Tuesday, December 19, 2023

Apocalypse Like Sugar: Volcano Suns


Synchronicities happen all the time - it's how the Reality apparatus works. The question then becomes exactly how significant those syncs are, and how they play into larger symbolic narratives. 



So when a major volcano erupts - and that eruption is drenched in familiar symbolism - is that just a self-contained synchronicity or a portent? Meaning, is it a sign of more momentous events to come?

To answer that question, let's look at the news:
An earthquake swarm began on the Reykjanes peninsula on the night of October 24, 2023 just north of the town of GrindavĂ­k. On October 27, the land in the area began to rise, indicating a magma intrusion in the earth below. 

OK, well, volcanos are going off all the time. Why do we care about this one? 

Well, for one, the significance here is the threat posed to Svartsengi power plant and the populated areas around it:
Current data and measurements indicate that another eruption on the Reykjanes peninsula is still a possibility. Given the possible location of an eruption, there is a real danger posed to operations at Svartsengi, which is the main supplier of electricity and water to the Reykjanes peninsula. 
Let's hope for the best. While we do, let's look again at when this all started:
An earthquake swarm began on the Reykjanes peninsula on the night of October 24, 2023 just north of the town of GrindavĂ­k. 
Ahh, there we go. 

Where we go, you may be asking. 

Well, let's start with the date this all began, October 24th. What's that the 40th anniversary of?

OK, what's the significance of that?

Well, we looked at this a ways back. Head Over Heels is extremely significant for many reasons, but for our purposes it's the album that features "Sugar Hiccup."

As a rule, I recommend you avoid the lyrics sites when it comes to Sibyl-scrying, but these particular lyrics are generally accepted as accurate.

 

Now, "hiccup" is a term often used by geologists to describe an earthquake, but "sugar" is the part of the equation that's always puzzled me.

So let's break it down:


 
So sugar comes from the Persian word for grit or gravel. 

So what about gravel?



So gravel comes from the old Celtic languages term for "grind."

Grind. OK.

So what's the significance of "grind" in our analysis of this latest volcanic event?
 

That's the significance.

So sugar-> gravel -> grind -> Grindavik.

All of which leads me to believe this eruption might be a sign and not just another earth-burp.


THERE'S ALWAYS A TELL


 
Now, the "Earth toss and tumble" is unambiguously referring to an earthquake, whatever the Sibyl was consciously processing.

But the "Heavens curtsy and bow" is more ambiguous. That is until you think about it visually. And then it seems like she is making a poetic description of a volcanic cloud.

See here:


 
Heavens curtsy...
 


...curtsy...



...and bow.



...bow. 

Not particularly decisive on its own, but more so in the context of the rest of it.


NIGHTS, I SWIM IN THE BLUE LAGOON


Grindavik is not only known for its volcano, but for the hot springs of the Blue Lagoon:
The eruption is just a few kilometres from Iceland’s most popular tourist attraction, the Blue Lagoon wellness complex and hotels. It had partially reopened on Sunday, despite ongoing volcanic activity in the local area: the decision to reopen was made “in close collaboration with the authorities”, it said on its website at the time.

The Blue Lagoon is now closed. Its website advises: “we have temporarily closed our facilities in Svartsengi. All guests with confirmed bookings in the upcoming days will be contacted.”

The synchronicity here is rather staggering when you consider the cover art of the previous Cocteau Twins release to Head Over Heels... 


... which depicts a woman in a very similar setting (some say Switzerland, others say Denmark).

So what about Iceland, then?


The Sibyl is connected to Iceland through expatriate John Grant, her friend and sometimes collaborator. She also performed a version of the Icelandic national hymn at the Blacks Club in 2018, an event that rife with apocalyptic and oracular synchroncity.


Here's a stunning rendition of the hymn. Sadly "The Willow Song" doesn't seem to be "Willow's Song," which I'd have killed to have heard the Sibyl coo.

THAT TROUBLING PROPHECY AGAIN


So there's some kind of nasty flu virus raging through my area lately - I've been sick with it nearly a month, and I hadn't gotten the flu since 2001 (and I didn't get anything all through the Covid years). 

Which brings us to "Five-Ten Fiftyfold," the terrifyingly unambiguous prophecy of a population being halved by an airborne respiratory virus.

Wheezing and sneezing
Tenfold it blew apart
It halved them in half
And went gushing gust wind

Five ten fiftyfold
Five ten fiftyfold
Five ten fiftyfold
Five ten fiftyfold
Five ten fiftyfold
 
If Nostradamus - as opposed to notre dame - wrote those same words, you'd never hear the end of it. But it's even more terrifying than it appears on the face of it.


We found out that the Feds had started messing around with weaponizing viruses again in 2017. Ten were cleared for study - five bird flu strains and five MERS or coronaviruses.

Now, think about that title again.

FIVE - TEN - FIFTY - FOLD

Fold as in fall.

The virus I'm afraid this prophecy is about isn't a coronavirus, it's the bird virus H5N1. "Five-ten" in this context doesn't just refer to the weaponized viruses, but also a play on "5-N," as in H5N1.

I hope to God I'm wrong. But this doesn't comfort me...


Now, why do I suspect H5N1? Because of another part of the prophecy:

Wheezing and sneezing,
Tenfold it blew apart
When gushing gust winds,
Turned just up north
 
H5N1 was first isolated on a farm in Scotland, "just up north" of where this song and the album it's on was recorded.

Now, prophecy has many purposes but it often serves as a warning - a way to avert a disaster or misfortune. That's the entire purpose behind this work for me: trying to decode all these messages and prevent these things from coming to pass. 

There's a lot of work to be done. Do we have a lot of time to do it?

I think we'll get the answer to that question in 2024.