in Uncategorized on October 14, 2008 by skyscraped

So here’s where you can get my new album, “Conspiracy of Roses” for FREE:

http://drop.io/delphinator

Tracks are not in order, so here’s the track listing:
1. 33rd Degree
2. Crematorium
3. Tower in the Water
4. Liftoff
5. On the Cusp of the Great Change
6. Easter Again
7. Gunslinger
8. This Apocalypse
9. Kabal
10. The Key
11. Revolution Rock Star
12. Conspiracy of Roses

Silence

Posted in Uncategorized on October 5, 2008 by skyscraped

Get me out of my head.
It’s going to collapse with all the noises, the voices
the sparrows of thought that get trapped in my roof
cause I can’t close the windows just yet.

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