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Tuesday, September 2

September, Esoterically Speaking.

September, for the uninitiated, it is a time to conclude the rites of summer with a long Labor Day weekend, that weekend, originally intended to be a salute to the working people and their struggles for fair work week with time off, now, nothing more than a celebration of the end of the vacation season, signaling that it's time to go back to work.  It's also a warning to children that it's time to hit the books for summer is over and school is back.

For those of us with eyes to see who see, September is the ninth month of the year, the first month of Autumn, and it derives its name from septem, the Latin word meaning "seven," as September was the seventh month of the old Roman calendar. 

The traditional birthstone of September, is the blue sapphire, to which the pagans of old incanted:

A maiden born when rustling leaves

Are blowing in the September breeze,

A Sapphire on her brow should bind,

'Twill cure diseases of the mind.

Oh, the good old days. 

September is shared by the astrological signs of Virgo the Virgin and Libra the Scales (or Balance).  Before the Virgo sign's symbol of a virgin was co-opted by the patriarchy, the figure representing Virgo was simply an unmarried woman who chose to live by her own laws and to never, ever give it away for free.  To embrace the sign's motto, 'I serve', we must first and foremost serve with determination at the altar of the self.  As the sign that arrives just before the zodiac's midway point, Virgo marks the last moment we have solely to ourselves before we step into the wider collaborative communion of the final six signs. 

September is sacred to the following Pagan deities: Persephone, Thor, and the Wiccan Goddess in Her aspect of the Mother. The Celtic tree-calendar month of Coll ends on September 1, and from September 2 until the September 29, it is the vine month of Muin, sacred to the god Lugh (Loou-ggh).

During the month of September, the Great Solar Wheel of the Year is turned to the Autumn Equinox, one of the four Lesser Sabbats celebrated each year by Wiccans and modern Witches throughout the world. 

Being the ninth month of the year, September is represented by the 9th card of the Major Arcana, The Hermit.  The Hermit is usually depicted walking with a lantern and a stick; he represents meditation, isolation and quietude.  The card also signifies crystalized wisdom and practiced discipline.  The Hermit is a taskmaster who motivates conscience and guides others on their path.  The perfect card to get things ready for the coming chills of Winter, the death of and resurrection of the Sun, the all enchanting moon goddess and her mesmerizing rights. 

Hex 12
According to Carol Anthony's book, The Philosophy of the I Ching, "the hexagram representing the ninth month is called Standstill (Hex. 12).  Here three Yin lines have advanced into the hexagram from the bottom.  Visually, this hexagram represents the mid-point between the summer and winter solstices.  Heaven is above, drawing farther and farther away, while the earth below sinks farther into the depths of winter.  "The flowing and ebbing of the earth's energies was a primary theme in early matriarchal societies.  Accordingly, the hexagrams representing the last six months of the year give counsel that accords with the time, i.e., retreat, conserve, and store up supplies to prepare for the coming time of decrease (winter)."

In Bess Matassa's book, Cosmic Year, the astrology of September asks us to kneel at our inner altars, anointing ourselves in the signature of scents of self-understanding so that we can bring our unique mystique to the world.  She goes on to  say, "Wed to witchery of the sixth sign of Virgo, this month is for letting our constituent parts come into clarity, as we take an inventory of our assets and mine our own mineral make-up for magic."

Finally, the number 9 is considered a symbol of spiritual enlightenment and completion.  It is often associated with a higher consciousness, selflessness, and compassion.  So, those of you on the path of true enlightenment, the Bodhisattvas of the earth in service to others, relax, enjoy a cup of hot chocolate, trace a leaf with your souls pen, in your spiritual journal, begin that masterpiece the universe is calling you to produce, get ready for cooler days, longer nights, the Autumn reunites, the stars are bright, it's September! Enjoy! 

~~ Eso Terry 

 

Monday, September 1

Labor Day 2025, The Trump Effect, and Plato's Republic, and Why I Now Support Trump

It's another Labor Day in the USA.  If you are a reader of EsotericDaily.com then you know the importance of this day to me; I've written about it before in my Madame Blavatsky Labor Day Story. That's really more of a story about Annie Besant than Blavatsky, but read it if you want to know the liberal side of the story. Today, however, on this Labor Day 2025, I want to talk about President Trump and how I owe him an apology.  For years now I have not written favorably of him, and today, I will change this. For this reformed liberal has seen the light.  I was wrong about everything, he was right. As it stands now, gas prices are the lowest I've seen in years, the stock market is at a record high, and well, with the National Guard on every street corner, I feel safer. 

So, Mr President, please accept my apology. Everyday I am praying for your happiness and the success of our country. Keep up the good work.  

According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, the ancient Mediterranean tradition, exemplified by Plato and Aristotle, admired craft and knowledge-driven productive activity while also espousing the necessity of leisure and freedom for a virtuous life. This is the balance. As with everything we need balance. Yes, the Yin/Yang. Work and Relaxation. Today I relax. 

The important thing to remember about this Labor Day 2025, is what we read on today's Whitehouse.gov in black and white:

TRUMP EFFECT: Higher Pay for American Workers

 “President Trump’s America First Economic Agenda has created a BOOMING economy — jobs are up, unemployment is down, wages are increasing, and inflation is dead. More than 139,000 good jobs were added to the private sector in May, all accounted for by American-born workers. Americans should continue to trust in President Trump, who continues to beat expectations.” — White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt

Need I say more?  

Yes, thank you President Trump for the "Booming economy."  You are the greatest president ever, and this liberal will now march in step with you. I support you and the walls to keep out the criminals.  I support the deportation of those who are not in the US legally.  I support shrinking government spending-- except for that which is benefiting me, i.e., VA Hospital, VA Disability Pay, Social Security -- and most of all, I support and honor your greatness.

~~ Eso Terry

Highlights of Plato's Republic 

Plato's concept of an "esoteric patriotism" refers to an allegiance not to one's literal city-state, but to the ideal of the
just city itself. This idea is "esoteric" because it is hidden within the allegorical layers of his political writings, particularly The Republic. This form of patriotism contrasts sharply with the "worldly" or conventional patriotism that Plato critiques. 
 
The critique of conventional patriotism
 
Plato's negative experiences with Athenian democracy, which condemned his mentor Socrates to death, fueled his deep skepticism of worldly patriotism. He believed that conventional patriotism and civic pride were susceptible to emotional manipulation by demagogues, leading to rash, unjust, and impulsive political actions. Conventional patriotism, as Plato saw it, was an allegiance to an unjust city-state, and therefore a corrupting influence on the soul of the individual. 
 
The allegory of the just city
 
Plato's esoteric patriotism is centered on the pursuit of the ideal, just city (kallipolis).
  • The Noble Lie: The myth of the metals, a "noble lie" told to citizens in The Republic, promotes an esoteric form of civic unity. Citizens are told they were born from the earth and their social class (gold, silver, or bronze) is determined by a metal mixed into their soul by the gods. This fosters a sense of shared parentage by the city itself, encouraging loyalty not to a particular family or faction, but to the whole community.
  • Inner harmony as a precursor to outer justice: For Plato, true governance begins within the individual. The ideal city-state is a projection of the properly ordered soul, in which reason rules over the appetites and spirit. This means that the truest patriotism is a commitment to cultivating justice in one's own character.
  • Rejection of tribalism: Plato's philosophical approach moves beyond tribal loyalties. In The Republic, the philosopher-kings' allegiance is to the Form of the Good and the concept of justice itself, not to a specific group of people. This is evident in Plato's thought on warfare, where he suggests a different, less destructive set of rules for conflicts among Greek city-states ("civil war") than for conflicts with "barbarians". This implies a hierarchy of political unity, culminating in the highest-order philosophical unity. 
The esoteric nature of Plato's message
 
Plato wrote his dialogues in a way that is intentionally confusing, open-ended, and not easily solved, often embedding allegories and myths with deeper meanings. 
  • Hidden meaning: Later Platonic traditions took this idea of "hidden meanings" (hyponoiai) as foundational to interpreting his work. Commentaries on Plato have noted that key concepts are placed at regular intervals in the text, similar to musical patterns, adding another hidden layer of significance.
  • Protection of knowledge: The esoteric nature of his work served a political purpose, protecting higher truths from "the common herd" who might misinterpret or abuse them. For instance, the Allegory of the Cave functions as an allegory for philosophical education and politics, not just epistemology. It suggests that the enlightened philosopher-ruler is needed to drag people out of their ignorance and lead the city to justice, even if the unenlightened masses perceive them as enemies.  

Sunday, August 31

The Essential Plato

 

(427?-347 BCE). Ancient Greek philosopher, one of only two whose writings are still extensively studied today (the other being his pupil Aristotle). 

Plato was born and lived most of his life in Athens. He was educated, as were all upper class Athenians, in what we would now consider the liberal arts, including cosmological speculation, mathematics, and rhetoric. In 407 BCE he became a pupil and follower of Socrates (469-399 BCE), who devoted most of his life to questioning the noble men of his day about their beliefs. Raised the son of a sculptor and actually practicing that art for a time, Socrates attracted a loyal group of young followers, but also managed to offend many wealthy aristocrats by exposing their ignorance about subjects in which they considered themselves experts. When a democracy was restored in Athens in 399 BCE, after a period of autocracy, Socrates was brought to trial on charges of impiety and corrupting the youth. The record of the trial is recounted in Plato’s dialogue Apology and reads like an eyewitness account. Although the charges were clearly ridiculous, Socrates was found guilty and condemned to death. Plato’s Phaedo purports to be an account of Socrates’ last day before drinking the poison, hemlock, to carry out the sentence. 

We know relatively little about Plato’s life. He came from an aristocratic family and never married. He saw military service, as did Socrates, in the Peloponnesian War against Sparta (431-404 BCE). Exactly when he became an initiate into the Greek Mystery Schools is unknown. About 388 BCE Plato went to the court of Dionysius the Elder, military governor (or tyrant) of Syracuse in Sicily, apparently in an effort to persuade the ruler to adopt his ideas for government. Upon returning to Athens, Plato (about 364 BCE) founded a school, called the Academy (or akadãmía, named after the grove of trees where Plato’s home was located in a suburb of Athens). In addition to teaching his own philosophic ideas, he hired noted mathematicians, astronomers, and physicians as teachers. One of his early pupils (then aged 17) was Aristotle, not an initiate into the Mysteries, who was later hired to teach his own philosophic ideas, even though they differed in significant ways from those of Plato. In 367 and 361 BCE, Plato again visited Syracuse, trying unsuccessfully to convince Dionysius the Younger to adopt his ideas. It was after those failures that Plato abandoned his model of the ideal political system based on a philosopher-king, as detailed in the Republic, and worked on the framework for a political system based on law. He was still working on his final dialogue, Laws, when he died. By this time, his Academy had been put under the control of a board of trustees and Plato died a relatively poor man. After his death, the school was first headed by Plato’s nephew, Speusippus, then by Xenocrates. They, however, did not share Plato’s tolerance for Aristotle’s views and so Aristotle, then aged 37, was forced to leave the Academy and start his own school.

Plato’s philosophic views as well as his method of presenting them evolved over his lifetime, as indicated by the style of and topics covered in his dialogues. It is impossible to date the dialogues with any certainty, but scholars group them into three categories: early, middle, and late. To the former category belong Lysis, Laches, Charmides, Euthyphro, Ion, Hippas Major and Hippas Minor, Gorgias, Euthydemus, and Apology. Probably also Crito and the first book of Republic, as well as Alcibiades I and II if Plato actually wrote them. Socrates is the major figure, portrayed as questioning important nobles about the definition of various virtues. This Socratic method is also known as a dialectic or elenchus. For example, the Euthyphro purports to record a conversation about piety which Socrates had with Euthyphro as the two were about to go into court, Socrates to defend himself against the charge of impiety and Euthyphro to bring suit against his own father (unheard of in ancient Athens!) for causing the death of a slave. Euthyphro is convinced he knows what piety is and offers several definitions, all of which Socrates shows are inadequate. The Apology contains not only Socrates’ very cogent, but unfortunately unpersuasive, arguments in his defense, but also a reference to his daimon or daimonion, and which the Mahātma KOOT HOOMI (Cf. Mahatma Letters, #11; Barker #28) and most scholars interpret as the voice of his conscience. It only warned him what not to do. Crito purports to be a conversation between Socrates in prison and his rich friend Crito, who has come to bribe Socrates’ way out of jail, an offer Socrates refuses by offering cogent arguments against those of Crito.

The middle dialogues present some of Plato’s most characteristic doctrines, again using Socrates, most certainly now anachronistically, as their principle character. These include Meno, Phaedo, Phaedrus, Philebus, Symposium, Republic, and Timaeus. The Meno, which some scholars consider an early dialogue, addresses the question as to whether virtue can be taught and introduces the characteristic Platonic doctrine of anamnesis or “recollection” in a famous scene in which Socrates, by means of questioning Meno’s slave boy, proves that the boy can figure out a difficult geometric problem, although he has been taught no geometry in his present life. That leads Socrates to conclude that he must have learned it in a previous life. Since there is no indication that Socrates actually believed in reincarnation (Greek metempsychosis), this must represent Plato’s development of Socrates’ ideas. It leads to the Platonic doctrine that all learning is recollection, although it is difficult to determine whether Plato meant just all moral knowledge or all knowledge in general. The argument for reincarnation is further developed in the Phaedo in which a group of Socrates’ friends plus two disciples of Pythagoras conduct a philosophic debate during Socrates’ last day in prison. One of the arguments, repeated centuries later by Descartes, is that since the soul and body are different and the body is mortal, the soul must be immortal. The dialogue also contains Plato’s view that a true philosopher — i.e., lover of wisdom — looks forward to death because it frees him from the limitations and distractions of the body and brings him in contact with all the great thinkers of the past. The final scene of the dialogue, in which Socrates cheerfully drinks the hemlock, is one of the most moving in all philosophic literature.

Republic is a lengthy dialogue attempting to define the meaning of “justice” which Plato takes to be the appropriate working of a well-ordered socio-political system. It contains, among other things, a full development of Plato’s doctrine of Forms, i.e., that there exists a conceptual realm, objective in nature, where the realities of all things, sensory and mental, exist and of which our perceptual world is an imperfect copy. It is suggested that this realm of Forms is hierarchical in nature, with the Form of the Good at the apex, and that the true philosopher or lover of wisdom is constantly trying to achieve direct realization of that realm. The dialogue contains the famous allegory of the cave wherein Plato suggests that our perceptual realm consists of the mere shadows of copies of reality, a doctrine very reminiscent, Blavatsky reminds us, of the doctrine of m€y€ in Ved€nta philosophy (IU I:xiii-xiv). We are like prisoners in a cave, chained to pillars able to perceive only these faint semblances of reality; the philosopher is like one who has unshackled himself and climbed out of the cave to view the sun (i.e., the Form of the Good). Therefore, Plato argues, because the philosopher, using the term in Plato’s sense, has apprehended the truth directly, he should be the ruler (or king), even though he will have to be persuaded against his will to accept such a responsibility. Plato outlines in the Republic a system of education, open to both males and females, in which people will determine by their own abilities (or lack of them) what role they will play in society, which he envisions are divided into categories very reminiscent of the Hindu caste system (cf IU I:271), but not based on heredity. The purpose of education would be to produce philosophers, though he realized that very few would actually attain that vision of reality which would authenticate their wisdom.

Timaeus is Plato’s outline of cosmology and contains his description of a lost continent called Atlantis. It is the dialogue most frequently cited in theosophical literature. Its scientific speculation, put forth by Timaeus, is drawn almost entirely from Italian and Sicilian sources so must have been written after one of Plato’s trips to Syracuse. Plato may have intended it as a text on science for use in his Academy, but even so in the dialogue Timaeus only puts it forth as probable or speculative. One interesting feature of this dialogue, as well as several other dialogues, is Plato’s use of a “myth” to expound some important idea. Scholars have interpreted this as an indication that Plato did not have cogent arguments for his point and so resorted to that device to forestall criticism. A more plausible explanation is that such “myths” were intended to remind his readers, some of whom would also have been initiates of the Mystery schools, of doctrines which were esoteric and not allowed to be spoken of openly in public.

There is very little of philosophic interest in Phaedrus or Symposium, the latter consisting mainly of a series of banquet orations given by seven different speakers. The Philebus, which contains a discussion of the doctrine of Forms, is dated by some scholars as a late dialogue, which would mean that Plato held that doctrine throughout his life. Others, however, identify it as a middle dialogue and claim that Plato abandoned his most characteristic doctrine later in his life, since it seems to be criticized in some later dialogues and not mentioned at all in the generally unphilosophical Laws.

Along with Laws, Plato’s third period dialogues are identified by scholars as being Theaetatus, Sophist, Parmenides, Politicus, and probably Cratylus. The Parmenides contains the famous “third man” argument against the doctrine of Forms and is interpreted as an indication of Plato’s eventual rejection of the doctrine. Plato had earlier argued that for us to realize that two things had something in common or that some action exemplified a virtue it must mean that we perceived the conceptual reality, i.e., the Form, of the virtue or whatever they had in common, since two individual things or acts are not identical nor perfect exemplifications of whatever they have in common. How else, he argued, would we be able to perceive that commonality? The Greek philosopher Parmenides, after whom the dialogue is named, argues that Plato’s theory would involve an infinite regress. In order to know whether the Form of, say, Man really resembled a particular man, there would have to be another Form, say Man2, which Man1 and the particular man had in common. That, in turn would require another Form, say Man3, etc. Parmenides’ argument is a form of reductio ad absurdum. Plato offers no counter-argument in the dialogue. But the argument is so obviously fallacious that apparently he felt he did not need to. Individual men have a body, arms, legs, etc., but the idea or Form of Man does not; it is a conceptual entity. So the two do not resemble each other in the way that two individual men do — hence do not need another Form to explain their resemblance. No such resemblance exists. It seems likely, therefore, that Plato did not abandon that doctrine, as some scholars believe, but merely turned his attention to other philosophic problems. As an initiate of the Mystery schools of his day, he certainly did not abandon his belief in reincarnation, which is associated in his dialogues with the doctrines of anamnesis and Forms.

According to Madame Blavasky, the mother of all things esoteric, she acknowledged Plato for his methodology which, she points out, was to start with universals and descend to particulars, the opposite of Aristotle’s method (CW III:196). She states that Plato “fully embraced the ideas of Pythagoras — who had brought them from India,” but “compiled and published them in a form more intelligible than the mysterious numerals of the Greek Sage” She also mentions with approval Plato’s concept of the soul, which he claimed was dual, one part mortal (what in theosophical literature would be identified as astral or kāma-manas), the other immortal (i.e., the monad or ātman, possibly the triple spirit: ātma-buddhi-manas). She states that the former was created by “intelligent forces in nature” while the latter is “an emanation from the supreme Spirit” or Parabrahman (CW II:16). It is the latter which is responsible for our well-being, but is often overruled by our animal desires, creating a continually unsatisfied longing, coupled with regret and despair, citing Plato’s Protagoras as a defense of this idea (SD II:412-412). HPB also points out that Plato’s concept of a Demiurge, mentioned in Timaeus, is not at all the same as the orthodox Christian concept of a personal God, since “Plato having been initiated, could not believe in a personal God — a gigantic shadow of Man. His epithets of ‘Monarch and Lawgiver of the Universe’ bear an abstract meaning well understood by every Occultist, who, no less than any Christian, believes in the One Law, that governs the Universe, recognizing it at the same time as immutable” (SD II:554). Furthermore, that, in Cratylus, he appropriately derives the word theos (2,`H) from the verb théein (2X,4<), “to move” or “to run,” indicating its creative nature (SD I: 2 fn.; II:545). Contrast that with Aristotle’s idea of a remote and abstract “Prime Mover.” HPB reminds us of a characteristic Platonic idea, the five so-called “Platonic solids,” when she notes that Timaeus 55c says that the concrete form of the universe, “first begotten” as an idea or Form, “was constructed on the geometrical figure of the dodecahedron” (SD I:340). Actually, the “Platonic solids” are found in Greek mythology as toys of Baccus. She also cites Plato’s story in Laws about an earlier golden age on earth when men were governed by rulers who had a daimonia (*"4:`<4") and that people in those days would no more allow ordinary men to rule them than they would allow a bullock or ram to rule over other bullocks or rams (SD II:372-373). The decline of that age occurred during the Atlantean period, coming to an end, as Plato points out, with the sinking of Poseidon. But she explains Plato’s reference, in Critias (108e) and Timaeus (23e) to the sinking of Atlantis as occurring 9,000 years before his time as meaning millenial years, hence 900,000 years, closer, she points out, to the occult tradition (SD II:394-395). She comments, in a footnote, that Plato had learned of Atlantis as a child from his grandfather, Critias, then aged ninety; and that Critias had heard it in his youth from the Greek sage Solon, adding, “ No more reliable source could be found, we believe” (SD II:743 fn), because Solon had heard it from “the priests of Egypt” (ibid, p. 266). Plato then, “as every Initiate would” intentionally confused the sinking of the large continent of Atlantis with the much later sinking of its last small remnant, Poseidon (idem.; cf. vol. 2, p. 767). These ideas should be kept in mind when theosophists or scholars attempt to verify — or refute — the existence of Atlantis.

There you have a brief overview of Plato. I'm sure we will have more to say on this guy in the future, or was it the past?

~~ Eso Terry  


Friday, August 22

Black Moon Talk


I've talked about a Blue Moon, Fake Moon, Eclipse Moon, and heck, even being Mooned by a Gargoyle, but I've yet to talk about the Black Moon, and so here goes it. 

According to the folks at Living With The Moon, a Black Moon is a rather rare occasion (about every 2.5 years) and refers to the 2nd New Moon in one calendar month

So that's really all there is on the surface, but esoterically, wow!  A Black Moon is seen as a real turning point, either globally or in your private life. The key word here is "change."  And like the Winds of Change Bob Dylan sang about in the early 60's, a Black Moon means change or new directions when it hits. 

Of course, the Christian predict the return of Christ every chance they get, which is silly, since they've been doing this since the beginning of their faith, which really has to be a downer, and regarding the Black Moon it is no different, for example, for the Black Moon on Friday, September 30th, 2016, the Christian blog "Express" wrote: 

Warning BLACK MOON tonight: Astrological event to herald 'End of Days' and second coming

That writer went on to state: 

TONIGHT'S Black Moon could bring with it worldwide destruction and the second coming of Jesus Christ, Christians and conspiracy theorists have claimed.

Of course, again Jesus doesn't show, but that's okay for most of us.  

According to NASA the Black Moon is... wait, they don't define it because it is not a big deal; furthermore, the term "Black Moon" only goes back to 2016, because, well, it is only a month with two new moons in it.  Not an astronomical event. 

Historically, the theme of events from the recent "Black Moons" or  second new moon in a calendar month between 2010 and 2020 are:

*July 7th, 2011 - Moscow bans the book L. Ron Hubbard Scientology book. 

*January 30th, 2014 - French Socialist Party defeated in major upset. 

*October 30th, 2016 -  FBI announces it will be reviewing Liberal President Hillary Clinton's email, a month before the presidential election; which gives Donald Trump the presidential election a month later. 

*August 30th, 2019 -  DOJ report finding the FBI violated policy investigating Donald Trump in 2016. Pro-democracy protesters arrested in Hong Kong. 

 *August 22nd, 2025 - To Be Determined, but whatever it is, "Dark Moons" seems to be favor President Donald Trump. 

Finally, for the Pagan in us all, here is the Pagan definition according to 

Spiritually, the Black Moon is a powerful time for shadow work, release, and deep transformation as it combines and amplifies the energy of the New Moon and the Dark Moon. Whether you see it as the ultimate lunar reset or a chance to plant long-term intentions, the Black Moon’s energy invites you to go inward, shed what no longer serves you, and trust in the unseen process of growth.


Wednesday, August 20

The Egyptian Book of the Dead

The Egyptian Book of the Dead is a guidebook for travel through the afterlife. Each “Book of the Dead” was customized for a specific person, based on his life and wealth. None of the “spells” has any meaning in the world of the living. There was no “canon” of contents, and each copy’s main purpose was to be buried with the deceased. According to Egyptian beliefs, this would allow the dead person to take the text with him into the afterlife.

It should be noted that the term Book of the Dead is an extraordinarily loose translation. The more literal title of these writings is something like “Chapters for Coming Forth by Day.” An Egyptologist used the phrase “Book of the Dead” when publishing translations in the 1840s. Those translations were based on papyrus found in Egyptian tombs, many of which included some version of those “spells.”

The “spells” in the Book of the Dead were believed to be useful only in the afterlife. The purpose of the writings was to guide the dead person to paradise. The instructions included ways to avoid certain dangers, passwords to use around certain spirits, and the correct procedures for getting past obstacles. Some of the directions are relatively mundane. Some are simple. Others were incredibly intricate and detailed. None of them were meant as magic incantations for the living to use.

The contents of the Book of the Dead varied considerably from person to person. There was no mandatory set of inclusions or anything parallel to the canon of the Bible. In fact, each Book of the Dead was custom-written for that person. Individuals with differing social position, lifestyles, and professions might have books including very different material. In some cases, professional scribes compiled Books of the Dead with blank spaces to be filled in later with the name of a customer.

Despite those wide variations, there was a “typical” version of the Book of the Dead used from around 1600 BC until the time of Christ. The only similarity between these writings and the Bible is that both are collections of separate texts. The Egyptian Book of the Dead was not a primary religious source or authority in Egyptian religion.

Among the more famous contents of a typical book of the dead are descriptions of how souls might hope to enter paradise. One especially famous passage, known as “Spell 125,” describes a convoluted process of answering questions, while naming and describing deities and spirits. This must be done correctly to arrive at the point where one’s heart is weighed on a balance—this determines if the deceased is worthy of paradise. This ornate ritual includes naming some 42 judges, each concerned with a unique sin or virtue.

What to know more?  You will, trust me, when death comes knocking. 

~~ Eso Terry 

 


Tuesday, August 19

Dreaming Changes Everything, or not.


If you are a reading of EsotericDaily.com, then you know the importance of dreams.  And here I go again trying to relate their importance.  For those not familiar with my dream history, here is an overview: I once posted a post in a dream; and don't know when, where, or how.  Then I wrote about how an old friend who died some years before, came to me in a dream and asked me to lie down on futon beside him.  Which I didn't, and know if I had I would have died.  I told him "I'm not ready," and didn't die down beside him

Of the hundreds of dreams I've interpreted, my favorite is Dream #689.  In that dream I cross the infamous "bridge" we all come across in our dreams. If you haven't crossed you dream bridge yet, please do.  In simple terms, the bridge in your dream is that person, job, or faith in your life that is holding you back. Once you awaken to that, you will live. 

Today, I want to write about people who woke up from sleep with a new life.  Yes, it happens. 

Caedmon, (c. 657-684), wrote the oldest surviving English language poem, which wikipedia deciphers as :

Caedmon was an illiterate herdsman, who went to sleep one night, and in his dream a stranger appeared to him singing the “verses which he had never heard.” When Caedmon awoke, he was a poet and wrote his very educated poems. 

That's not all, a google search will given you many others, of which here are a few:

  • Elias Howe (inventor of the sewing machine): Struggling to design a functional sewing machine needle, Howe reportedly had a dream in which he was being attacked by cannibals with spears that had holes near the tips. This image inspired him to place the needle's eye near its point, enabling the invention of the modern sewing machine.
  • Dmitri Mendeleev (creator of the Periodic Table): After days of working on organizing the known elements, Mendeleev is said to have fallen asleep at his desk and dreamed of a table where all the elements fell into place according to their properties.
  • Friedrich August Kekulé (discoverer of the benzene ring structure): Kekulé is said to have envisioned the cyclic structure of benzene in a daydream, seeing a snake biting its own tail.
  • Albert Einstein (developer of the Theory of Relativity): Legend has it that Einstein's dreaming of sledding down a mountainside at high speeds, causing the stars to change, contributed to his realization that the same event could be observed differently from different perspectives, according to Reader's Digest Asia.
  • Frederick Banting (discoverer of insulin): Banting's dream about an experiment with a dog's pancreas and isolating the substance that could treat diabetes reportedly spurred the development of insulin.
  • Otto Loewi (discoverer of chemical neurotransmission): Loewi dreamed of an experiment involving a frog's heart that helped him demonstrate the chemical transmission of nerve impulses, leading to his Nobel Prize win.    
  • That's all I have to share today, so dream, for life is but a dream. 


    Thursday, August 14

    When Death Comes Knocking: A Prediction of Death for one of today's World Leaders.

    Eso Terry Sings The Blues
    Eso Terry Sings The Blues

    What I have to say today is based on a creative project I did, or should I say, found.  I was cleaning up old media the other day and found a song I sang over twenty years ago called, "When Death Comes Knocking."  It's a reminder that no matter what we have or who we think we are, there is no escaping it.  And the thought came to me that the world leaders today seem to be oblivious of this fact by their actions of threatening nuclear war and starvation to get their way.

    Then the thought came to me, "One of them will die in office before 2030."  What if they knew this?  

    I ended the video with the song "Three Blind Mice" because the three major leaders, Trump, Putin, Xi, are definitely blind to this fact.  On another note, no matter how much better they think they are than us, ha, ha, the joke is on them when death comes knocking. 



    Tarquin the last King in Rome

    Let’s go back in time boys and girls, way back, back to the last time Trump's spirit might have appeared on our planet.  The time was around 534 years BCE in Ancient Rome when King Tarquin’s misuse of power brought down the monarchy system and gave Rome its first Republic.  You see, King Tarquin already had a reputation of unsavory character when he seized the throne by murdering his predecessor, King Servius Tullius.  As new ruler, King Tarquin, “on day one,” arrested a number of patricians on phony charges so he could take their wealthy estates for himself.  This greediness alienated many in the country, but until his son, Sextus, raped the wife of the noted patriot Lucius Tarquinius Collatinus, no one did anything about it.  Eventually, however, the patriot of the day along with other leading nobleman, locked Tarquin and his disturbed children out of the city and dissolved his kingship.


    First King Tarquin Now Trump

    The Roman fathers then proceeded to create a completely new kind of government, one based on the wishes and votes of the common citizen. Yes, a true democracy.   






    Monday, July 21

    My Protection From the Annabelle Doll


    IN this weekend's news I read about the Annabelle Doll Handler Dan Rivera, who passed away while traveling with the haunted doll. As you can guess, we here at Esoteric Daily understand the power of spirits, how they can pop up anywhere, anytime, and if you are have no protection, you are screwed.  Before I go into how I keep these spirits away from me, let's look at the Annabelle Doll story. 

    Annabelle's history goes back to the owners Ed and Lorraine Warren who received the doll from a 28-year-old student nurse who claimed the doll could move by itself and exhibited malicious and frightening behavior. Over time, the Warrens publicized various claims about Annabelle: supposedly the doll inflicted "psychic slashes" that drew blood from victims, caused a priest who insulted the doll to run his car into a tree, and stabbed a homicide detective, forcing him into early retirement. In 2025, the Warrens' estate promoted online reports that the doll had "disappeared" as part of a viral marketing campaign for a tour called 'Devils on the Run,' showcasing items from the Warrens Occult Museum. "The doll was never missing," said Tony Spera the Director of New England Society for Psychic Research. "We had taken the doll on a brief tour to several locations, so paranormal enthusiasts could witness the real Annabelle."

    Which brings us to July 2025, where 'Devils on the Run' tour organizer and host Dan Rivera died in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania while transporting the doll.  His cause of death has not been revealed, but does that matter? Rivera let in the spirits which took over his life and ended it early. This could be karmic retribution, or the greed from making money off the dolls spirit.  Whatever, he is dead and you can bet it has something to do with Annabelle.   

    I've posted on possessed dolls before, for instance, there was the Stormy Daniels court testimony of her possessed doll and how it "moved around the room at night." Truth is, objects, things, even air can be possessed by demons.  I've written about gargoyles being possessed and causing men to jump off buildings, and of course, the many stories of murder caused by demon, or Satan possessions.  It happens, and if you are not careful, that harmless Japanese Geisha lamp you buy at an estate sale, can be an Ouija board to death. 

    Now, how do I keep myself clean?  It is by chanting Nam-myoho-renge-kyo.  By doing so I am protected by ten demon daughters who are sworn to protect those of us who believe in the Lotus Sutra.  Of course this is not the only way to receive protection, but it is one you can have now by chanting Nam-myoho-renge-kyo three times. No shit, it works.

    Happy chanting, 

    ~~Eso Terry   

    September, Esoterically Speaking.

    September, for the uninitiated, it is a time to conclude the rites of summer with a long Labor Day weekend, that weekend, originally intende...

    Thanks For Being!

    Thanks For Being!