Anonymous ID: 98d4f3 May 21, 2021, 1:40 p.m. No.13721333   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1365 >>1452 >>1532 >>1611 >>1660

>>13721279

Not the hijack your comment, or…maybe to high jack your comment, but I recently started researching Twin Peaks. It made no sense to me back in the day, but now it does.

 

Basically, it is about shining light on the darkness through investigation. Even if an investigator is murdered, the investigation will continue to shine the light. This is what they fear the most and I think it is why they are working so hard to implement authoritarian control- the Great Awakening terrifies them.

 

Twin Peaks Explained:

 

https://youtu.be/7AYnF5hOhuM

 

I will help look for this X Files clip if you can give me a bit more information.

Anonymous ID: 98d4f3 May 21, 2021, 2:05 p.m. No.13721529   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1540

>>13721365

Basically, what I said, but to elaborate some more. My interpretation so far is that the Dark Lodge can only operate in the dark, so they do not want people shining the Light onto them. This is why they censor us and resort to murder if need be. They are the line of Cain, so murder is not a problem for them. It makes me wonder what Cain was really doing…

 

This link explains it better than I could. I searched "twin peaks esoteric" on DDG.

 

The 10 Most Important Occult Themes In “Twin Peaks”

 

https://www.tasteofcinema.com/2019/the-10-most-important-occult-themes-in-twin-peaks/

 

"Co-creator Frost has made no secret of the influences which informed his pen while writing Twin Peaks, and the occult references are in fact quite easily apparent. In an August 1992 interview with The Independent, Frost admits “The whole mythological side of Twin Peaks was really down to me, and I’ve always known about the Theosophical writers and that whole group around the Order of the Golden Dawn in the late 19th, early 20th century—W.B. Yeats, Madame Blavatsky and a woman called Alice Bailey, a very interesting writer.”

 

Black Lodge:

 

The existence of Black Lodges is an important occult concept which has been given plenty of consideration by initiated authors. Perhaps most prominently, Black Lodges are discussed at length in the book Psychic Self-Defence, by Dion Fortune. Fortune was an occultist with ties to Theosophy in her early career, and her writings remain influential today.

 

Fortune explains Black Lodges as sinister centers of influence where black magic is practiced by unscrupulous characters.

 

White Lodge and Ascended Masters:

 

Everything that The Black Lodge is, The White Lodge is not. In fact, The Black Lodge is described as the “shadow self” of its White counterpart, which is “a place of great goodness” where virtue thrives and beneficent spirits operate. It, too, has a rich history rooted in occult teachings about groups who work behind the scenes of humanity to promote wisdom and progress.

 

Though Dion Fortune makes mention of a “Great White Lodge” in Psychic Self-Defence, the majority of occult lore on this topic comes from other sources. Alice Bailey and other Theosophist writers frequently mention the “Great White Brotherhood,” which is composed of “Masters of the Ancient Wisdom” who help direct the spiritual progress of the human race. Some difference of opinion may arise over whether its members are living or dead persons, but the belief in the existence of such a lodge is generally agreed upon by occultists.

 

The Psychic Self-Defence book by Dion Fortune is online, such as ZLibrary.