Friday, June 30, 2023

Crazy is as crazy does and other hitchhiker guides on earth and beyond

    Once upon a time I clerked for US District Court Judge Clarence W. Allgood, in Birmingham Alabama, who presided over every federal criminal prosecution in that Court's jurisdiction. Behind the scenes, Judge Allgood ran the Democratic Party in Alabama - except for the George Wallace faction. Democrats who wanted to run for local or national office went to Judge Allgood to get his blessing. Today, I think Judge Allgood would be revolted by the Democrats and the Republicans.

As for the classified documents indictment, it is merely that, an indictment. A jury will decide if Trump is guilty. The Department of Justice chose to prosecute Trump in south Florida, which is very red, instead of in Washington, D.C., which is very blue. It takes a unanimous jury to convict. One hold-out juror, Trump walks. One Trump ringer on the jury, Trump walks. The DOJ could prosecute Trump again, but mostly likely, would not.
What might be in jurors' minds? How about Trump is nuts, and that's why he kept the classified documents after being asked to return them. Nuts is a good defense, if the Defendant pleads he is nuts, not responsible for his actions. Of course, pleading that defense might disqualify Trump from running for president again. But, a good defense lawyer very easily could plant that seed with the jury, without it being official.
A good defense attorney might put Trump's Attorney General Bill Barr on the witness stand and let him analyze Trump's Achilles heel- his giant ego blinds him to anything but his giant ego. He really does love America, but he's just too self-absorbed to see how his giant ego gets in the way. The classified documents were retrieved. It was ugly. But no harm, no foul.
Right. Did Trump actually damage national security? I think that will be on the jurors' minds. Can DOJ prove Trump actually damaged national security? Can Trump argue he is not getting equal protection under the law, because Hillary Clinton damaged national security, and she was not prosecuted? Can Trump argue to the jury that he only did what Hillary did, but he didn't actually damage national security like Hillary did?
What is not been talked about in the news I see online and on television, even if Trump is convicted, even if he is in prison, he still can run for president. He still can be elected. What a circus that would be, taking George Wallace's 3rd party candidacy to levels never before imagined by the craziest conspiracy freaks!
I told a black preacher friend yesterday, that it looks to me that Hunter Biden might be as sorry as Donald Trump, and it also looks to me that Hunter got to where he is today with help from his father, when he was President Obama's vice-president, and perhaps when his father was president. I think the DOJ needs to do to Hunter what is being done to Trump. I think the DOJ should do to Hillary what it is doing to Trump.
In 2016, I published many times at my blog that Trump and Hillary both should be locked up, in adjoining cells. After Trump beat Hillary, I published that the Democrats ran the only candidate Trump could beat.

    On the same day that upped and hopped out of me and I posted it at Facebook, this showed up in my email account:

POETICOUTLAWS.SUBSTACK.COM

Riding it to a New Age, a New Birth, a Totally New Condition of Mankind

By: Joseph Campbell

“Is there not some point of wisdom beyond the conflicts of illusion and truth by which lives can be put back together again? That is a prime question, I would say, of this hour in the bringing up of children.”

― Joseph Campbell

There were formerly horizons within which people lived and thought and mythologized. 

There are now no more horizons. 

And with the dissolution of horizons we have experienced and are experiencing collisions, terrific collisions, not only of peoples but also of their mythologies. 

It is as when dividing panels are withdrawn from between chambers of very hot and very cold airs: there is a rush of these forces together. And so we are right now in an extremely perilous age of thunder, lightning, and hurricanes all around. 

I think it is improper to become hysterical about it, projecting hatred and blame. 

It is an inevitable, altogether natural thing that when energies that have never met before come into collision—each bearing its own pride—there should be turbulence. 

That is just what we are experiencing; and we are riding it: riding it to a new age, a new birth, a totally new condition of mankind—to which no one anywhere alive today can say that he has the key, the answer, the prophecy, to its dawn. 

Nor is there anyone to condemn here (”Judge not, that you may not be judged!”). What is occurring is completely natural, as are its pains, confusions, and mistakes.

Sloan Bashinsky

I was easing through the New Age when I discovered Joseph Campbell. In time, I came to view the New Age as kin to the Fukawi tribe, which was forever getting lost and gathering in a circle and sitting down and holding hands and closing their eyes and chanting, "Where the fuck are we?! Where the fuck are we?!" I feel much the same about mainstream Christendom. 

It looks to me that humanity, in the main, has lost its receptivity and creativity, which are aspects of the feminine, and the result is, humanity, in the main, is spiritually cloning itself and devolving. 

I think if I were a woman, I would be very concerned about bringing a baby into this world today. I might decline to do that. 

Tracing humanity back in time, it looks to me that the mess today is the result of men running most things. Humanity is killing the planet, and thus killing humanity, which don't seem terribly smart. 

A very tuned in woman named Dora Kalff, who graced me with being her friend, invented what is called Sandplay Therapy. She was a direct student and friend of the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung. She was a friend of the Dalai Lama, who, she said, told her that Sandplay therapy was applied Buddhism. Most of Dora's students were women, including my 3rd wife, which is how I met Dora.

When I asked I Dora at her home in Zollikon outside of Zurich, why she thought the Jungians had not embraced Sandplay Therapy?, she said she thought it was because they had not embraced the feminine. My wife gave me "the look" and looked like she wanted to hide.

Dora kept telling her students, in order for any change to occur in the world, the women will have to go first. That really bothered my wife and most of Dora's women students. It bothered me. I argued with Dora about that, and she humored me and said it was true nonetheless. 

Imagine if women went on strike, crossed their legs, quit having sex with men. Imagine if women quit making babies. In 100 years, humanity would cease to exist on this planet. Along the way, such interventions might cause a great deal of change in humanity.

The day before at a Reddit spirituality group:

Millenial Ardvark
I’m struggling with the state of the world right now
The rise of transphobia, misogyny, anti progressivism. The rise of AI and out further detachment from nature and our minds. The further demise of the environment. All these polarisation and conflicts are taking away the light. Even spirituality is mocked and dismissed more now. What do we do in this times? 
 
Puzzleheaded Drop (me)
In the main, humanity is destroying itself in two ways. It has lost its receptivity and creativity (feminine aspect) and is cloning itself spiritually and is devolving, and it is destroying the planet. If you watch or read mainstream TV news or commentary, you see this clearly. There is nothing you can do about it. All you can do is deal what is dead in front of you each day in the most authentic way you can. That includes spending a great deal of time looking at yourself in the mirror, which is not fun and certainly is not popular. I think women of childbearing age should give serious thought to not birthing children into such a wasteland. If women took charge of getting pregnant and stopped getting pregnant, they could put humanity out of its misery in less than 100 years, and save the planet, as well. Of course, that's not going to happen, so it's pretty much every man woman and child for themselves in the big scheme of things. But most people are social creatures, they need something to belong to, to feel okay, safe, have fun, feel relevant, secure. Me, included, although the path I was put on by angels known in the Bible did very definitely cut me out of any herds, and made it impossible for me to fit into herds. I came to feel like a visitor from another planet, or a new species that looks the same as the old species, but is wired very differently in perspective, endeavor and what is important and causes me to feel somewhat okay about myself. Even as I am tested ongoing, stretched, ground up, roughed up, etc. Mostly internally, today, but in the past the external tests were very rough, as well, and perhaps the external tests will return. In the end, it looks to me that life is the grindstone of soul alchemy for me and for humanity, and how I progress, or not, is why I'm here. In the spring of 2004, this fell out of me, I did not think I was its author:
 

"Earth, the sacred prism through which souls are refracted into their elemental parts, purified in Holy Fire, then one-forged and sent on their way to not even God knows where, simply because they are all unique emanations of God, evolving..."

sloanbashinsky@yahoo.com

Thursday, June 29, 2023

bigotry comes in many forms, flavors and disguises - Conversations with a south Alabama bayou river country belle poet about Southern Baptists, Methodists, Jesus, the Adversary (Devil), mammon worship, gender and salvation bigotry

    A south Alabama bayou river country amiga replied on Facebook to the The Golden Flake Clown's younger brother, R.I.P. post about my bisexual younger brother killing himself and trying to make it look like murder.

Elizabeth
The southern baptists have come to my methodist church and are bullying the elderly into disaffiliating from the UMC so that they can get the property for 1/1000th it's current value and I have prayed all over it. 
 
Sloan Bashinsky
You are speaking out in your church about this? You have reported it to UMC? You have reported it to the local newspapers? There is a newspaper in Foley? I know there is one in Mobile. Are the Southern Baptists local to your little river village? 
Are they from somewhere else? I keep hearing in my thoughts, 
Matthew 6:24 No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.
And now, 
Matthew 12 Then Jesus entered the temple[a] and drove out all who were selling and buying in the temple, and he overturned the tables of the money changers and the seats of those who sold doves. 13 He said to them, “It is written,
‘My house shall be called a house of prayer,’ but you are making it a den of robbers.”

Elizabeth
The UMC is who explained the coup. The usurpers aren't from here and don't even live here.
God hates a coward. I will fight this contagion.
 
 
Sloan Bashinsky
Yep, God dumped that on you, but the UMC is doing what? You will have to speak out in that church, and perhaps to newspapers and radio show hosts and local bogs, like you are doing on FB. I don't think there is any way to walk with God and not take risks, which Dietrich Bonhoeffer did when he joined a movement that tried to get rid of Adolph Hitler. Bonhoeffer's iconic book, THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP, speaks of "cheap grace," as opposed to being in the flames. He is said to have said, "Silence in the face of evil is itself evil." He was captured and put in a camp and executed. 
Speaking out in her Birmingham church was the difficulty I had with a very old dear friend when she told me about what the new minister in her very old line Presbyterian church was doing. I told her she had to speak out in the church, raise hell, interrupt the church service, but as far as I know, she didn't do that. She didn't like my telling her a demon was in the church, and the demon was infectious and was infiltrating everyone there, and it was attacking me, and I didn't care for that. We have not spoken or seen each other since then, and I can look out my living room window and see that church any winter day, when there are no leaves on the trees.

Elizabeth 
It's true and I am making waves. 
 
Sloan Bashinsky
My experience is, sheep and/or the sleeping and the dead don't care much for waves, and my experience also is that it when it is given to me to make waves, not knowing what might then happen, I mostly don't see much change, but it was mine to do anyway.
 
 
Elizabeth
It's looking like I am the only member who's not going along with the dirty deeds for the deed. The only one who thinks it's evil to judge. I guess there's no one to fight for. Somehow the Methodist Church wasn't clear enough along the 
way in every way that what it means to be a Methodist is being the love of God. Not judging, just loving. The members are FINE to leave the above and embrace the hate.
 
Sloan Bashinsky
I thought this was about selling the church land to make a lot of money? Jesus was very clear that there are times when something must be spoken to, regardless. 
 
Elizabeth
For the minister who came in and started this, yes, the financial reward will be large. But apparently they're all bigots like him and want to disafiliate from the Methodist Church for their loving embrace for all who want to come.
 
 
Sloan Bashinsky
Well, mammon chase looks to me like a very different issue from to be be a Methodist is being the love of God. Not judging, just loving. Love without Truth is mush, Truth without love is harsh, they live together, or die together, is something that flopped out of me in the fall of 1995 and then I proceeded to screw it all up pretty well. Jesus was not nice when he brought out his whip in the temple. If the usurpers are outsiders, and the minister is going along with them, you might be looking at going to church in your flower garden. For, when are we ever not in church, really?
 
 
Elizabeth
The minister is the main outsider. Word is that everyone else likes him fine. Has seen no bullying and will vote under his direction to leave the UMC, leaving the church and desirable property for the minister to take from the UMC as allowed if they want to disafiliate for everyone being welcomed. They do so there's no one to fight for other than the UMC. Since finding out first hand that fellow members care a great deal about the sex lives of others and are disturbed at the very thought of a possible gay member, they can tell it to a higher authority than me. 
I'm turning it over. I wash my hands of them. They can handle their own flowers and be oh so proud of being themselves entirely perfect enough to break the only Commandment Jesus gave.
 [Love your neighbor as yourself]
 
Elizabeth
Oh, and the Gulf Shores UMC is doing the same. No more will they be Methodist. Fine with taking the property from the UMC due to a very stupid clause that allows it.
Damn.
 
 
Sloan Bashinsky
I recall in the Gospels that Jesus told his disciples to go forth and spread the Gospel and where they were not welcome, to shake the dust off their shoes at the doorstep and leave. I confess I was sort of puzzled when you first started telling me about this church and the good effect it was having on you. I was puzzled, because you have never come across to me as someone inclined to get involved with a church. Maybe when you were younger, but not now. I can't imagine anyone who channelled the "pigs in mud" poem being a "good church girl".
  
 

All want the security of the well fed pig.

Horror at the baseness unrecognized.

A lifetime spent in shirt stuffing.

And pen comparison.

Is truth more palatable when honeyed?

Is a stark soulscape less so with the eyes of Monet?May my affectations always be understood. 

 
Elizabeth
There surely are still Christians and Christian churches. My gay step sister and her wife attend one. But apparently the people of the deep south hold bigotry in high honor. 
It's just cultural. If the Naziesque ideologies prove to pay enough, it'll spread like it did in Germany.

Sloan Bashinsky
I think that's a different topic than the Southern Baptists taking over Methodist churches to get their land. I was begged the other day by a woman I know pretty well, and her husband, to attend their church with her, because I am one of her favorite people and she wants to see me in the afterlife. I asked her how many churches Jesus built? She said, "One." I said, "And it was not made of stone and mortar and wood. Church is everywhere. God is everywhere." I'm still undecided whether I will accept her invitation. She isn't coming on to me. She really believes I need to attend church.
 
 
Elizabeth
It's the exact same topic if the Baptist minister took a position in the Methodist Church expressly to use bigotry to take the church. 
Hey, it works. Just have a member who secretly was never Methodist in his heart recommend a Minister they know preaches not from the Christian part of the Bible but rather the Old Testament. 
It would be lovely to have fellowship and discourse with like hearts. You are fortunate to be asked.
I will place my no vote. Beyond that, it seems that they actually never were Methodist if they will vote to leave over gay people being allowed to attend. They were always Baptists in their hearts I suppose.
 
 
Sloan Bashinsky
Agreed, and that's a very different topic than mammon worship. I have a trans grandchild, who had surgery to become male. I have zero tolerance for religious freaks that do what you describe here. Yet, they abound, and they are totally convinced God is their Authority. However, there was at least one Southern Baptist church in Birmingham, which I sometimes attended, mostly an eclectic Sunday school class, which welcomed gay men, whom I persuaded to give that Sunday school class a try, they would like it, after I convinced them St. Paul was gay  My very old dear friend, described earlier in this thread, is lesbian, she is in the open with it since long before I met her in maybe 1975, sang in the church choir. But the new minister at her church went on a tear about baptizing infants, and did other things that caused her to think he was an evangelical freak, and she was not alone in that congregation, feeling that way, according to her. The church was in her bones and DNA, so to speak, and I can't imagine she would ever leave it. But I don't see how you could cope with what you describe about your church. I couldn't cope with it.  
 
As for the invitation to attend my friend's church, I told her the people at her church might not care to have me around, and I would think about it. I'm still thinking about it, and a dream last night caused me to think perhaps I should take her up on her offer. Then, see how it goes. She gets onto me about saying damn, hell, shit. It's not Godly. You can imagine I'm wondering how else she and I and her church members might differ.  

Sloan Bashinsky

Elizabeth  
Sloan Bashinsky After contacting church officials, I reached out to one of the members who expressed that she didn't care for the bullying by the minister. Told her I requested his removal and she answered that that was wrong. That most agree that we're to love another but not tolerate perversion and sin. My answer is below, since I can't message you.
My dear, wonderful stepsister is not a pervert. She was the Orange Beach librarian. People acting for the Adversary made her leave her church and state.
Of course her current church is not bringing up Old Testament and judging her. No more than we'd stone our dear organist for being divorced. Or eating shellfish.
Unless Jesus said for me to judge another, I never shall. Other than if they judge another Child of God.
I have Vascular Ehlers Danlos and will not get to be your age. The up side of knowing that I am so close to death is that I know it.  
I'm leaving the matter since everyone wants to judge the woman who taught me about Jesus and turning the other cheek.
I'd rather stand next to her, knowing that she never allowed anyone to diminish another child of God than be anywhere near the Life Review of one who did. I will continue calling on Jesus and Archangel Michael to deal with the ones who would cause strife in God's Sanctuary, meant for all. 
May God's Grace cover you.

Sloan Bashinsky
Thank you, Elizabeth. In my 20s, I was very prejudiced against gays, but I grew out of it and I cannot pin point why. Perhaps learning my younger brother was bi-sexual had something to do with it. It really bugged me many years later, when I concluded he had killed himself and had tried to make it look like murder, because someone was going to out him and there was nothing he could do to stop it. I sent someone I met yesterday a link to the chapter about his death in The Golden Flake Clown's Tale. This person is a pathologist at UAB Medical Center. He said he works with the Jefferson County Medical Examiner. I told him that the Jeff Co ME had determined a relative's suicide was made to look like murder.
https://goldenflakeclowntale.blogspot.com/2023_03_26.
 
 
Elizabeth
It's sweet. I see nothing wrong with it.

Sloan Bashinsky
You were in love with your Methodist church, encouraged me to come down there and attend services with you. I've had many experiences in Birmingham churches, and churches elsewhere. Who knows what my friend's church is like? She is sincere, no doubt of that. The only way to find out is I go there and be with people who are convinced the only way to get into heaven is attend church. 
 
Elizabeth
I can't hurt.

Sloan Bashinsky
That's not the point. She is convinced the only way to get into Heaven is attend church. That's her stated motivation to get me to go to her church. It could hurt a whole lot if I absorb psychic shit in that church, which I have done a lot in churches in past times.

Elizabeth
Well, I guess that's truly what some people think. It's still sweet that she cares for you that much.

Sloan Bashinsky
Yes, in that sense, No, in the sense she is convinced I will go to Hell, if I don't attend church. Is not that bigotry?

Elizabeth
Not if she's just thinking about you staying in a high vibration. 
 
Sloan Bashinsky
I think you need to step back and meditate on what you are saying. What's the difference between a church person believing your sister is ungodly and going to hell because she is lesbian and my church friend thinking I'm going to hell because I don't attend a church? Nearly every time I go into a church, I feel the palpable presence of Lucifer. I then have to deal with it, and it's never pretty. If I'm told by God to go to her church, I will go. But staying in higher vibration? If my friend had to deal with what God has dished out to me since 1987, she might wish there was no God? As might any Christian I have known, might wish that, if they had lived in my skin that long. I don't wish that, I am very glad God took a direct interest in me, and I wish God would do that with everyone. This would be a very different world, if that happened. Meanwhile, because God does not do that, look at the mess in your church.

sloanbashinsky@yahoo.com 

Thursday, June 22, 2023

Summer Solstice chatter about illusion, belief and direct experience

       I engaged in some mindless chatter after this showed up in my Facebook timeline yesterday, June 21, 2023. 

Poetic Outlaws
“You always replace one illusion with another illusion. 
Always… 
So your wanting to be free from illusion is an impossibility. That itself is an illusion. Why do you want to be free from illusions? That's the end of you.”
—U.G. Krishnamurti

Sloan Bashinsky
In the early 1990s, I read two or maybe three books written by U.G. Krishnamurti, who described having experienced a spontaneous metaphysical event that changed him permanently. It happened to him, he took no credit for it. He said he lived in a totally natural state, where his mind no longer operated, unless something engaged it. He described, before the changes, meeting and speaking with J. Krishnamurti, and during their conversation, U.G. told J that he thought J had seen the sugar, but he did not think he had tasted it. I didn't live in J's skin, so I don't know what he saw or tasted. One thing I read that J said, which rang true for me, was, the solution to every problem is contained within the problem. I shared the first of U.G.'s books, in which he described what had happened to change him, with some people where I lived. After reading it, a fellow, who kept saying we can't. know anything, not really, so why try to know anything?, asked me what I thought about U.G.? I said I thought U.G. really did have the experience he described, and it really changed him in the way he described, yet he said in the book that he told people who came to him that he had nothing to offer them; he could not help them experience what he had experienced, it was an anomaly, and yet he wrote more books, after saying in the book I read, that he had nothing more to tell anyone. Maybe he needed to make money off book royalties?

Diwakar
Sloan Bashinsky as far as i know all his books are property of their publishers. He hadn't claim any ownership on books neither charged any commission

Sloan Bashinsky
Diwakar Publishers own books they publish, and the authors are paid totalities, in my day with publishers anyway. Of course, authors can decline royalties or donate them.

Diwakar
Sloan Bashinsky ok what i wanted to say is, he didn't author any books and he didn't charge any money if someone wanted to write a book on him.
 
Sloan Bashinsky
Diwakar I read 2, maybe 3 books written by U. G. Krishnamuri. Here's a link to books about him, several show him as the author. https://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en...

For all I know, U.G. didn't accept payment for his books. However, the first of his books I read, which described his journey in and from India to England, where the big change came, looked like he was struggling financially in England to get by, and why not accept payment for that book about his truly DIFFERENT experience? I have had so many truly DIFFERENT experiences that it's become like breathing, for me. I wrote reams about earthly and unearthly experiences, weaving in an out of each other. I wrote about other people I knew having somewhat similar experiences. I reported conversations with people having their own experiences, and people still in the belief stage. I published books about all of that, and when I realized the books were not going to make me a living, financially, I gave them away. I gave away later books I wrote about my and other people's evolving and/or not evolving process. Some of those books now can be read for free at an internet library - archive.org. Just enter Sloan Bashinsky in the search space and press Enter. 


Marc 
When you know that it is impossible to understand the universe, then why would anyone not live with illusions that are not toxic but in fact helpful? It's like God: Why try to prove it exists? If it makes you feel better to believe in God, and that you do not then try to force others into your belief, then why not do it?

Sloan Bashinsky
Marc  Belief in something is what seems to drive humanity. I think Einstein was certain that nothing could move faster than the speed of light? But, was that simply his belief, based on what he knew? Donald Trump probably now believes he was sent by God to save America from communists - Democrats, and his ardent followers seem to believe that, too. When Trump dies and they die, will they still believe that? Oh, that assumes when they die, they don't really die, but carry on without their very short-lived (in the big scheme of things) physical bodies. Is any person, including  U.G. or J Krishnamurti, not seriously affected by their beliefs? Is there any way to be rid of beliefs? Perhaps by staying drunk and hallucinating all the time? Perhaps by dying? Hillary Clinton seemed to believe she would make a great president, lots of Democrats thought so, too, including President Obama and Vice-President Biden. Turned out, Hillary had pissed off so many Americans that she got Trump elected. I suppose Shakepeare could have really done something with that. I read where the Swiss Psychiatrist Carl Jung was asked at a party, if he believed in God? He answered, "Believe? I know." I didn't live in Dr. Jung's skin, so I have no clue what he knew. I live in my skin, and because of that, I know for a fact that angels exist, that ETs exist, that other sentient life forms exist, which are around Planet Earth. I also know I would be insane if I thought, or believed, I could prove that to anyone else. Yet, I have had friends, and I have met people, who were not church goers or Bible readers, who belonged to no religion, to no political party, to no sect, social group or cult, who knew for a fact, from their own direct experiences that were as real to them as hitting their thumbs with hammers, that humanity has no clue what is really "out there", and what is "really going on". Angels can move instantly, and can be in many places at once. They are not constrained by the speed of light. There are ETs that are not constrained by the speed of light. I saw one of their ships do circus tricks in the sky, for three people I was with, who would not even look up and watch what I was describing to them that the ship was doing. I have been messed with by demons, and by what might be called "ultraterrestrials" which are not angels, nor demons, but can travel about without needing a spaceship. There is so much humanity doesn't know that it makes humanity a very backward species. God knows what it would do to human religions, if ETs landed on the White House and Kremlin and Beijing Palace front lawns and came out of their ships and paralyzed any resistance and said, "Take us to your leaders." God knows what Christendom would do if Jesus in the Gospels came back and did what he did in the Gospels. Very likely, they would kill him. 
 
Marc Wampach
Sloan Bashinsky I do appreciate someone who goes beyond a mere utterance in reaction to a text.

Sloan Bashinsky
Marc I don't recall the title of the first of U.G.'s books that I read, but it was his firsthand account of his journey up through and past the anomalous experience that changed him permanently. It included an account of a discussion he had with J. Krishnamurti in India, before U.G. moved to the UK, as I recall, where the anomalous event happened. U.G. described the serial onset of massive physical commotion at each of his chakra areas, his physical body changed shape at each chakra, and it proceed to run its course, and by the time it was finished, he was someone else entirely. He took no credit for it. He told the many people who came to him that he had nothing to give them, but people kept coming. It's easy enough to quote what someone says, it's a little more involved to include the context for what the person said. I read other accounts by people who experienced what appeared to be full arousal of the kundalini energy, and their reports were nothing like U.G.'s report of what he experienced. I had my own anomalous experiences, far too many to even imagine trying to chronicle. Nothing like what U.G. reported he experienced. 

Malek
Marc Well! I potentially not believe in existence of god , but I do not force others to follow up my beliefs. I can not prove myself right when I had followers, but I am okay .

Sloan Bashinsky
Malek I've had countless direct experiences, still am having them, daily, which cannot be ascribed to anything human or scientific, in the human sense. Nor can they be imagined in the human sense. Belief is what most people go with, or not. Direct experience is something else altogether, and, in my experience, it cannot be proven a human way. But once it happens, there is no way to honestly ignore or pretend it didn't happen. Psychiatry, Philosophy, Science, Religion, etc. are out of their depth in the direct experience realm. I speak not just from my own personal experiences. I have known a number of people who reported having ongoing ongoing direct communion with supernatural beings. These people were lucid, sober, were not taking LSD, peyote, ayahuasca, etc. They were entirely different to relate to than anyone else. Like a different species. 

Gloria
My own experiences have not been quite as broad in range as your own, but you were there when AJA and the philosophy professor showed up during a time you and I were working on an important project, and totally blew my mind. They opened me to no longer being hesitant, shy or cautious about speaking of my own anomalous experiences with beings/ personalities beyond the ordinarily accepted.

Sloan Bashinsky
Gloria Attorney Judge Attorney and the Philosophy Professor showed up to tell you stuff to tell me, to help me deal with something awful I had set in motion, but if I had not set it in motion, I may never in this life have learned why something happened to someone in my family. Being helped in that way is very different from not of this world beings capturing me and reaming me out in many ways that I imagine might cause most people to wish there were no God.

Gloria
Sloan Bashinsky you got that right!


sloanbashinsky@yahoo.com

White Supremacy hypocrisy and other American-right communist plots

     Today, June 21, 2023, is the Summer Solstice, aka, the bringing of the dark- as in, what is obvious is not seen.

    I dreamed before dawn on Juneteenth of getting down to writing about white supremacy in America, and this is what I posted on my Facebook timeline that morning.

This is Juneteenth, which is really important to Black Americans. However, I'm a white American, and I live in Birmingham, Alabama, which is more blue than red, while Alabama is very red and a Donald Trump stronghold. Maybe because I practiced law and thereby learned about res ipsa loquitur - Latin, for the thing speaks for itself. Or maybe I had enough hard knocks to peel off some of the programming and blinders I acquired growing up. Or maybe I actually believe what I see, when I rummage the internet and see lots of photos of MAGA rallies, and the Charlottesville riot, and the January 6 riot, and I see seas of white faces. Believe it or not, I'm not a Democrat. When a retired Birmingham lawyer I like a lot told me the other day, he likes some of what I post on Facebook, but I'm a little left of him. I said, I'm not left or right, I'm in the middle. And, back in 2016, I kept saying Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump both should be locked up, in adjoining cells.     

Charlottesville
January 6, 2021
MAGA rally

    Trump, Republicans and MAGAs are too clever to say what they mean by claiming the 2020 election was stolen. What they mean is it was stolen by Blacks.

    Today, I posted this on my Facebook timeline:

Communist propaganda😎

Politico 

Ex-Bush Aide Rips Evangelical Trump Supporters For 'Obvious' Hypocrisy. 
 
"'You have in Donald Trump the person who probably most embodies the antithesis of the Sermon on the Mount, the person of Jesus, and the teachings of Jesus,” Wehner, a prominent conservative Christian, said on MSNBC on Tuesday. 'And this guy’s a rock star and has been for year after year."

Peter Wehner said evangelical support for Trump is a "tremendous indictment" of that religious community.

Wehner, who served in the administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush and as a senior aide to George W. Bush, said evangelicals could have argued in 2016 that they didn’t know who Trump really was.

But not anymore.

“And by the time we got to 2020 it was so obvious what he was,” Wehner said. “And yet they stayed and it’s a tremendous indictment of them” and of the evangelical movement overall."

Trump and Jeffrey Epstein

    One if my closest friends is a US Army Special Forces combat veteran. He voted twice for Trump. After the January 6 assault on the National Capitol, my friend told me that the rioters all should have been shot dead. Yet, he did not say the rioters' leader should have been shot dead.

    Trump, Republicans and MAGAs' defense to Trump's classified documents indictment is it's a political witch hunt, because Hillary Clinton was not prosecuted for mishandling classified documents, which jeopardized national security. In making that defense, Trump, Republicans and  MAGAs concede Trump mishandled classified documents, which jeopardized national security, and they are okay with that.

    Trump was president for four years. He had two Attorney Generals, Jeff Sessions, from Alabama, and William Barr, from another part of Hell. They did not prosecute Hillary. 

    Barr has said many derogatory things about Trump. Barr has said the classified documents indictment, if true, is terrible. Barr also has said he will vote for Trump again, anyway.

    When he was President, Trump had a photo taken of him standing before a church holding up a Bible. That photo was featured in the television media.

    Do Trump backers ever ask themselves if Trump attended one service in that church? If he opened that Bible and read it? If he attended any church services when he was President, or before he was President, or after he was President?

    Do Trump backers feel any unease about Trump's first wife Ivana being quoted in Vanity Fair as saying when she and Donald were married, he kept a book of Hitler's speeches in a cabinet on his side of their bed, and sometimes he read that book at night?

    Does even one Trump backer doubt Trump paid Stormy Daniels money to be quiet about having sex with him when Melania was pregnant?

    Do Trump backers ever even once ponder Jesus in the Gospels saying, "Hypocrite, first take the beam out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly enough to remove the speck from your brother's eye?"

    Do the Democrats need to do the same about Hillary Clinton, President Biden, his son Hunter, and Vice-President Harris?

    Yes, if they actually believe Jesus is their savior.

    Yes anyway, if they have any decency in them.

sloanbashinsky@yahoo.com    

    

The Hit and Miss Club

     Today is Father's Day. I have two wonderful daughters, who have great husbands and two great kids each, and two great dogs each. Sometimes their kids call me by a nickname which dates back to when my older daughter's first child was born and her husband, whose father had been one of my favorite professors at the University of Alabama School of Law, asked me what I wanted my grandchildren to call me, and Grandfossil popped out of my mouth.

    On August 3, 2005, I was seized to type something that came to me about as fast as I could type it, perhaps 40 words a minute, about how fast I touch typed after taking a typing class my freshman year at Ramsay High School in Birmingham, which my father had suggested I do, as it might come in handy later in my life. Perhaps some day he wondered if that was a good thing for me to learn?

    Anyway, what I wrote that day was a memorial of sorts about my father's and my relationship, which was filled with love and also with disappointment and distress. When I typed the last period of the last word in the last sentence, my cell phone rang. It was my father's lawyer calling to tell me my father had passed away.


THE HIT AND MISS CLUB

Sloan Young Bashinsky
around age 50

    Sloan Young Bashinsky caused the Golden Flake Potato Chip Company in Birmingham, Alabama to become a market force in the southeastern United States. This below leaped out of me right before I learned he had died. 

“THE HIT AND MISS CLUB”

              IT’S AUGUST 3, 2005. I was involved in something for a few years that did not turn out very well (in my estimation), and I was beating myself up about it and wondering what I was going to do instead. Then came a series of dreams last night. In the last two dreams, my oldest daughter, Nelle, takes me by the hand and leads me away from something toward something else; then my father’s wife, Joann, is a legal secretary who hands me a case file I do not have in a bundle of other files I’m already carrying. I wake up about sunrise, knowing there is something I have missed or do not yet know about. Then I find myself thinking about a hunting club that went by the name of “The Hit and Miss Club”. Now why, I ask myself, am I thinking about that?

              In 1964, my father purchased a membership in this club, which mostly was for quail hunting, while I was still in my senior year at Vanderbilt. He was not a hunter but in those days hunting was a pretty big deal for me, and he did it for me. We went down there some together, and sometimes I went with friends. What I remembered this morning, after waking up and thinking of this place, was a time my father and I were coming back to Birmingham after hunting over the weekend, and I was driving and we were talking about different things. I was going to leave Birmingham and return to Vanderbilt that night. It was good between us; it felt tight. About halfway home he said he liked me driving, he felt safe, which he said he did not usually feel when he rode with other people. Maybe he felt safe because I drove a lot like he did, which some people in those days told me made them a bit nervous when they were riding with me. Well, maybe it wasn’t that. Maybe it was just one of those things that happened on that day but might not have happened the next day.

              Another thing that came to me this morning was that a lot of what I seem to be given to do, and a lot of my life before I got into this way of living, has had a lot of hit and miss in it. Maybe more miss than hit. In baseball, if you bat .333, that is, you get a hit one in every three at bats, that’s considered very good. You might even win a league batting crown with that percentage, but certainly you will be a star and maybe play in the All Star Game and will get well paid for hitting so well, and with a life-time batting average that high, well, maybe Ted Williams and a few others would be higher up the ladder but you would be way up there yourself, too. Maybe that was God’s way, this morning, of telling me to stop beating myself about not hitting a home run with every job assignment, or even a triple, or even a double, or even a single, or even just getting a walk or hit by a pitched ball.

              Darn, I’m about to have myself a big conniption here, if I’m not careful. Why that is, is that for a very long time now, it has seemed to me that heaven has had me on a training regimen that is all or nothing. I do assignments perfectly, or it’s judged for naught. I bat 1.000, or I bat 0. And even if I bat 1.000, if my playing partners don’t also step up to the plate, then it’s as if I did not step up to the plate, too. I heard a few times in dreams that this is what has been going on, so for me it’s not mere conjecture. I told a friend after I got up this morning that this whole thing was driving me nuts, feeling that I have to do everything just in a certain way, or I get plastered afterwards. Jesus surely made mistakes, I said. How could he not have made them? He was human.

              The Job assignment that had not gone well came to a head out of nowhere, like I had stepped unexpectedly on a convey of quail I did not see hidden on the ground in plain view right under my very eyes and the darn things suddenly erupted with all of their unnerving flapping wing-noise right from underneath my startled feet and swarmed up and all around me in various trajectories and directions designed to get me to shoot at holes in the air and run out of shells as they frantically dove for safety, and maybe I got one or even two of them but I didn’t shoot the whole damn convey out of the sky and maybe I didn’t hit even one of them. Hit or miss, that’s what bird shooting is. That’s what life is. Despite Jesus saying in Matthew 5:38 et. Seq., for his disciples to be perfect, even as their Father in heaven was perfect, that dog simply doesn’t hunt, at least not on his world.

              After God has gotten ahold of someone real good and that has gone on for a while, the aholdee starts to see things both from the perspective of both a human being an angel. However, this is not the same perspective that just being an angel enjoys. An angel doesn’t have to mess around with and put up with the human being messing up what the angel is doing. An angel can just be an angel. But a human being can’t just be an angel. A human being has to mess around with and put up with being a human being, too. It’s a serious problem; maybe it’s a kind of multiple personality disorder: a perfect angel yoked to a perfect donkey, or something like that.

              I probably could say that my father was a perfectionist and his father was a perfectionist and his father also was a perfectionist and so I am a perfectionist therefore. Perhaps there is some truth in that. But then, I said, perhaps it is fucking impossible to be a perfectionist, because it is fucking impossible to be perfect. However and despite all of that, I told John that I now find myself thinking of some perfect moments I had with my father, and that drive home from the Hit and Miss Club was one. Maybe just a small one, but it was one. My father knew how much I loved to hunt, and he didn’t care that much for it yet he made it possible for me to have that experience. I had some very good times down there with college and law school buddies, and our wives. I don’t care to hunt now, but that doesn’t take away what it was for me then.

              I remember when my fourteenth birthday came, and my mom and dad asked me what I wanted for a birthday present, and I said I wanted to go to Destin to fish in the Rodeo. I’d heard about the Destin Fishing Rodeo, that it was the best fishing time of the year. My birthday was in October, in the peak of the Rodeo. So my father came and got me out of school on Friday and off we went to Destin, five hours away, before I had learned to drive in the way my father drove, all rather exciting for me, but he seemed blessed with a sixth sense and we arrived safely and a bit early, as I recall, at the Silver Beach Motel, which you might still be able to find today underneath all the high rise condominiums down there.

              I remember a few years before that fishing trip, the last day we were to be there that summer vacation, we were staying in at the Old Miramar Hotel in Ft. Walton, which is about twelve miles west of Destin. In those days, there were no motels and no anything else on that beautiful beach lying east of Destin, and my father and brother and I went out there to swim, and it was one of those magic moments, like I had died and gone to heaven, but was still on this world, and I really didn’t want to leave that beach that day, I wanted to stay there forever actually, just us, no one else was there. I asked Daddy why it felt so good that day and he said it was because it was our last day down there. I think it might have been because of this day, too. My tears say it is so.

              Anyway, when we got up on Saturday morning, it was raining and the seas were stirred up. We had a boat chartered for that afternoon and the next morning, but nobody went out in this sort of weather. Over breakfast in the Silver Beach Motel restaurant, I don’t think I was drinking the water but only milk, because the water from under the ground there is full of sulfur, Daddy said we could stay and try to fish tomorrow, if the weather let up, or we could go home and come back the next weekend and fish. I chose to go home and come back, and when we came back the next weekend the weather was perfect the first day and we caught a lot of nice king mackerel that first afternoon, after fishing on Crystal Beach pier that morning. The wind had shifted by the next morning, a cold front coming in. The kings were not biting so we went to bottom fishing and caught a bunch of nice red snapper. We took it all home. It was the best birthday present I think I ever had.

              Many years later, my father started taking me into the Florida Keys to fish there, for bonefish mostly. This is not something rookies can do very well, as you have to learn the flats and tides, see the fish, stalk them, and so forth. It’s a cross between hunting and fishing and finding and stalking the fish is similar to using bird dogs to find quail, which bird hunters feel is as important as, if even more important, than actually shooting. Most people who don’t know how to do it already use flats guides; and most people do it out of skiffs to cover more territory, although wading works very well if you know where a good wading flat is. I fell so in to love with bonefishing that there are no words to describe it. When my father bought a nice home on Lower Matecumbe Key, about Mile marker 76, I really got to do a lot of bonefishing.

              I went down there a lot with the family, and with wives and friends. It was Paradise. It made me want to live in the Keys. It seemed when I left the Keys headed back to Alabama, that my soul stayed behind, and when I went back down there and reached the Overseas Highway, just below Homestead, my soul was there waiting for me. I could literally feel my soul greet me when I left the mainland. It’s still like that, and I am having these big raindrops falling out of my eyes right now over this. My father loved it down there, and I felt awful when I learned he had finally sold his beautiful home on the Atlantic, because I knew how much he loved it. But, I was told he had not been up to going down there for a few years, and so it was sold.

               My father once told me that he didn’t go down and live there all the time because he was afraid he would find out just how sorry he was. But I tell you truly, when I learned he had sold it, I wept, because I could not imagine him being more happy than down there; but he had all sort of things in Birmingham that were important and close by that he was involved in, and he let go of what I once told him was the only thing he had that I really wanted: The Fish House. I didn’t feel that way when I later I learned it was gone, but I felt that way when I said it, and it looked to me that it sort of got to him that I said it, because it sort of looked to me that he saw that I really meant it.

              Most likely, I would have lived in the caretaker’s cottage, gotten guide papers and fished the flats with clients, and rented out The Fish House, when it wasn’t being used by folks who had fallen in to love with it too. For my father let many people use it: family, friends, business customers. Beside the front door, as I recall, was a sign on which was printed: “Welcome to my home, please treat it as you would your own.” Somewhere inside, as I recall, was another sign saying, “Some guests please us in their coming, others in their leaving.” And over the toilet in downstairs bath was a drawing of Bear Jesus, er Bear Bryant walking on water, and underneath were these words: “I Believe!” Coach Bryant spent some serious time down there with my father and other close friends of theirs, and in the Green Turtle Inn still hung, last time I looked, a pair of old white tennis shoes in a plastic bag, with some sort of card or sign hanging off them, saying “Bear Bryant’s Booties.”

              I caught a passel of bonefish wading that flat out in front of The Fish House, and I caught another passel of them in the little Boston Whaler my father bought when he got the place back in 1963. I fished those flats hard, got really sunburned chasing those grey ghosts hither and yonder. And then, as had already happened with hunting, which I had come to love after I had fallen in to love with fishing, it went away. I no longer wanted to fish for sport, and I really didn’t even care much to fish for the skillet either, even though I might do that sometimes.

              The changes started in early 1987. I felt it, like a great shadow coming over the land. I felt it over me, against me, and inside me. There really is no describing it, but I knew it was going to be very different. Very different. Then an odd thing happened: I saw that I was still fishing, but it was a different kind of fishing. Very different. I still used what I had learned on the flats, and before that at Destin, and fishing lakes and ponds and streams near Birmingham: cane pole, bait casting, spinning and fly, but invisible. In this moment, I have no doubt that my father’s spirit was there with me all along, and my son’s, we three were fishing together. We three are fishing together now.

              My father was fishing when I was twelve and it was early spring and baseball was warming up and there would be a Little League in our community that year. We made up a pitcher’s rubber and a home plate in the gravel drive behind our home. He bought a catcher’s mitt and came home after work every day, and I threw until his knees wore out from stooping in the catcher’s position. I got to where I could get it over the plate pretty well and could hit different spots in the strike zone. I didn’t have any stuff on the ball, no curve, no knuckle ball, but I had zip, and I was left-handed, and that was unusual for a pitcher in those days and batters were not used to it coming from that side, and I got on a good team and I was one of the pitchers, all because my father and I had gone into the zone together those many afternoons after he came home from work.

              He had season box tickets behind the visitor’s dugout at Rickwood Field, where the Barons played. We went a couple of nights a week. I’d get in the back seat and go to sleep on the way home. Jimmy Piersall played one year, before he went up to the majors. He hit a lot of game-winning home runs, to the opposite field (he was right-handed), in the bottom of the ninth, as I recall. In those days, baseball was the most important American sport to me, although football would take its place one day. In football, winning is everything, or so said The Bear. I suppose it is, but it has killed me, trying for perfect records every day of my life.

              I made a lot of bad casts to bonefish, but I caught my fair share. I wrote a number of very good books, non-fiction, novels, verse. Or perhaps it would be more accurate to say, a lot of good books wrote themselves, using me, as I had no clue where it was coming from, just as I have no clue where these stories here are coming from, before they come from wherever they are coming from. Yet by the measures of this world, those books were inconsequential. How they sold in heaven, I cannot say, because I have not been told. The best novel I may ever write was written right here in Helen, Georgia, 2001, perhaps on this same library computer.

              And I just now received a phone call from John McKleroy, my father’s lawyer, to tell me that my father passed away in his sleep yesterday morning…

              Maybe I need to stop writing, for now…

Next morning epilogue…

              I burst into tears when John McKleroy called yesterday afternoon, because, I said, I had not gotten to see my father before he left. John said I would see him soon, and I said, yes, but still my tears were because I had not seen him here, on this world, before he left. I said I see him often in my dreams; it is good for us.

              The night before John called, I also was told in dreams why my father and I were not seeing each other: it wasn’t anyone’s fault and was just one of those things I would never have known if it had not been revealed to me. Then I got up and went into town the library and I wrote yesterday’s story. Then John called to say he had not been able to reach me the day before yesterday, to tell me that my father had gotten up that morning in his home and had breakfast, then said he wanted to take a nap and thanked everyone there for helping him.

              About four months ago I was told in a dream that something undefined would change by August 2. A friend has offered to drive me over to Birmingham this afternoon so that I can attend the memorial service tomorrow. John McKleroy has offered to get me a rental car and place to stay. Friends in Birmingham have offered me their home, for a place to stay, and I will take John up on the rental car. Dreams last night were encouraging. It did not turn out as I had hoped, but then, maybe that’s why I awoke yesterday morning thinking of the Hit and Miss Club. Maybe some things just turn out the way they turn out and that’s a good enough batting average.

                       Sloan Young Bashinsky Jr.

                                 Age 63, April 2006 photo