#25 – Gibraltar. Thresholds, convergence, old gods, and portals
In this Podcast I mainly explore Gibraltar after a recent 2 day visit. This small parcel of land located on the South West tip of Spain is still owned and governed by the United Kingdom and has been under constant control by the royal crown since 18th Century.
Geographically it is one of the UK’s last remaining aspects of its colonial empire, which for the most part has long since disintegrated. It is a very strategic place with a looming military presence
I realised its a really powerful place of boundaries, thresholds, and portals for masculine and feminine energies, the old gods, religion, seas and oceans, lost civilisations and the known modern civilisations.
It has a very special energy all of its own, and to me it feels certain that many shadow systems are feeding off the telluric earthly feminine currents of this land.
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Podcast transcript
The following text is a A.I created transcript of the podcast, so it may not be a completely accurate representation of my spoken words.
Good morning, good afternoon, good evening wherever you are in the world. This is the Reconsider Simon podcast and this is podcast number 2525. As usual, it has been a while. Um hopefully going to be doing a few more of these. There’s been lots and lots of things going on, but in this particular podcast, this is going to be about Jibralta and the old gods and again the old masculine and feminine energies and more particularly to do with threshold portals and how some of these strange places like Jibralta can be these
powerful convergence points. Uh, and I think this is kind of a burgeoning sort of area. I don’t know what you call it, research, unfoldment, just understanding narrative where I’m sort of, you know, reading the landscape more and more and how uh finding narrative in that and how it kind of weaves of history, but also how it affects the people that live there and the culture and spirituality, the whole thing really, the whole of, you know, reality and the human experience. It’s just fascinating. And
if we think about everything is really energy and the physical world really is just a manifestation of that en energetic kind of skeleton or underlying kind of structure and and more particularly shadow systems and how these shadow systems uh you know is a a representative of shadow energy but it actually has a physical location on the map. Um so even if it’s like a virtual thing you know in terms of like finance or internet companies you know these still have offices these have servers they all have a physical location within
the landscape itself you know one of the oldest shadow systems obviously finance and money is a big one but also the military you know waring element to do with society and the energetic kind of connections to that and particularly I’ve been speaking a lot about the southwest uh Spain and this so many military facilities all the way along the coast and the same with with Jibralta. I mean, this is a very strategic place for the British. So, there’s a huge military presence there as well. And in terms of like shadow
systems, there appears to be a new kid on the block of shadow energy. And this is the whole data center conversation going on at the moment with AI and surveillance. Uh in a way it could be seen as that the new military seems to be spreading like wildfire across the world. There’s an interesting component here to do with water and data centers. And you know big question is like what are these things really? But what’s fascinating you know going to Jibralta a couple of months ago as I did it feels
like it’s a very representative of our current times. Jibralta feels like this huge convergence of so many things like energies and cultures uh and history just so much I’m going to be discussing um but we feels like we’re in a period of time of convergence as well where we have this all these things coming to the surface in terms of the shadow aspects of the medical industry financial technology entertainment gender like it feels everything is very strange and everything’s kind of upside down and
being rearranged and being looked at and light is being kind of shone on some of these shadow aspects of all of these things and you know h again how does that reflect from the human body cuz again my the way I see the world is that everything really is a projection of the human body I mean even if you look at popular culture weird thing I’ve been thinking about recently is like celebrity culture seems very very strange and some of these people at the top of this kind of celebrity tree which
are you know global names that loads of people know tend to be musicians or a lot of them are film stars. And then there’s this very interesting ampic craze where suddenly all these people are getting super super skinny and just looking very very kind of quite drawn and not really human in so many ways. And um it just feels like this kind of shadow aspect where everything’s very feels very strange is sort of manifesting in the look of these individuals. And then you have to ask this question. I mean cuz some of them
are coming back looking completely different, maybe even having slightly different personalities and acting very strangely and the way they speak seems very very different. Um there’s just so many cases of that and it feels maybe a bit weird to kind of discuss this but you know it just kind of speaks to the fact that everything in our reality really is just kind of rearranging and all these shadow aspects are kind of coming to the surface and you know I have big questions about who these individuals are. Are they even human? I
don’t know. But over, you know, the course of my spiritual journey, I’ve always kind of tapped into, I guess, to those sort of new age concepts. It’s kind of informed me quite a lot. And there’s been a lot of talk for years now, of like purging the shadow and energies coming to the surface and the elevation of everyone’s consciousness. And to me, like over these last 10 years, it does feel like that has been rolling out. It feels like very very real in my opin opinion. And it feels
like, you know, the world, myself, you know, I’ve had loads of low quite severe health problems. It feels like everyone is going through this like massive healing crisis on a personal level, but just also on the exterior level as well. Like it just feels like the world is just in constant fluctuation, you know, in chaos. Um, and it does feel like there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Like it is a process and definitely going through this portal and this threshold again is quite painful.
But I do feel like there is something quite beautiful at the other end of it. And again, I’m sort of going to mention the fact I just feel that the exterior world really is a manifestation of consciousness. So everything that’s kind of happening is really a projection of our own consciousness and our own body. And you know, the vastness of our own conscious, the vastness of our body, it’s just it’s kind of like the TARDIS in my view. Um it’s just never ending really. And there is so much dark and
there’s so much light. held held within the very fab fabric of our body and it’s like everything really has kind of narrative I’ve explained this before where I feel that reality is in a constant feedback loop so even if very bad things are happening like you become ill or with a particular condition uh there’s a reason for this and it has taken me a while to kind of understand that because it is quite uh frustrating because you can be in in the midst of illness you can be in the midst of
incredible pain and going for a long time. And yeah, when people say, “Well, you know, you got to heal yourself.” Um, it can be really triggering, really irritating cuz it’s like I’m trying to do everything I’m I’m trying trying to think of like physically, spiritually, but it’s still not shifting. Um, and yeah, when you’re in that kind of like head space, it’s really hard to kind of see the light at the end of the tunnel. Um, and but I just think that everything
really does have an energetic component. Even to the small things on a practical day-to-day level, like when you’re moving around, sometimes you might accidentally cut yourself or stub your toe. It all kind of links to something. Um, you know, within my own kind of mechanics of my body, I’ve always sort of seen the left side of my body really is kind of feminine, the right side of my body as sort of masculine. And sometimes when I’ve uh had a predominant uh litany of different health, you know,
problems on my left hand side of my body, which I have, uh I’ve always perceived it as really being linked to some aspects of my feminine nature which are kind of slightly need healing. Um and then the same, you know, vice versa with my right. And sometimes I can like constantly keep stubbing my right toe and okay, something’s going on here. This is kind of linking something to kind of masculine energies. And again, I don’t want to like really dictate how your own body works, how your own
consciousness works because I think sometimes maybe there’s a uniqueness within yourself. So it might not be the same for you. But this is what I’ve kind of discovered. I just feel like the human body really is just a map and just, you know, the way you feel in different parts of your body. Um, you know, sometimes I’ve felt a lot of energy at the front of my body, but it’s always felt very dull and sort of dullled down on my back. And then I think that’s kind of linked to something
I’m never quite sure what and I’m still trying to unpick that. But it’s just like everything has a reason in some strange way, but it’s just not your own body. It’s like the exterior world is constantly feeding you feeding back to you, whether that’s through numbers or or music you hear moving dayto day. And obviously everyone’s very much glued to screens these days, including myself. So the algorithm, the internet, your you know your your YouTube feed or your social media feed also messages are
carried through that or what films you watch or what TV series, everything really has a message in there for you. Um, and then obviously when you’re going into nature, I think one of the purest synchronicities you can probably get are animals and they can be birds and they can be insects. And I’m constantly having interactions with animals. And now I live in more of a rural area again in Spain, even more so now cuz I kind of moved into the forest. It’s like a constant surrounded by nature and birds
and trees. And again, it’s that kind of shamanic experience of like, you know, at the moment, I have a constant problem of like mosquitoes coming into the house or uh, you know, big ants, black ants, and everything really has a me message behind it. And, you know, a lot of the time I’m not quite sure. So, it’s a point of divination where you’re just going on the internet and putting, you know, spiritual messages for ants and then whatever you find on the internet in terms of an explanation could
resonate with you and that would probably be the reason. So I don’t think it’s necessary to sort of like catalog like a huge library of understanding of what every single animal means. You can quite easily kind of reference and research yourself and just kind of discover things. Um but yeah, I think as you do this more and more like I’m starting to understand like you know birds sometimes can be a big warning for me. So when they start to fly nearly fly into me or if I’m driving they nearly
fly into the car I’m like okay something’s going to happen quite soon and inevitably something does unfold which is not always like really really bad but there’s a kind of warning you know gear yourself up something’s going to change quite dramatically. I mean going back to the body and again this could be very much uh specific to me because again I don’t want to dictate how your body works but I’ve had like a real issue with kind of the bottom half of my body has a very very cold energy
and you know part of my health wanted to move to Spain where I am now away from the UK was a lot to do with like temperature as well because I can feel the co particularly when I’m sort of sat down at a desk at a computer like I am uh I can just really start to feel the cold quite quickly. If I’m moving around, I’m sort of fine. But I’ve had this very, very cold energy in my legs and my feet. And again, I think this is kind of linking to something to kind of darker energies which I’ve been trying
to unpick and sort of understand. And I do think some of these energies are now starting to kind of be transmuted and I’ve seen a lot more movement particularly in my legs and feet. So something is definitely happening with that. Um and then another kind of uh situation that happened recently again when I was actually in Jibralta which kind of links to that that I was really a lot of darker energy was coming from the center of my mind my crown my kind of I guess pineal gland in a way I could
sort of feel it um and uh it was sometimes it can feel so intense that I get a lot of pressure there as well and I was walking around Jibralta and I was climbing along these rocks and I managed to sort of see this old disused. They look like satellite dishes pointing towards Morocco across the street at Jibralta. And I was like, “Okay, I should check that out.” There’s a weird building next to it and it had a door that was a jar and open and I walked in and it just had this it was completely
disused. It had a rack of servers in there and I was like, “That’s interesting.” Anyway, as I came out, I just managed to like whack my head on some concrete and it was the most painful thing and it was like my eyes were watering. I felt I wanted to cry cuz it was so painful. But again is a very painful reminder to sort of say no you’ve got a lot of darker energy uh around your pineal and your kind of crown area. And I think even just that kind of intellect intellect can’t say it
that kind of uh conscious thought that that is happening it starts to shift things and starts to transmute it in a way. So it just brings your awareness to it which kind of starts that process to really uh start to transmute it and hopefully then it will start to disappear and it did. It started to kind of move through. But a quick sort of life update I guess some of these podcasts really it’s quite hard to divorce like my own life and my own experience from some of these things I’m researching now cuz I think actually
sometimes like the viewer or the participant is as important as the information in many ways. So it’s kind of like becomes this like inter meshing sort of strand that kind of interweavves and mixes and yeah all sorts of things. So I think it’s important maybe to give context about what’s going on with me at the moment. Um but yeah I sort of moved to Spain last July if you started listening and uh it was mainly to try and sort of rectify health problems I’ve been constantly having particularly over
the winter time. And so I end up accidentally moving to the southwest uh tip of Spain and a place called the Costa Deloo. And I had never really been to this area before apart from went for like a quick holiday because I just felt this pull to a particular area of Spain when looking at a map. And so I went there and I was like, wow, you know, it’s just full of like really interesting history and just layers and layers of just fascinating energy. And I could feel it as soon as I went there. And as I’m trying to talk to you is
another mosquito. God, I got this electrified bat which kind of zaps them. Feels a bit harsh, but I can’t do mosquitoes. Anyway, right. Continue. Um, where was I? So, I moved to Spain. Just looking at my notes. Um, yeah, there’s just so much going on energetically, esoterically, and I’ve done a lot of videos to do with that and sort of written stuff of some of the strange stories and encounters. And I just found this place incredibly remarkable. I mean, I always thought, you know, the UK had the market,
cornered the market and paranormal activity and strangeness, but no, definitely Spain has given a run for it. I guess a lot of the European countries are like this cuz they just stretch back so far. um cuz it has more of a visible like architecture and and civilizations. I mean you going to sort of towns in Spain and the stretches some of the most continuously like oldest continuously inhabited civilizations ever in the whole world uh that are still kind of running um and stretching all the way
back to Phoenicians and stuff. And that’s another interesting component this whole Phoenician thing. It was a a thing that I’ve been reading quite a lot through Michael Deserin about sort of Britain and Ireland and the Phoenetians and how that kind of connects and it was just I was then going to these like very Phoenician really ancient towns around the southwest of Spain. I thought it was a really fascinating synchronic synchronicity. Um and again another aspect of just where I am just this is a
a huge component sometimes when you go into places with so much light and so much energy there always tends to be like military facilities there and yeah you can either look at it like they were consciously put there or maybe they were unconsciously put there because there’s some force that kind of moves that these shadow forces in in certain places and it’s the same you know when I visit I’ve done videos of renam forest all the way east anglia it’s very energetic place It’s just lots of, you know, American
bases there as well. It’s a huge American presence there. Um, you know, obviously ties into the render from Forest incident and another favorite place of mine, Avery, the whole Wiltshire. Again, there’s loads of military facilities around there and it’s this is repeated all over the world, even when I’ve gone to sort of California and it’s a very energetic place in America and just lots of huge obviously well-known military facilities around that area as well. And it’s the
same with Spain. All the way at the coast of light, there’s a Spanish uh military facilities, but also huge massive, one of the biggest in Spain, I think, is in Rotor, which is a US militarybased, naval base. And so that’s probably about an hour and a half’s drive away from here. So again, it just feels like some of these shadow systems are really sort of feeding off this light in some way. But I’m, you know, been living in this past year in a place called Los Canos Dame Mecca and I
unfortunately had to leave there just because uh the guy that I was renting off because summer’s like a big like holiday destination. So it’s just strange. A lot of the rental places very seasonal. you can kind of rent from September and then June you have to sort of move out and so I moved out you know but I was having problems of like noisy neighbors as well which is like another you know spiritual aspect to like you know why this is kind of a repeating pattern that’s happened before with me
where you just feel like where I’m living is being invaded by someone else’s music and so in some ways I was sad to go but other ways I was quite relieved but I did this mammoth trip in my car you know drove through all of like Spain up to the north to Bill Bower cuz I had my UK car and it had this inspection that need to be done in order to be insured again. Um, so I did this man trip to go all the way back and then I took the ferry from Bil Bau which then arrived into Portsmouth and it was
hilarious how I just sort of you know obviously Spain weather’s quite nice. It’s hot and warm and sunny and the same with when I got to Bil Bower even though it’s further north it was quite nice and Clement I was getting the fair and it’s beautiful skies but as soon as you got closer and closer to the UK it’s just like the clouds descended. And it was just like again sort of familiar 3 4 miles deep of like gray cloud just goes on forever and it just sort of hangs in the air for weeks for months and it was
another one of the reasons why I just felt like I had to leave. And it’s just very strange as like heavy cloud that just sort of sits there all the time and then again the weather just got more and more tumultuous and stormy and stuff and it was just like yeah welcome home Simon but you know arrived into Ports I’ve been to Portsouth before but never from the context of like taking a ferry there and it’s just fascinating sort of seeing the skyline again think it’s one of the biggest like naval um kind of facilities
the British Navy is there and Yeah, just a lot of sort of naval frigots and other kind of warships, whatever you call them, it’s a big kind of naval ship that yard there basically. And but it’s fascinating because a lot of like the UK like every time I come across some of these military facilities, they look like they’re falling apart. It doesn’t look like anyone’s really there. So I don’t think we have any real kind of military to kind of speak of. Even though you know the rhetoric sometimes
of these politicians like we’re going to go to war with Russia and it’s like are you joking? I mean, Russia’s probably got this humongous army with like endless tanks, endless soldiers, endless kind of naval ships everywhere and like UK, we’ve got nothing. And I’m I’m not like a proponent of having a big military, but it’s just it’s kind of quite comical the way they sort of like act like they have this huge kind of military to back up the works cuz they just don’t. I just feel just like
everywhere I come across in the UK, it’s either been mothballled or it just looks like it’s falling apart. Which is also another kind of interesting thought experiment, you know, are these data centers in some kind of strange way. Uh like the the kind of the child of the old kind of military facility in a way. This is kind of the new shadow system and the military is going to sort of disintegrate and it’s all really going to be digital. It’s all going to be surveillance and this is kind of like
the new shadow system that’s being installed across the world to kind of manage the light, manage the energy. So that is an interesting thought experiment I have been sort of thinking about. But again everything that’s unfolding including like the AI like you know to my point of view it has like a link back to consciousness and some of this crazy weather. I know there’s been a lot of rhetoric in the news about it being 40° and I just my dad was saying that in an email recently but I went on
the weather and it just seemed like it was like 30° in the UK. I couldn’t see any temperatures that were 40. where I am lost canister mecha again I was seeing all these weather warnings it’s like 23° so I’m just like oh is this another kind of weird weather fear porn but you know I would admit that definitely the weather just feels a lot more fluctuating these days but I think it really kind of links back to consciousness in kind of some strange way as the shadows coming up and particularly the UK feels so heavy I
just think there’s a transmutation some really heavy energies within that country at the moment hello this is a Quick commercial interlude. Just want to tell you about my t-shirt shop. I have conscious creations of some of the scribbles and artwork that I’ve done. I basically put them on t-shirts which you can wear day or night, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. But you can go to reconsider.com and you can click on the banner there which will take you to my Etsy shop and it’s a great way to
support me. Thank you so much. Bye. But yeah, now I’m back in Spain. My car died unfortunately. So that’s an end of an era. um it was worth way too much to get it fixed. So I kind of come back to Spain. Probably been here about three weeks I think now I think. And um yeah, thankfully I’ve kind of settled a bit more. I’ve got a place for summer. I bought a Spanish car. So I just feel a lot more rooted and a bit more cuz it just felt crazy before cuz I was like went back to the UK. It’s like go go go
and then I had loads of stuff in storage. I need to sort of sort through and kind of throw stuff away, sell stuff. And it’s just just been on a constant go go. And then as soon as I got back to Spain, it was like I got to find somewhere to live and I got to buy a car. So it’s all these kind of one thing after another. And just like this week I’m like ah feels like in a better place now. Everything’s kind of a bit more organized and I feel a bit more rested. So it feels like I can do a bit
more content again which is good. So normal service will resume. Um, but yeah, before I left, uh, I guess now it’s about 2 months ago, I guess, I decided to take a impromptu trip to Jibralta, um, because I didn’t didn’t realize, I never really checked how far away it was. I’d seen it on the map, but I didn’t realize how close he was, and it was only about an hour, an hour and a half, and I was like, I could just do that in a day. But I decided to sort of stay overnight. So, I stayed on the
Spanish side and just decided to kind of walk across into Jibralta cuz it is kind of cheap if you stay on the Spanish side. Um, and I remember going there like many years ago, I think way over 10 years ago with a girlfriend that I was living with in London at the time. And, uh, she was French and she kind of hated the British weather, always complaining about it. So, I thought, you know, well, maybe we could live in Jibralta and they sort of speak English and it’ll be easy for me to move there. Um and then as a
designer, freelance designer, there seems to be lots of work with financial companies and gambling companies and stuff. So yeah, maybe you can go there. So we decided to take I think it was around about April time we decided to sort of fly there. Um and but actually the weather when we got there wasn’t that great initially, but I think it did sort of brighten up. Um but it was interesting. Um I didn’t really like it. Uh, I just felt just felt really quite industrial. Um, and at the time some of the I was quite into my
food. So, we were going to a lot of restaurants. I was cooking a lot and I just felt the food was like, you know, British food from 20th years ago, just quite depressing. Just this constant smell of sort of stale fat. And I just wasn’t very particularly impressed by it at all. And I was like, yeah, there’s no way I could live here. So, that was kind of at the time it was completely off the table. Um but having returned and again this is a big block of time since I went there again guessing about over 10 years
ago if not more. Um yeah I completely changed my opinion. It just felt like everything had sort of improved massively. Um I think there’s been a lot of development. Um it just felt everything felt better and maybe it was the person I was with at the time. Maybe she was quite sort of negative. So again, that’s another that idea of like, you know, how you know the energy that you’re emitting sort of really just affects the exterior environment with maybe a feeling a lot better, more positive energetically. It’s kind of,
you know, Jibralta’s changed quite significantly as well. Um, so that could be a part of it in some strange way. Um, but yeah, like you know, the two days that I spent there, I was like, yeah, I could quite easily live here. I won’t because it’s a little bit too hectic for me at the moment. But yeah, generally I really, really enjoyed it. I enjoyed the energy. But, you know, a lot of this audio podcast is all about the convergence, the threshold, you know, a portal, whatever you want to describe it. It’s
just kind of this meeting point, these two contrasting opposing forces or concepts or energies. Um, and there’s just so much like that in Jibralta. It’s really bizarre. Um, and you have the Atlantic Ocean, which stretches on for miles and miles. And back in the olden days and the ancient world, it was always perceived as being the end of the world. Obviously, they found out later on um you know, in terms of like the known western world at the moment. Obviously, there’s been ancient civilizations and stuff and continents
have moved around, but you know, what we’re told is that, you know, the Atlantic Ocean was just there was nothing and there was no land at the end of it and you’d fall off the edge of the earth. That’s the kind of the narrative you’re given. Whether that’s true or not, I don’t know. But it is a convergence of the Atlantic Ocean which is unknown kind of world and again sort of feeding in the ideas of like the old gods. It was perceived as not meant for mortal humans. This was the the era of
the gods. So don’t go there. And the exotic world of the Mediterranean Sea. So it’s again it’s that kind of joining of these two oceanic environments and the Mediterranean Sea is just like abundant you know with so much like exotic spices and exotic places. It’s the sort of gateway to Africa. It’s a gateway to so many beautiful landscapes in the Mediterranean European region. Um so yeah again a threshold a portal whatever you want to describe it as. Um and then Jibralta itself is a you know
it’s a bordering town. So weirdly Jibralta even though it’s part of Britain it does feel like its own country and it has many different systems which are completely different. Like I thought again going back to my car like I get my car emoteed in Jibralta. You can’t because it’s a completely different system. The post offices aren’t linked with the post office in the UK. So in many ways it’s it own weird little country but it’s bordering Spain and it’s this kind of
French threshold as a tension between the Spanish side and the Jibraltton side which is obviously part of the UK but I made you know few short videos on this and in terms of the landscape you know Gibraltar this is very phallic masculine presence this kind of like limestone monolith that’s sort of hollow inside which is another fascinating aspect to this and then you look at the Spanish side it’s flat you know, very very flat. So again, you’ve got this huge contrast in the landscape itself and just the landscape
itself. It just looks, you know, masculine. The Jibralta is masculine. A feminine kind of Spanish side is, you know, feminine in so many ways. But it’s also just influenced the name as well cuz it’s called the the town itself is Linia. The conception which kind of relates to the mother Mary. So even in the name on the Spanish side, it has a feminine kind of name. And in terms of like the activity, Jibralta is like real hive of like capitalism and actually is one of the healthiest in terms if your
metric is money and commerce then yeah Jibralta looks relatively successful cuz when I was walking around I didn’t see any kind of boarded up shops. Everyone was like buzzing around. They had had kind of a slight London energy. You know when I was younger I used to really love going to London just because of that go like energy. There’s just so much going on and you’re sort of going on the tube and processed through these different environments, it feels like future very very futuristic in many ways. Um, and
kind of Jibralta has that same sort of buzzy energy. Um, and then but if you go to a majority of places in the UK, it’s not like that. You know, you go to some sort of even where I’m coming from, Chester, there’s just a lot of boarded up shops like areas which are completely just not used anymore. Uh it’s kind it’s very a representative of what’s going on in the UK. It’s a very heavy depressing energy. It just feels very uh I don’t know just stagnant really. Um and so
this is kind of replicated in so many different small towns and cities around the UK at the moment I think. Um so Jibralta is very very different. It’s still feels very buzzy. It feels very kind of like you know things are happening. But you know in terms of like me some of the main industries in this reel and it is small and what’s fascinating is just like probably one of the most you know un easy places to build cuz again you’ve got this limestone and it’s quite steep all the way down to the kind of the sea area. Um
I think it’s more towards the tip overlooking the straight of Jibralt. It starts to get a bit more flatter. I know they’re starting to kind of reclaim land. They’ve already sort of already built a marina. It’s quite nice around there. Um I think they’ve been reclaiming more land and sort of building skyscrapers. Not skyscrapers, but quite tall buildings. Anyway, um so where was I going with that? Uh yeah, so in terms of like some of the industries, uh again you have this a hive of like
finance, shipping, you know, the straight of Jibralta I think is probably one of the most busiest shipping lanes in the world. I know there’s a a lot of information to the straight of hormos um if I’m pronouncing that correctly to do with the Iran conflict and this being this main kind of nodal point of like the flow of oil to the rest of the world and things and you know Jibralt is another point like that not specifically oil although I I without a doubt assume there’s a lot of oil tankers go through
there but it is huge kind of gateway to you know Africa and Europe and North America South America you this kind of straight of of Jibralta, you can just feel it like the importance of it and it’s it looks stunning. When I was there this those couple of days, the light was so stunning stunning. It was like crystalline and like looking over the ocean out into Africa and to Morocco. It’s just really really beautiful site. And you can just imagine historically some of the mariners, you know, these ancient civilizations going
on their sailing boats or maybe they had boats that had different propulsion. I don’t know. Um, but you can just imagine them being in awe as well like I was in awe is a very very like interesting convergence again. So you have all these industries including like the military. Military is a huge thing. Gambling is a huge thing. You know as a designer I’ve done sort of work for various gambling companies. Poker stars is always quite a favorite. It’s a place I went back to freelance quite a few times. Um and I
always really enjoyed it and I know Poker Scut Stars I think was in Jibralta as well. Um, but anyway, so you got Jiala is a very like, you know, phallic penis like it’s limestone. There’s always like go- getting like masculine sort of companies there, corporations there. Um, and then you look on the Spanish side again, it’s very flat. Everything’s more spaced out. You just everything has air to breathe. And again, even the name, it’s like the Virgin Mary. Um, obviously it kind of relates to the Catholic face
and the Catholic traditions. Um but Jesus was obviously made through this process called immaculate conception. So it was he was basically born through not having sex. Um so conceived without sin because obviously having sex is very very bad and ungodly. I would say that is without a doubt very very wrong. But that’s the way they kind of read the situation. and the feminine in terms of my my experiences over these last few years over these last decade have very much involved the feminine whether in
terms of like actual physical people having these very very powerful experiences or just in the landscape or kind of culturally and Spain is just another huge synchronicity in that because there is so much kind of feminine aspect to Spain in terms of like the Virgin Mary there are so many places kind of relates to kind of feminine goddesses and and feminine Christian figures um and this has been a huge huge unfoldment that’s been happening for me. Um, and I’ve got Yeah, this is why I’m going to probably do
another podcast on that. Um, because there’s so much and particularly a lot of the churches and cathedrals in Spain don’t tend to focus on Jesus. It’s always kind of Mary or a feminine fig figure. That’s kind of the idolatry that they have. And I think this kind of stretches all the way back to sort of Celtic times. They’ve sort of managed to maintain this kind of feminine aspect within their religious traditions. Whereas you look at like the UK, you know, most churches and cathedrals is
always about Jesus. It’s very very rare that you see kind of Mary or a feminine presence. It tends to be you sometimes you get it in the stained glass window, but it’s that Protestant very very kind of masculine approach to kind of Christianity. And again, this is another threshold that I’ve just understood. You know, you have kind of when Spain and Britain have been at war or France, you have these femininebased countries. you know France is the same and Spain is the same and this kind of relates to the
battle of Jafag which happens outside of Los Canasta and you have this Protestant country very very masculine. So it’s just interesting how again this masculine feminine thing just kind of weaves through everything through the landscape and it just affects seems to affect history as well and obviously on the m micro level in terms of like interpersonal relationships with you know one another men and women it’s just everything is this kind of you know masculine and feminine energy kind of
intertwining and sometimes clashing at the same time but from my own point of view and experience you know sort of been in many different landscapes now around the world and there just seems to be an interesting correlation when you have a predominant area of like flat land and you have this sudden just kind of strutting out of this like phallic I don’t know hill or rock or mountain or whatever it is it seems to be quite you know an interesting energy it’s it’s the energy around that landscape tends to be
very very interesting very very powerful and I also found the inverse is true so if you have like an area that’s very very mountainous very very hilly and then you have like a small area of like flat land which kind of looks at odds with the rest of the landscape. Again, it feels like it’s a nodal point of some quite special energy and that without a doubt is happening within Jibralta and I’ve seen it so many places like place I’ve been in Africa, you know, places uh you know around the world that I’ve
encountered where you have this kind of huge contrast. It does seem to create something in the landscape. Well, you know, it’s representing the energy really. So, it’s like the physical landscape is being shaped by the energy behind it. So again, that physical realm really is a manifestation of what is representative of the energy. And so, you know, Jabolta being this masculine force and the Spanish being this feminism force is very representative of what is happening now really. I thought
because it really links to now because at the moment, if you go online, particularly in the internet space, there’s just so much chaos and so much shedding about what it is to be a man, what it is to be a woman, and just kind of that combative interplay that seems to be happening. And that’s another weird one in the fact that on the internet or the digital space everything hyper real like everything’s intensified to kind of a million. So in some ways it doesn’t feel real cuz if you sort of
walk around you know normal you know the exterior world even though you know in many ways that is sort of an illusion. Um it’s very different. You know you’re not having these combative sort of men and women at each other’s throats. It’s just different. It’s just like normal life. Uh so again it’s just this the internet’s strange like this hyper real environment but through this you know threshold this contrast between this masculine this feminine these two countries that have been at war for
hundreds of years um you know a lot of these settlements wouldn’t exist Jibralta wouldn’t exist you know the Spanish town wouldn’t be as big as it is now without that constant like interplay and combative nature of these two energies and you know before like Spain had this permanent for of military obviously on the border of Jibralta as a you know to push the British forces away is like a constant threshold a barrier to prevent any more of them sort of coming into Spain itself and and then that military like
settlement has grown into a normal settlement where people live where people have jobs where they have families and you know when I was on the Spanish side I didn’t really see any military aspects at all um it was more on the British side um so without that what’s an interesting you’ve had that kind of conflict and and this tension has created this very very strange prosperity in a way. Um and it’s become quite symbiotic because you have a lot of people who live on the Spanish side.
They will travel every day across the threshold into Britain into Gibralta to work, you know, and then they’ll come back at the end of the day. Um cuz I I I get the sense obviously maybe some of the jobs in Jibralta would be better paid and also there’s probably more of an abundance of work in Jibralta being it being a more capitalist society. So it’s like this waring conflict in a way has just created a strange prosperity and it’s just you know inadvertent consequence of the shadow sometimes that
sometimes good aspects do kind of come out of it which is strange to say but you know that sometimes can be the truth. Um, and obviously it’s very very strategic. You know, let’s not forget that that is an element to this because Jibralta overlooks the straight of of Jibralta. Incredibly uh important shipping canal which I’ve already said, but it’s a gateway to Europe. It’s the gateway to, you know, North America. It’s the gateway to Africa. There’s all these different environments. All these
different kind of spheres of like human reality exist and it’s that kind of nexus point where they all seem to meet. So for Britain, it’s an incredibly important foothold and to have that and I can’t ever really see them ever giving that up and I can’t really ever see Spain wanting to try militarily take it over. I just can’t see that happening. Um because it feels so embedded like that now the two cultures the way it’s sort of set up. I could be wrong. Um but yeah, it just I can see the strategic
nature of it why the British wanted to hold on to this small speck of land for so so long. And it is tiny if you look at it. And then esoterically is there something going on here? Like energetically they understand that they have to have a foothold here as well to kind of power you know every country in so many ways is like a shadow system in its own right. Uh it tends not to really like um serve the people broader people. It tends to serve special interests richer people. Um and and UK and Spain
are no different in that regard. Um but it just fills you know some of these shadow systems need the light of Jibralta to be able to power itself and be able to kind of you know maintain its aspect in everyone’s consciousness and because of that light this is why you have all these shadow systems in terms of finance and gambling and uh you know shipping maybe you know sometimes a shadow aspect in that as well and obviously the military all of these things are kind of feeding off that feminine creation energy that creation
energy in. So again, that kind of very masculine go getting energy which you know in the UK is very prevalent. Uh it just even when I went back I felt it you know it was just like go go go. It’s just like one thing after another. Okay, once I’ve done this, I got to do that and it’s just like a constant conveyor belt of things you have to do and and um so it’s very representative in the country and I have kind of thought, you know, why in the UK being such a small country like why do we have this
predeliction wanting to sort of travel and go to other cultures and obviously in the sort of in the past to connalize, you know, sort of well we’re going to make another England here. Um, and there’s always been I think it stretches back to the Phoenetians cuz they were a huge seafaring sort of civilization. So there’s an energy in the land of the UK that seems to want to make people to explore but also to connalize in some kind of strange way. And I think it comes from the energy in the land and
maybe stretches back to the Phoenetians because the Phoenicians had that same predeliction to kind of move and travel and they set up civilizations all over the world, you know, including Spain potentially and other areas of the Middle East. Um, and they they from what I’ve read in some of Michael Darian’s work um I haven’t really read outside of him admittedly and but they were just very very advanced civilization. They knew about naval kind of technology. They knew about astrology and you know what else
did they know? Do they have sort of hidden knowledge theory of spirituality about reality and yeah hidden knowledge basically the whole mystery school thing. So UK as a whole can very much to be described as very masculine based society and then you look at Spain it’s very very different. You know work is does exist. Um, but I I get the sense that, you know, having 2 hours over lunch and then here shops close at 2:00 and they open at 5, you know, so people take a long time to sort of have their
lunch and relax with their families. And then there’s another aspect I like about Spain is the fact I’m not really spending that much money here because the weather’s good and it’s very like for me it’s an outdoor culture and there’s like forests and there’s seas and so I’ve got quite into surfing and things and predominantly Spanish people tend to sort of go to the beaches and they’ll go with their families and they’ll set up a huge encampment with various umbrellas and they’ll be there
for hours and they’ll have chairs and they’ll bring loads of food. They don’t have the whole barbecue thing here because I think because of the hot weather it kind of can cause forest fires and things. So they tend not to do that. Um but yeah without a doubt Spain’s famous for the idea of siestas sort of taking it easy. So it’s very much imbued in the energy of the land. So again that’s kind of informing like how the people act here. And it’s the same with me like definitely I working
less here than ever. Um, and sometimes I have this tension within myself cuz I’m like, you know, I should be doing something and I need to be achieving. I need to be creating. Um, so it’s just something I’m really trying to learn to kind of relax. Go for walks, go to the beach every day for an hour, just soak up the rays, just relax. It is quite hard for me sometimes. But it’s fascinating how again these energies really are manifested in in the religious context as well. Like I said,
with the UK, you go to even just the church, the cathedrals, the medieval ones, they look more, even though they’re beautiful, they look way more um just utilitarian. Um and then obviously you’re going to sort of more of the Latiny cultures like Italy and Spain and France. I mean, some of the the cathedrals and churches are just so ornately decorated. Again, I would say actually Spain’s probably quite simple in terms of the architecture, but it’s again it’s just this idol worship in
terms of like the mother Mary being really focused and central to a lot of the religious kind of traditions and particularly over Easter. I didn’t really get it’s called like Holy Week and a lot of the churches and cathedrals all around Spain and they have these huge processions. You’ve probably seen videos online where there sort of people and it happens like every day at different points and there’s always kind of a ritual or a story behind it and they’ll carry these huge feminine
figures with you know mother Mary and ornately decorated into sort of gold and amazing kind of clothing and things and some of the people carrying them have it looks a little bit like the Kucks clan which is kind of unfortunate and they are part of a brotherhood but obviously the Ku Cox clan sort of whole thing has really tarnished that sort of visual really cuz it kind of people have been obviously visually repelled by that. When you see these people wearing these pointy hoods, they immediately go to the
American South and and the Ku Klux Clan, but it’s obviously not to do with that at all. Um, so yeah, you get these very strange hooded figures like carrying these feminine characters through these streets, these very narrow streets within various Spanish towns across Spain. Um, so yeah, again, this kind of feminine aspect is throughout society. And I would hazard a guess maybe it’s more matriarchal in terms of the way your families are set up or maybe the the grandmothers and the wives are way
more in charge of families than might have been in the past in the UK where it could be more of a patriarchal kind of setup within families. But I think, you know, a lot of um this relates back to that kind of it’s a it’s a strange term, Celtic times, pre-Celtic times, because it’s very it doesn’t really not very descriptive and it sort of encompasses so many different civilizations and stuff, but it’s a kind of broad uh phrase for very very diverse kind of culture. But I think it does stretch
back to that era, whatever you want to describe it as. And it it those additions did happen in the UK I think and particularly some of the videos I did in Chester where there’s like the Manurva statue next to the river D which is supposed to be a Roman goddess but probably would predate that. It was probably I think it was the DC Angley tribe and the Cornovi tribe that were around that particular Chester area and they had you know goddesses you know the river D that’s there’s a name um that
links to a goddess apparently and even diva uh for the D.A thought which is the Roman name for Chester uh you know is a Roman god is a goddess name obviously diva um so it is there but it’s just been lost you know through the current religious traditions of the Protestant church and stuff a lot of these things have been completely stripped away um and then obviously again I think air fends another goddess in within Chester as well so and you know I found this strange alignment between all of these
kind of quite important the juke of Westminster the Manurva statue Chester Cathedral and various other kind of stately homes It all seemed to be in a line and very close to that it went straight through the military barracks of Chester as well. And it’s just like there’s a big question is like you know were these things done consciously? Did they understand something or is it completely unconscious? You know the shadow system sort of placing these shadow aspects whether it be like you know the largest land owner in the UK
the Duke of Westminster in line with Chester Cathedral in line with um military barracks. Um, yeah, whether that was kind of more unconscious rather than a kind of a conscious placement and just bringing the conversation back to where I’m at the moment and lost Canos demech but the rough translation of that is like pipes of peace I guess or pipes of paradise um or canals of paradise whichever you way you want to kind of structure it. Um but yeah, this is a name given to this area by the moors cuz
it has very uh deeply spiritual spring water that flow underneath of these lands. uh which I why I think this area is so energetic and there’s so much kind of interesting things that have happened around this area in terms of like UFOs um apparations like ghostly apparations um and you know being here it’s very very healing place for me personally there’s been a lot of interesting quite painful energy shadow energies that have definitely come up and that’s something I’m still dealing with but overall I
found this place incredibly energetic and it’s without a doubt be instrumental in my healing process as well. Um, but what’s been strange about this, I moved to this area completely by accident. I was looking, you know, quite a broad stretch of coastline really. Um, and I just happened to come across this place this guy was renting and it was an area I’ve never been to before. So, when I went to go and check out this apartment, it’s the first time I ever went to this town. I was like, “Oh, this is
interesting. It’s quite nice.” It’s a little bit uh disheveled in some ways. Um but the kind of the natural environment around it is really stunning in terms like the beach and the kind of forest around it as well really really beautiful even though the town itself is not particularly like picture postcard like you know specific. Um, but one thing that I I uncovered about this area was just the a lot of place names. Like I was living in this kind of strange gated community called an urbanization
which is quite typical in Spain and it was called the Cabo de the Trafalga which is you know translates as the Cape of Trafalga. And little did I know that this whole area or that coastline was kind of this the theater of uh the huge historical conflict of the battle of Jfalga which is between Napoleon. So it’s a combined Spanish and French forces Napoleon against you know the battle of Jfalga and Lord Nelson. And in this point, it was a very bloody battle that went on for hours. I think about 6 hours. And you know, hundreds if
not thousands of sailors died and a lot of their bodies were washed up on shore all the way along the coastline apparently. And there’s a lot of ghost stories linked to that. People saying they hear cries and naval sort of echoes of naval warfare happening. And also people feel the tugging at each other’s cl. Having thought thought thought about it, I mean that is another aspect of this area that I found fascinating is the amount of le mysterious booms I hear and a lot of people attribute it to the
military activity. But yeah, maybe some of these are ghostly apparations of war. I don’t know. Um but anyway, I just find it fascinating that you have this instrumental naval conflict, you know, being British and this is, you know, Britain against Spain. It’s just literally on my doorstep. And so I found that fascinating and having lived in London and walked through Trafalga Square so many times in the daytime and various drunken states after going to like I don’t know Chinatown after meeting friends and
things. Um yeah, it’s just weird. And you know the Jibralta links to that because a lot of the dead or some of the dead that were collected or the injured from this great naval warfare uh were taken to Jibralta. So you can when you go there there’s a really old cemetery kind of right slap bang in the middle of the town it feels um and it’s quite beautiful and tranquil even though it’s very like heavily built up. It’s got trees but a lot of the sailors are built sort of buried there itself. Um so again
it’s just strange how the two link up. Um there’s another aspect to this in terms of like the old gods and um this area like Jibralta being perceived as being Hades like the gates to kind of hell or the underworld. And I’m living in Canos demecha which is you know paradise. So it’s like heaven in some ways. And again this is another strange threshold I’ve sort of just realized as oh my god you got sort of the gates of hell down here and then you’ve got like heaven here. Really
bizarre but again coming back to this narrative of like feminine masculine like I was speaking about it’s the marrying up of Spanish and French forces more sort of feminine. Um, and then in terms of like the UK being more masculine with the Protestant aspect to it and it really just feeling like the war of the sexes, you have this like feminine force, distorted feminine force fighting this distorted ma masculine force. So again, it just feels like that interplay of the two energies. It’s just kind of
happening on a larger theater of war. It’s really, really bizarre. you know within UK I think that many of the statues to do with Mary in fact any feminine goddesses references were you know completely destroyed which is what you know relating back to Chester it’s strange actually how that statue has has maintained to be there it’s kind of survived a lot of the the wiping away of historical accounts that wiping away of history the wiping away of statues and idolatry that have perceived as being
sinful uh yeah it’s strange that the Manurva statue in Chester is kind still there and but you know Spain and France they sort of managed to keep this kind of feminine presence still even though it’s distorted you know it’s still kind of there it’s ingrained within the culture itself and you know apparently Spain is called the land of lady sorry I said that again I said it wrong Spain is called the land of Mary and this is the way it’s kind of perceived and France is the eldest daughter of the church so
yeah again it’s just like feminine aspect relating to Christianity which probably stretches way back into kind of more Celtic times and yeah without a doubt there’s you know distortions within Protestantism and also uh you know absolutely within cath Catholicism uh particularly with the Vatican obviously everyone knows the conspiracies about the Vatican and things the Vatican bank and you know all these very conspiratorial ideas you know Vatican being a country in its own right and if you’re thinking of the world as a
kind of deep state thing it seems to be like the religious center of you know is the Vatican the city of London being the money aspect and Washington again has this strange area where it’s perceived as being an independent country with the United States and that’s like the military aspect and again with like Switzerland you have all these like banking you know the international bank of settlements which controls all the central banks around the world we like all of these large institutions are in
Switzerland and again seem to be weirdly their own country in their own right so yeah without a doubt all of these systems have distortions, including the church. But it’s just incredibly poetic and beautiful in some instances where, you know, you’re having this war, this conflict, but you know, on the surface, if you really go back to the energy, it just feels like feminine distorted, masculine distorted that are kind of war with each other. And it’s just this is a a thing that’s been unfolding
throughout, you know, centuries, if not longer. And it feels like it’s always been there within the culture. This kind of tussle between men and women as well. on the micro level. But yeah, some of the understanding about the battle of Trafalga and the feminine masculine just there’s just loads of synchronicities that have been happening. Apart from that, I could go on forever talking about this, which is why I want to do a few more podcasts, but I just feels like on this strange alchemical biblical
journey at the moment where all these things are like unfolding at the moment. It’s very very peculiar, very interesting, fascinating, quite exciting, but it’s a it’s taken my life in a direction I never thought I would be going into because, you know, previous to that, I’d always sort of started off with the whole, oh, UFOs and aliens and coming from different star systems. And I’m not sort of discounting that, but I think there’s probably a lot of false information in some of these
concepts to do with like aliens and an extraterrestrial craft or interdimensional craft and everything. I’m sort of really focused on, you know, my exterior world at the moment and my own internal world. I think that’s at the moment one of the most important things. And some of these larger things like disclosure actually are really huge distraction and aren’t helpful and I actually think are weaponized in so many ways to sort of get people to look outside of themselves too much. Um, and
so I’m really just focusing on my own journey. Some of the synchronicities are coming up. I’ve noticed some of the synchronicities have been so huge and so out there even just like people I’ve known you know some of these romantic relationships their names and how it kind of relates into some of it’s just mindblowing what’s been happening. So you know given that what I’ve just said in essence going back to Jibralta it feels like you know it is a very living threshold between masculine and feminine
energies in an allegorical way. you know, it’s that energetic undercurrent is really informing what’s happening in the landscape, but also in the way how people interact with each other when they’re there. But going back to Linia conception, the town, the Spanish bordering town of Jiala, and it gets its name from the mother Mary and it’s and the mother Mary is really really important to the Spanish military and sort of I think it stretches all the way back to like the 16th 15th century. It’s
it’s it’s been for hundreds of years where they’ve had a real reverence for the the Virgin Mary. And apparently it doing some research, it all stretches back to a particular war where the Spanish were fighting the Dutch in Flanders in 1585. Now, apparently Spanish forces at the time became trapped on a hill and Dutch warships uh started to open river dikes around that particular air around the 5,000 Spanish soldiers specifically to drown the soldiers to drown the Spanish soldiers. I think the initial intention
of the Dutch military forces was really to scare the Spanish into submission. Um so the intention was to kill him, but I think really to get them to surrender really. Um, so the Dutch asked for surrender, but the Spanish response, this is the quote that I got, was the Spanish infantry prefer death to dishonor. We’ll talk of surrender after we’re dead. So, uh, whether that was the narrative across all of the soldiers, and it wasn’t just like some very very headstrong, uh, sort of officers, I
don’t know. Um, but yeah, that’s basically what happened. And so the Dutch opened this these the various dikes to kind of flood. But at the very last minute, a Spanish soldier was digging a trench and uncovered a wooden panel with a picture of Mary, the Virgin Mary. And all of them saw this as a hugely divine sign and started praying to Mother Mary. What happened as the waters that were beginning to rise uh you know from the Dutch opening these river dikes that completely abnormally the surrounding river after the Dutch
sorry after the Spanish had found the Virgin Mary and started to pray to Mary the whole surrounding river froze solid overnight. So it meant the Spanish were able to walk over the river and destroy the Dutch ships that were actually kind of encased in this ice. So, ever since this particular conflict, obviously an amazing turn of events, you know, Immaculate Conception has been perceived as the patron saint of the Spanish army specifically because of this story. Even the Dutch forces and the officer could
see that a miracle of happened and yeah, they were quite blown away themselves and conceded that the Spanish forces were being protected by some other kind of saintly Christlike energy. So ever since that particular story, Laenia, the conception, the V Virgin Mary has been incredibly important to the Spanish military and obviously it’s why this military bordering town, Spanish bordering town of Gibralta has its name and yeah, it’s why again I think why the Virgin Mary is so revered across the
country still. So you have this feminine border, but as a whole in terms of if you stretch back and look at Gibraltar historically, and again I’m sort of weaving some of the mainstream understanding, you know, maybe some aspects of this could be wrong, but it’s been occupied for over I think it’s like a 100,000 years. I don’t know how correct that is. Um that’s what I kind of found on the internet when I did some research, you know, from more kind of mainstream sources. And but there’s very
famous Neanderthal cave um that’s been discovered within, you know, the sort of the limestone itself. And it has like various kind of very rudimentary art within the cave itself. And there’s various like uh evidence of food sources, I think, you know, various kind of deer and sea snails that have been found in some of these caves to sort of link them to Neanderthalss. And but you know bringing it more into the future again I talked about the phoenetians and so the phoenetians had a god shrine
within Jiala itself which seen you many these cultures have perceived Jabala being very very special and in a lot small space you know a lot has been going on and there’s just so many layers to this as well and apparently it’s one of the most fought after bits of land in human history you know ever you know there’s been so many conflicts for this small speck of land and then bringing it historically forward a To the Romans, they called it Hollow Mountain or Mons Kulpa. A Mons Kulpa, there’s like a an
interesting sort of it looks a bit cheesy, but there’s a kind of strange sculpture near the kind of coastal area of Jibralta that overlooks the straight of Jibralta. I’m not sure if it was like funded by Freemasons, but it has Mons Culper on it, and it’s perceived to be the sort of the pillars of Hercules, which also really important important. Sometimes you hear variations on the story but essentially you know Jaba being the pillar one of the pillars of Hercules and the other one is on the
African side in Morocco and so you know you go back to Plato again this brings into narrative to do with like lost civilizations whether that’s Atlantis or something else and but Plato always perceived Atlantis being beyond the pillars of Hercules and you know within the name with the ethmology you have the Atlantic Ocean and Atlantis so and I know there’s lots of stories about Atlantis being all over the place. I’ve mentioned this before. Some think that the eye of the Sahara, that’s Atlantis.
It’s got these concentric circles. Um, but there’s a lot of legends to do with like Atlantis being off the Spanish coast. And the same with like Ireland. If I bring in some of Michael Tesarian’s work as well, he sort of talked about Atlantis and lost civilizations then moving to Ireland after these kind of catechisms or you know huge uh earth changing sort of seismic events whether it’s flooding or something else. Um but yeah, we’re bringing into America there’s also stories about Florida. So it just feels
like and even the Caribbean as well. So it just feel like that Atlantic Oceanic region there’s just a lot of mystery and myth surrounding this Atlantis kind of story. But going back to this Mons co this hollow mountain is one of the biggest features of Gibralta is the tunnels and you know there’s lots of mysteries surrounding this you know how deep do these tunnels go and there’s lots of interesting conspiracies of like ancient tunnels. Um, so yeah, that’s a huge aspect of Jibralta and it’s one of the reasons why
I think strategically the British have been able to hold on to the island as well. It’s not an island, but you know, the kind of the cape of Jibralta, they’ve been able to hold on to it because of this cave system. It’s been used so much within the military and, you know, being able to bury themselves in this limestone fortress in a way. But in terms of some of the known sort of civilizations that have used and inhabited Jibralta or had reverence for Gibralta, you know, like I said, it’s
the Phoenetians, if the Carthagenians, uh, the Romans, the Vandals, the Moors, obviously, again, Spain, the Dutch, and now, you know, the British have had control of Gibralta since 1704, and then again, I think 1713, and ever since then onwards, you know, it’s been part of Britain. But, you know, talking about sort of Islam and the Moors when they had a lot of control over parts of Spain, you know, Jibralta is no different. Um, and it’s still evident in the in the traditions and some of the
architecture around Spain, but also kind of Jibralta itself. So, there’s like a Morris castle which still is there which you can visit. Um, I didn’t go inside. Um, but I kind of looked at it from the outside. Um and then on the kind of the I think it’s called Europa Point there’s a mosque that there as well very beautiful looking mosque. So still kind of that Islam is very very important to this land as well and it’s been there for a very very long time as well as Christianity and and that within that
fully functioning mosque uh Europa point it’s also the point of like the lighthouse as well which is very kind of protruding phallic object which sort of helps mariners kind of navigate less so now obviously because a lot of the kind of navigation tools are electronic but you know lighthouse is incredibly important in the ancient world but focusing on this Euro Opera Point, which is this area of flat land I talked about, which kind of overlooks the straight Gibraltar and this kind of uh allegorical kind of pillars of Hercules
with this mosque on it. It has like a big um sports center there as well. It looked like people were kind of playing football, but it’s it’s one of the only areas of like continuous flat land that you can kind of walk around. Um but it’s been continuously sacred apparently for about 700 years. And if it wasn’t a shrine to Islam, it’s been a shrine to other things as well. They had this thing called the perpetual flame which kept burning for like for years, for decades, for centuries to help seafarers
looking for protection as they cross, you know, the sacred pillars of Hercules from the Mediterranean Sea into the Atlantic Ocean. And this name, you know, Europa Point is very, very important to the naming of the continent of Europe. I mean this is apparently why Europe is called called Europe is because of this uh small speck of land within Jibralta itself called Europa point was the inspiration to call the continent of Europe as well which I guess you know how do you perceive obviously Europe is
kind of the name for the land mass in a way but it also kind of fits towards this political system you know uh previously before I was always quite pro the idea of the European Union but I like a lot of government governmental structures and corporations I’m kind of quite anti it these days. Um, so again, you know, how does this tie into this idea of Europe and European countries and uh is there an occult aspect to this because there’s probably a lot of cult activity not only within governments
within these larger kind of like global like institutions like the European Union and it does feel you know people talk about global government governance in terms of like a one world government in a way if we don’t have that already but kind of European Union feels part of that and it feels interesting. And it all kind of stems from this name Europa point to it’s like again energetically is there a link to the wider political structures of Europe um and this point I don’t know but it’s just I’m just you
know asking questions another aspect to Jibralta that’s quite funny and you know quite nice uh is the mckett which are sort of these monkeys that live on the top of the rock and there’s a huge legend which kind of links the makett to because you don’t not not that I know but I don’t think you get makett anywhere else in Spain. Uh I could be completely wrong on that, but I haven’t seen any monkeys. Um but yeah, the Macs for some strange reason inhabit the top of this rock and there’s a legend that
they came through these like, you know, underground tunnels that linked to Africa. So it’s like, you know, they sort of claim that some of these monkeys came from there. And interestingly, they’ve sort of done DNA tests on some of these mats to sort of work out their lineages. And some of them do sort of link to areas of Morocco, other places of Africa. Um but there’ll be more on that later because you know it’s quite similar to the you know the ravens and the tower of London there’s a whole kind
of prophecy around that but officially if you kind of look on you know mainstream sources you know why are the mats there officially people think they came over with the moors as pets and then obviously they were escape pets which then sort of created their own sort of monkey civilization on top of the mountain uh on top of the hill and the limestone kind of monolith. Um, it’s quite funny from my point of view. They look a little bit overweight and fat. I think they’re pretty well fed cuz it’s such a big kind of tourist
destination. You go to the top of this rock and there are these really narrow roads which I wouldn’t drive up cuz they I don’t know they get very congested with various tourist cars and stuff. I just walked up the top. There’s some quite beautiful paths as you go up and but obviously if you’re a bit more infirm it is quite a sort of steep walk. Uh, so people obviously tend to maybe just do a car tour instead, but when you get there, like a lot of these guides are sort of feeding these monkeys.
Now, there’s quite an interesting relationship where, you know, they’ve trained some of the mats to kind of sit on people’s head and the guides will then give them food. And there’s a lot of warnings about not sort of feeding the mats bad food. So that there is, you know, I think a lot of these guide companies, they sort of leave things like apples and carrots around and stuff. Um, so they all the my cats all look pretty well fed. A little bit overweight if I’m being honest, but I don’t have a huge amount
of experience with monkeys and my cat. So I could be wrong. Um, but yeah, they’re a little bit buly. They’re not the sort of things you want to try and kind of stroke because, you know, they’re not they’re a little bit grumpy. And and then some of the baby ones as well, they’re quite erratic because they suddenly jump at you. Um, so kind of walking past them, you got these like really narrow stairs which go up and you have to kind of walk up and it’s very very tiring and sometimes you’ll get a
monkey that’s just randomly asleep on the stairway and you’re sort of trying to creep round it to not disturb it because they could you know they are known to get you know violent and sort of lash out on occasion but there is a whole prophecy around the mckettes and again similar to the ravens in the United Kingdom there’s this prophecy from the tower of London you know which overlooks the the river tempames that if the ravens were ever to leave the Tower of London then Britain would crumble and
then so the ravens held within the Tower of London to prevent that from happening they clip their wings so they can’t sort of fly away so they’re kind of stuck in the Tower of London but with the Macs there’s a similar uh sort of prophecy really obviously they’re not able to fly away but there have been times when the Mac numbers have been quite low and this has actually been taken quite seriously by various kind of British government not only just within the government within Jibralta but the wider government
as well. So this prophecy dictates that if the MATZ were ever to leave the rock of Jibralta then Britain would no long it would lose its ownership over Gibralar essentially and so that’s why they’ve always taken it very very seriously. Um when Britain first took over Jibralta in 1704 it is noted that officially they did document these macats were there and whether you know it came over the moors or came through these ancient tunnels I mean who knows I don’t know but what is certain that in during World War II they
became really really concerned that the Germans might take Jibralta because it was obviously very very strategic and it’s kind of documented that Hitler really wanted to take the the the speck of land as well and So the British became quite concerned that when the mac numbers were very very low they actually replenished them and this is a a personal directive from Winston Churchill in 1942. He personally made sure that my cats were replenish replenished and they were taken from places like Morocco and Algeria and the
prophecy uh they became fearful because apparently two of the main pack members died mysteriously. So there was rumors that maybe the Germans in some strange way were able to poison some of these pack members. But similar to the Virgin Mary story and the Spanish army, there’s a uh the British army has its own kind of um story to do with the mat being some kind of guardian. And there was a famous battle in 1780 when the Spanish forces were secretly undercover going to invade Gibraltar. And it was that the Macs on
the rock they started chattering when the Spanish Spanish forces started trying to invade. So it was the noise of the Macs chattering at the Spanish forces as they were encroaching on towards Jibralta that obviously signal to the British forces what was happening and ever since then uh it cemented their status as guardians for the British in a way and this has been quite a sacred thing and even members of the military who have uh you know tried to injure or even kill the Macs have actually been caught marshaled. So the
makats are seen as very very sacred to the British but also to the military forces that inhabit Jibralta itself. It’s a it’s seen as a guardian and they are protected weirdly by British forces. But again, this huge limestone monolith which sort of dominates the entire skyline and sometimes when I’ve been for a walk on the Spanish side in some of the national parks around here, even though it’s a good hour away, there’s been times I’ve been walking down this path, you know, going back to the car
and just I can see out to sea and like, you know, wow, it’s Jibralta in the on in the view there on the horizon and it is quite an imposing site, you know, not only physically imposing on the rest of the landscape, but it just has a very energetic aura around it as well. So there’s a lot of power physically and energetically and it is this kind of protruding monolith and the fact that it is hollow is another fascinating aspect to this. And in terms of the cats, I don’t think they sort of tend to inhabit any of the
cave systems. They tend to be just on the top itself. But again, there’s just lots of stories and layers of history and sort of legends surrounding some of these tunnels and and cave systems. And again, it’s just like how far and how deep do some of these things go? And there’s a lot of mystery kind of surrounding it. And it’s why, you know, again, Jabolt has been so strategic that many times there’s so many stories of the British basically embedding themselves in the rock face itself and
using it as a natural fortress in a way to kind of maintain their power over Gibralta. Um, now a lot of these many cave systems and tunnels are used as like tourist attractions. And um, you know, actually when I was on the island itself, I went in some of the cave systems there. I think it’s called the St. Michael’s cave and it’s beautiful and they’ve sort of lit it up with various colored lights and so the lights sort of change and things and it’s very dramatic music but it is a
really really stunning environment to go into but yeah getting some more mainstream archaeological information. Apparently the caves are around about 40,000 years old according to them. Whether that’s true or not I don’t know but in terms you know we talk about Neanderthalss and other kind of primitive societies. There’s like remnants of lynxes, hyenas, griffin vultures which have, you know, been eaten as food that have been the remains have been found in these cave systems. And again, I mentioned earlier like
things like large sea snails. I’m not sure if you get large sea snails, but obviously you don’t get links. You don’t get hyenas around the Spanish landscape in the mall. You get griffin vultures and that’s another fascinating sort of liinal animal. And I’m talking about the gates to Hades of Jibralta and up the road, you know, an hour and a half away where I live now, lost Kestcha, which is seen as like paradise is heaven. And then you have these griffin vultures that kind of fly in between these two
environments. And they are beautiful, beautiful birds. You know, vultures, they have a strange kind of, I guess, aura around them because they perceived as being animals that scavenge when people die and things and they look a bit weird because they got this like bald head, but actually when they’re flying, they look really, really majestic. And it’s this, again, it’s like a short video I released sort of recently where a lot of synchronicities do of griffins and griffin vultures are one of them. And
there’s bird that sort of fly between these two environments of the underworld and the spiritual world and the human world. And it just it’s very allegorical the way I’m sort of seeing this bird, you know, because it kind of flies between Jibraltton. It flies between Los Mecca. It’s just very representative of like what this, you know, the griffin is supposed to do, kind of move from the underworld to the human world to the spiritual world. It’s really fascinating. But the tunnels overall are
well known and officially described as haunted. So a lot of the times when you’re reading anything to do with the tunnels, it’s kind of one of the official official messaging that you read of fact that they are kind of haunted. It has this strange kind of mythos around it. And there’s been lots of instances where people have heard sort of digging in the distance or whistling or singing when there’s no one there. And again, I think due to this interesting powerful energies, there’s
been stories when people have been driving on these roads or walking along these roads, narrow roads that I talked about that they have seen sort of spectral activity in terms of ghosts or ghosts of soldiers who on this eternal kind of watch when they’re walking back and forth. This is kind of a repeating story. You get those in Chester as well. You hear about stories about monks kind of walking um sort of along the pavement or obviously Chester has this kind of Roman wall that kind of wraps around and you
see apparently people have seen the ghostly figures of Roman soldiers and this perpetual kind of watch kind of night watch. So I think again yeah these powerful energies you’re going to get things like this like ghost stories and you know there’s also a lot of information to do with orbs and UFO activity in that area you know not only Jibralta but also case that I found in 1980 that’s another ongoing narrative in my life to do of UFO events in 1980 which is when I was born but yeah overall straight of uh of
jibrolas just a lot of strange kind of phenomenon in sky, you know, whether it’s lights or UFOs and and then part of that again when you get to some of it activity, you have sort of the military and obviously again Jabology is highly militarized. As soon as you kind of walk over there’s a huge air strip, you know, take off what you call it runway uh which is used by civil aviation. So you can fly into Gibraltar on this this very small airport. Um but this kind of landing strip just splits off. It’s kind
of like a border really between uh you know Britain and Spain. And whenever you want to cross over, you can go over in a car, you have to go through a checkpoint or whether you walk. I just walked. You have to walk over this vast kind of runway. It’s really fascinating and sort of looking. But you’re not supposed to stop. It’s actually you can get into trouble. You get fined and prosecuted if you do stop. So, you’re supposed to keep walking. Um but yeah, it’s just got buses that going over. It’s got normal
pedestrians. And again, a lot of these Spanish cuz it’s such a distance that they have these electronic scooters. They’re going, you know, to and from the British and Spanish side. And I think they have had problems in the past, particularly with Brexit, but now you can pretty much walk through uh sort of uh what you call immigration customs without really them. They kind of vaguely look at glance at your passport, but not too much. But I remember when I flew with my girlfriend that first time,
we sort of flew into Jibralta. quite a hairy experience because you know it’s kind of a short even though when you’re on the run it feels really big but for obviously for a big jet it’s not a lot of space so when it takes off you kind of realize you’re like along this runway oh my god there’s the sea and it’s very very close so yeah it’s quite quite exhilarating so yeah as soon as you enter in Jalt you have that threshold of this runway and I noticed there was a huge kind of
residential barracks I guess for a lot of the naval or like engineers or like just general army people that work and live and work in Jibralta itself and it seemed like majority of the military activity was kind of overlooking the Spanish side which kind of makes sense. Um, so yeah, there’s a huge kind of naval shipping yard there and you can sort of see the remnants of big sort of military ships kind of, you know, in dock essentially. So it’s a huge presence is the kind of the military and
obviously that kind of ties into important with shipping lanes and kind of commerce and this ancient pillars of Hercules ancient kind of narrative this kind of threshold between the Mediterranean Sea and the Antlantic Ocean. But the military at points, you know, during, you know, when Spain and UK were just constantly trying to like Britain maintain its foothold in Jibralt and Spain were constantly trying to take it back. You know, the British forces will always embed themselves within the rock itself. And there’s another story
I’m going to be talking about shortly during World War II, a thing called Operation Tracer, which interestingly involves like Ian Fleming and the whole James Bond thing. There’s a lot of interesting ties. It’s a fascinating kind of operation, but it sort of ties World War II into the occult into Ian Fleming and all sorts and spycraft. Yeah, it’s it’s fascinating story. But yeah, overall that rock is incredibly strategic and apparently uh the military still has various tunnels which are used
and sealed off. So again, there’s a huge amount of mystery surrounding like how deep these goes. Why do the military still have these tunnels? Are they just keeping them because they’re strategic or is there something more going on? Again, lots of strange questions with this. And you know, this is a a common theme across all of these military facilities where, you know, they can look quite rudimentary from the street level, from you know, the land when you’re stood there, but actually how far
deep do they go? And that’s questions I’ve had with the Chester military barracks when I did some research. And then also um it’s the same with obviously the American ones are always a big thing for that and in Rotor there’s a huge military naval military base in the sort of more northern tip of southern Spain and there’s lots of questions about they know that there’s a military facilities underground but again it’s just really really unclear how vast and how big these military
facilities are and what are they used for. But going back to the pillars of Hercules and that whole story again, you know, Jibralta perceived as being this physical one of the pillars and the second one being on the Moroccan side and um yeah, it’s going back to kind of the old gods of the Greeks and they perceived that the Atlantic Ocean was not for mortal men. This is the area for the gods. You know, this is quite interesting because you know how that maybe ties into Atlantis being perceived
as being this very advanced civilization, maybe spiritually, maybe technological, and maybe they did something to blow up their own civilization or there was some kind of reset because they were getting too it was getting too dark. I don’t know. It feels like we’re kind of recreating that pattern in a way. We’re making quite a dark civilization for ourselves through technology. Um but yeah, you know, maybe that is why the ancients perceived this place as being, you know, place of the
gods because maybe these people had, you know, technology or understanding of the world that they’d never un never seen before. And because of that, they just perceived them as being godlike. But also that that narrative kind of fits with the different states because you get the Mediterranean Sea, which is generally quite placid. It’s not that tidal. Obviously ties have an element, but they’re not that tidal. Uh and obviously the weather tends to be good. So you don’t get it’s very rare that you
get big big storms. Obviously the Atlantic Ocean is very very different. You huge swell, massive waves, huge storms. You know, it’s a very very dangerous crossing for all type. Even modern ships now, it’s it’s dangerous. It’s not a safe place to be. So again, when you’re talking about the different environments of the Mediterranean Sea, as a mariner, as a seafarer, when you’re in the Mediterranean Sea, you probably feel a lot safer than when you’re in the Atlantic Ocean. So that’s another reason
why they could perceive this era being of the gods because it’s just so chaotic and so beyond comprehension to kind of normal man’s minds about how you would sort of traverse the sea state that just so chaotic and forever changing. So you have this legend that Hercules split Africa from Europe with his bare hands and so he made the more sheltered Mediterranean Sea and again it’s less tidal. It’s hotter compared to the vast exposed you know violent erratic ocean of the Atlantic Ocean. So again this
narrative is another convergence another threshold and even Hercules himself you know you could see him as a threshold. He was the son the god of Zeus a god and the who had a relationship with a mortal princess Akamini I think it is princess Akamini I could be butchering that name so yeah it kind of you know Hercules are the result of the gods basically breeding with a normal mortal princess so again it’s like another threshold you could look at this story or narrative in different ways I guess it could be
purely just a legend just a story just a narrative just to explain energy h or Maybe there could be kernels of truth in this, you know, linking back to Atlantis or some form of ancient advanced civilization to other people around the world. If they were from Atlantis, due to their spiritual power or technological power, they could be perceived as being a god and maybe they just hooked up with a princess or a lesser civilization. Uh, so that could be a factor. Or maybe there’s a non-human element to this. maybe this
god Zeus was if you’re believing the kind of extraterrestrial kind of narrative from a different planet maybe that ties into it or you know could be closer to to earth could be an inner earth being who knows um so yeah it’s just interesting how some of these old gods these old legends are there kernels of truth in that is there a kind of a more real story behind it than we realize but yeah fascinating how this this Hercules is a threshold a boundary in his own right a portal is kind of the
link to the human to the god and obviously he’s created this land mass he’s created the the divide between Africa and Europe and it’s a you know a portal from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean so yeah it’s kind of if you distill it down even simpler it could be chaos and order or the known and the unknown the unknown being the Atlantic Ocean and then known being the Mediterranean Sea so again this is all these fascinating narratives you know weaving in between each other but
similar to the goddesses where it feels Like sometimes you can have a particular goddess which is known under a different name, you know, determined by the actual civilization that’s revering it. It could be the same for Hercules. So at some point the ancient Greeks had Hercules and maybe this figure stretches right back into other traditions, you know, such as Phoenicians. And apparently there’s a lot of similarities of the Phoenician god called Melquat. I could be pronouncing that incorrectly,
but I think that’s how you say it. Uh, but yeah, I was just watching actually a video where there was some link to Mollik. So again, maybe that’s another sort of linkages and obviously with the modern world now and people understanding potentially the occult and maybe the elites and Mollik is perceived as this god of human child sacrifice. Um so yeah, don’t I’m not sure whether there’s connections to that or not. Um but yeah, definitely it wouldn’t surprise me if Hercules was known under a different
name. So the Phoenicians had Malquat as a god and he was like the king of the city. And and if you go further north in Spain in Kadis or Kadif as the Spanish say again it’s a really really ancient place and some actually think that the pillars of Hercules relate to this particular area in Kadis and not at Jibralta and they perceive like the king of the city Malquat Kadis. Uh there’s a temple of Malquat just uh near Kadis or outside of Kadis. I’m not quite sure, but there were actual real physical
pillars within this temple. And that’s what the name the pillars of Hercules actually relate to. I don’t know if that’s true or not, but that’s just another aspect of research I found that it’s not actually the physical landscape, but it’s actually within this temple near Kadith. But overall, Melquat quite similar to Hercules was perceived as a death and resurrection god. uh which you know again if we bring into more modern traditions like Christianity you could perceive as a Christlike
figure cuz that’s a huge proponent of uh the Christ journey is about the death and the resurrection and also God’s use and this mortal woman is very very similar if you think about the idea the monotheistic god of Christianity and the Virgin Mary through immaculate conception. So again, there’s a lot of strange similarities between some of these characters, whether it’s Hercules or Melquark being death, the resurrection, and also the pregnancy of a child, a male child through immaculate
conception. So through not through normal intercourse with a human, but actually through this god-like figure. But obviously in terms of Christianity, the idea of like a Jesus-like character, you sort of bringing a morality structure to so society in a certain way is a more of a positive story. But obviously some of these characters like Melquat and B and Mollik again you know there are questions on on Jibralta about whether there are signs of child sacrifice under his name in some way whether it be in Jibralta or in Kadith
in Spain um you know some of these unfortunate rituals involving the death of people humans and even worse children for a particular god for energetic offerings. So obviously profoundly some of these if that is true that’s obviously pretty horrific if those things were carried out. Um but yeah so but again it’s JBL it just seemed to be this boundary where gods meet the mortals particularly within the stories of Hercules. It’s just another thread another boundary another portal between
these two worlds. So a lot of these are mythical stories. So it’s really really hard to from a mainstream point of view verify that. I think actually we’re moving into an era of like intuition where like some of these answers going to come to us. It’s going to have resonance in our body and it’s going to have truth. We can just feel that truth. Um so I think that is a new phase of humanity that’s going to come and it’s kind of happening now and it’s unfolding now. But from a mainstream perspective,
obviously there isn’t any real evidence to support apart from, you know, a lot of uh teachings from Plato where he talks about the pillars of Hercules and the link to Atlantis. But, you know, there is, if you’re looking from a mainstream academic research point of view, there is documented through, you know, some of their testings of huge floods around, you know, 5 33 million years ago and also 11,000 years ago. It’s documented that there were huge floods in this region. So again, do some
of these floods linked to loss of ancient civilizations along the Atlantic Ocean or close to Gibralta or close to, you know, the southwest tip of Spain. I don’t know. But there is definitely within the geography of the land, some of these academic researchers do claim that there are documented huge floods that happened around these periods of time. And obviously the Atlantic Ocean is a vast vast place. It’s obviously, you know, two big oceans in our world if they’re true, if the globe model is
true. Uh yeah, so Atlantic Ocean is one. Obviously, the Pacific Ocean is another one. But from Plato, from his what he spoke about uh was the fact that the lost civilization of Atlantis was larger than Libya and Asia combined. So uh yeah, from that point of view, if you look at a map, it does seem a vast area. In fact, did exist and it wasn’t the Atlantic Ocean. Obviously, it would cover quite a huge uh area of the Atlantic Ocean. So, all of that is incredibly fascinating. And you know, there are groups that maybe still do do
hold some understanding about some of these myths and legends, whether some of the information is true or not. And they would be the Freemasons. Obviously, we’re delving now into secret societies, and there’s probably so many different secret societies around the world of different uh names and different origin stories, but the Freemasons is probably the most visible one cuz they tend to have actual physical locations. You know, you can go to the the Grand Lodge in London, central London, which I’ve
been to once before, and obviously most major towns and cities have some kind of free masonic element to it. And you know a lot of my research when I was in Chester checking out this air fen line there’s obviously a freemasonic aspect to this in terms of the juke of Westminster was a known Freemason and then you find out that actually Freemason you know maybe 10020 years ago is a lot more widespread than it is now. So even if you’re in the military, apparently if you’re a military officer, you would have been a
Freemason, you know, a lot of these kind of oldw world characters like Roar Kipling or just so many like writers or journalists or major politicians or royalty were all involved in Freemasonry. Uh now whether whether more hidden for in in Freemason, they don’t admit that they’re Freemasons. I don’t know. Maybe it is more prevalent, but it was just part of society back then. And so yeah, Jibralta being Jibralta and having a very dominant military presence was a real stronghold of Freemasonry.
In Spain, they had very much of a different approach to Freemasons and the fact they were persecuted. And in fact they were so persecuted that rather than having you know buildings like lodges actually within the normal urban environment they did a lot of their sort of rituals and meetups in underground tunnels hidden away from prying eyes just so they didn’t know that people knew that they were primasones because it was dangerous to their life you know literally to their life. Uh, and this
plays out in Kadis. Again, really, really ancient town, stretches back to the Phoenetians. If you go there, it’s just really, really old. You can just sort of see the layers of different architecture. It’s really, really tightly packed of buildings and architecture, old mosques and old churches. Fascinating place, but it has a really large network of underground tunnels, and some of them is still being uncovered now. But there’s a quite a famous Masonic tunnel underneath Kadis which has various uh Masonic symbolisms
on the wall and it’s well known it was used for meeting and and having rituals hidden away from people because they were so persecuted within Spain itself. So interestingly again a counterpoint to how Spain were treating the Freemasons, Jibralta became a real haven for the Freemasons. And actually Jibralta was the the place for one of the oldest English lodges in the world. And in fact it was seen as a primary lodge not just for the United Kingdom uh but for the whole of Western Europe because
obviously if Spain is is um is persecuting here obviously Jibralta is the nearest point a safe haven for uh Freemasons across Western Europe. So yeah Jibralta and Freemasons been incredibly important. So again, yeah, there’s a strategic aspect to this that it’s the bordering town to Morocco and Africa, Mediterranean Sea and Europe, but that is that is true as well. But again is the secret societies, Freemasonry have this huge presence on Jibralta again because it has an energetic or a cult importance to them
being able to maintain their power structures in some way across the globe. Is Jibralta helping them within that? This leads us on quite nicely to another character um never explicitly linked to Freemasonry, but there’s a lot of potential evidence it does. Uh this is Ian Fleming, well known obviously as the writer and creator of James Bond and the books which became a cultural phenomenon particularly with the films. Obviously was always a background in my childhood. My favorite Bond was always Roger Moore
more than uh uh I can’t name forgotten his name. That’s how less important. Sean Connory of course Shan Connory the great Shan Connory. Uh but yeah Ian Fleming is the writer of the famous James Bond books and he has a really really interesting link to Gibralar and its story particularly during World War II. Bearing in mind that Ian Fleming wrote the James Bond books from his experiences in real life, which is quite crazy to say because obviously you watch some of the the earlier James Bond, in
fact, all of the James Bond films. It feels quite fantastical to say that because a lot of them involve narratives with very very wealthy individuals usually with a scar in their face and a cat sat in some kind of layer which kind of ties in quite nicely with Jibralta and the rock of Jibralta and all the tunnels and things. Um but yeah, I mean particularly now when you seem to have all these big oligarchs like billionaires around the world with huge amounts of wealth and power, you know, power over government and they seem to
be although not explicitly saying it, it just feel like they have little regard for any of us. And obviously they’re just trying to accue more and more power, more and more wealth, and it seems like they have some very strange kind of religious or spiritual views kind of underpinning what they’re doing. Although now I don’t know whether that’s ever been different but it just feels like you know the British establishment whether that’s MI5 MI6 which kind of links to banking have never really I
mean the whole James Bond narrative you know the British government always trying to stop these mad people from doing their dacly plans but it actually feels like governments and some of these security services are kind of part of that narrative and in some unfortunate way but anyway yeah in terms of Ian Fleming and World War II this kind of stretches back to 1941 so obviously painting a picture everyone knows Britain is at war with Germany and and then you have an individual called Rear Admiral John Henry Godfrey he’s the
director of naval intellig in intelligence and he devised an interesting plan just because Jibralta was such a strategic place and they were so concerned that that Germany was going to invade Jibralta or the fact that Spain was going to be heavily influenced by Germany which actually you know from my research when I went to player deos almanes a beautiful beach uh you know southwest tip of Spain again has a lot of German influence a lot of German Nazi influence a lot of Nazi money went into that area so you had a lot of fleeing
Nazis actually building houses and resorts there and so yeah without a doubt there was a heavy German influence in Spain during World War II that kind of lasted into in to you know into the 70s and 80s really which is really fascinating anyway so they were British at the time were really worried that Spain was going to you know become heavily influence or either taken over by the Nazis. So to stop this or to mitigate against this from happening or if it did happen, they came up with this plan and it involved
having six volunteers and I literally cannot understand how anyone would want to volunteer for this because it’s a pretty horrific uh thing to do. Uh but these six volunteers would be sealed in the tunnel in one of the tunnels in the rock of Jibralta and their basically their remit would be to look through these two small slits in the rock face which overlook the straight of Jibralta and from these two slits uh when they’re hidden in this rock they could then be able to view you know ship movements and
radio back basically intelligence about what the Germans are doing. So you had these six volunteers. They were essentially in ttombed indefinitely in this rock face in this tunnel specifically to gather intelligence and then send it to the British government. Now I cannot imagine like me now like ever volunteering for such a thing. I have little reverence for my own government and the idea of power structures. And yeah, I just can’t get my head around how people would sacrifice themselves. And it just goes
to show how kind of blinkered and blinded people were by their own governments and their own power structures back then that they would do something like this. I mean I can understand it because the narratives were so pervasive and and you know the general narratives that the Germans were bad and they were wanting to invade Britain and take over which did you know was the kind of the case to to a degree but actually you know how much of this was orchestrated energetically by secret elites wanting to a you know reduce the
population and b make a lot of money and basically just kind of break up Europe and just change and control it in some strange way through warfare. So obviously we have that kind of hindsight now that there’s all kind of money behind this and it you know the way that World War II in fact any war carries out. It’s not you know the usual narrative we’re told it’s always something completely different. So yeah maybe if I was back in that era I would have been overtaken by the narrative of
World War II and would have thought you know the Germans were ultimately really really evil and you know it was a fight against good and evil. But at the time as this operation was being built and designed and carried out ready to be implemented at any point uh you know everyone knew there was a possibility none of them would be rescued. So it could be a complete you know death mission in a really horrific way. Um and yeah throughout the entire process of them building constructing this project
they had builders working on this thing and they were taken there at nighttime to work. So it was on the cover of night and even the people working on this project it was the utmost secrecy. They had no idea where they were at all. I think they had a general idea maybe they’re in Jibralta but they didn’t know exactly where. And after the project was finished these builders and everyone that involved in this particular project they were all shipped back to the UK and they were forbidden from leaving Britain
until you know the end of the war essentially. So these builders constructed hollowed out a larger room within the rock face itself with these two slits which could be used to gather intelligence from German ship movements and other information and the rock you know the volunteers would essentially been intombed in this rock and they were given six years of food and water. Now, if any of them actually had died during this process during the years that they were there, they would have to be imbalmed and essentially cemented into
the wall or to the floor, uh, obviously to prevent contamination. So, how was Ian Fleming involved in this particular story? Well, it turns out that Rear Admiral John Henry Godfrey, who was the, you know, the director who oversaw this whole operation. Whether it was his original idea, I don’t know, but he definitely was the main commanding officer who orchestrated the whole thing, but he was assisted by a lieutenant commander, Ian Fleming, who was actually the personal assistant of this Admiral Godfrey. And he actually
helped design some of the aspects of this operation as well, including what is called the leather chain bicycle, which was used to power one of the radios, which would they then be able to communicate with the wider British military. The idea of a leather chain bicycle to power a radio, a CB radio is quite ingenious obviously because sound in insulation is the utmost importance because you don’t want to give your position away to the Germans. So I think they thought about sound insulation quite heavily. So hence why they use a
leather chain bike so to prevent noise and but the overall operation again was called operation tracer and it was a hidden room uh hollowed out within the rock face itself and it was only 44 ft in length and 16 ft wide and 8 ft high. So yeah pretty intense to those six people that are kind of in this space and imagine that being there for 6 years. It would be quite horrific. I mean they had you know food and water for six years. Um but another sound insulation uh mechanism they had they had a cork floor again to prevent any
sort of uh sound escaping out of this uh intunement. But overall I think it was divided into separate areas. There was like a radio room for communication a medical station. So if any of them became gravely ill or died, they’ll be an area where they could be tended to and obviously again a general living area where they could then view through these two slits through the rock face to be able to see these ship movements out of the straight of Jibralta itself. But Ian Fleming’s naval intelligence operations
didn’t just end with Operation Tracer. Fascinatingly, he was involved in a thing called Operation Golden Eye, which I’ve never read the James Bond books, but obviously there’s the Piers Broden film Golden Eye, which became a quite a cultural phenomenon. Weirdly, the commute computer game Golden Eye was like this massive success. I would say is even bigger than the film. Uh I think it was N64. My brother had this console and Golden Eye was an amazing game at the time and I think it’s quite a
cultural phenomenon for a lot of people my age. Um, but yeah, so Ian Fleming was involved in Operation Golden Eye, which I never knew is a real operation. And essentially what this operation involved was setting up a spy network from Morocco. So again, if Germany ever took Spain or Jibralta, this would then be initiated. I mean, if you look at some of the original James Bond the books and the films, there’s a real aesthetic with it and it’s quite it lends quite well to the idea of Morocco and Tangers and you
have like, you know, people from all over the world and this very exotic location of Morocco. It has that old colonial aesthetic uh that you see some some of these films of the original James Bond films where it’s like it’s weird how Morocco in real life apparently became a haven for spies and it’s very much the backdrop of luxury idea of luxury casinos, people wearing fez hats and dinner jackets and stunningly beautiful women adorned with jewels and gold. You know, it’s funny cuz most people like perceive James Bond
as being fantasy, but you know, again, Ian Fleming took real inspiration from his real life experiences in this kind of spy world. And it’s fascinating how Morocco plays a huge part in the spy world back then. I don’t know if it still does now, but it was really perceived as being this real spy playground, a place where they could relax. So a lot of the spy world, spycraft or people involved, they would go to Morocco and it was seen as a place to relax where they wouldn’t be in danger. It’s kind of very I made the
analogy in my own head like you know you see the film The Highlander when the Highlanders can’t be harmed on sacred ground. So if they’re in a church or cathedral, they can’t fight. And so it’s kind of like the same thing in Morocco. If you’re there, you’re basically, you know, in a holiday. So you’re not going to get touched by other spies or try to be poisoned or killed in some horrific way. So it’s just funny how Tangers or Morocco were just perceived as some kind
of holiday holiday resort for the spycraft world. And again, you know, coming back to Ian Fleming and this idea of Freemasoner and there’s no sort of definitive links that apparently can be found documenting that he was a Freemason, but his father definitely was. And again going back to my idea that you know if you were high up in the military as an officer it’s it’s pretty much certain that you were a freemates and most kind of wealthy people were but there are a lot of researchers that
claim his books are filled with occult symbology references masonic codes. This is according to some researchers information. Um whether that was conscious or unconscious because sometimes you know whether writers who become quite successful are inadvertently channeling ideas into their work and they don’t know. I think that happens quite a lot just in writings but in films. So if you’re writing film scripts but also kind of musicians as well. There’s a strange you know where are these ideas really coming
from. But there’s a lot of information out there where you know Ian Fleming had a lot of dealings with Alistister Crowley. Obviously Alistister Crowley is like kind of this big verbose figure of the cult knowledge from history and it just fills so many like roads kind of lead to him and what he was up to and doesn’t seem like a very nice man in terms of some of the activities he was involved in but he seems to be revered by various very very successful musicians and particular elites whether
it’s political power or monarchies seem to have a reverence for Crowley himself and so yeah Ian Fleming does have links to Crowley but obviously Obviously, if you look at some of these evil characters with the James Blonde, whether it’s like Blofeld or you pick any of the kind of evil characters, these evil kind of men who are trying to take over the world, they do have a lot of visual kind of references to Alistister Crowley. You sort of see some of the photos of Alistister Crowley. He’s like quite a butch man with a bald
head and Blofeld has a very very similar aesthetic to him. And so there’s a lot of evidence to suggest that, you know, Crowley was an inspiration for some of these characters. And this kind of links into the whole idea of like MI, you know, 6 and MI5 and these other security uh agencies around the world, whether it’s the CIA or Mossad and how much is actually, you know, linked to really banking and a cult power. And there’s a lot of information the idea of John D who was the astrology for Elizabeth I
and stuff and he was perceived as being the first 007. He was seen as like the eyes of the queen. So he was seen as like the godfather’s kind of spy craft and a lot of his work involved in you know occult rituals and scrying mirrors trying to channel information and talking to entities and again there’s some evidence to suggest that maybe you know Britain being a very very small island how were they able to take over most of the world and some potentially say that you know maybe this comes from
a cult power which you know maybe stems from John D being the very first 007 007 obviously is James Bond so there’s that kind link as well. So the occult world does seem very very highly linked to James Bond, Spycraft and specifically Ian Fleming himself. So again, you know, talking about, you know, civilization of Britain being very masculine, Jabolta being very masculine. These were very masculine things. Operation Tracer, Ian Fleming, Godfrey, James Bond, again very very alchemical, masculine archetypes.
And what’s fascinating within the James Bond stories, James Bond always kind of links up with a feminine presence, you know, one that sticks in my head is kind of octopusy, you know, Roger Moore and there’s various kind of feminine fem fatals, dark feminine, you end up being quite helpful even though they appear to be sort of maybe on the bad side, trying to do bad things, but actually kind of, you know, the very last moment sort of helping James Bond in a world. And it’s in a way it’s like a strange alchemical
mixing of masculine and feminine energies. weaving in some of my own personal stories. I’ve seen some of this strange alchemical journey and you know I’ve been looking deeply at some of the names of these women that I’ve been involved in and some of the experiences I’ve had that I’ve spoken about on this podcast. But there just seem to be something very very interesting kind of going on. um you know whether you describe this as like twin flame or like through the work of Eve Log Lan she
talks about the thing called the alien love bite and but I’ve been sort of researching some of the names and one of the girls is called like Olivia and actually within Spain the word Olivia really again relates back to the Virgin Mary I’ve seen a lot of houses they called the Virgin of Olivia which roughly translates as Virgin of the olive and the olive is very very important obviously across the Mediterranean like cultures But you know the olive is very representative interestingly as the Virgin Mary as
well. And obviously you get like virgin olive oil. So olives you know olive trees are all around this area. In fact the whole of Spain and many of the Mediterranean countries you know olives are really really important because they give you food uh but also they give you oil for cooking but also that oil can be used for light. So they kind of create light as well. So it’s like a lightbearing substance. So an incredibly useful food tree and just very very symbolic of feminine energy. But again,
if you’re stretching this story, this you know archetype to the Virgin Mother, the Virgin Mary, and is it known under different names? Again, so we’re talking again relating back to Chester, my own hometown with like Manurva statue that’s there. D, the river D being a D goddess, D.A. He fen was particularly again the Celtic name for a goddess. Oh, the these the names essentially the same energy this feminine energy and bringing it forward to now when you have a lot of information to do with extraterrestrials
and I always find that Chris Bledsoe story quite interesting. and I spoke, you know, released a few videos on him and he talks about having encounters with something called the white lady who claims that, you know, she’s also linked to Hatheror or Athena and this individual, a Christian contactee, so he has a real belief in God and all of these kind of experiences he have, he kind of relates it back to his Christianity. Um but yeah, it’s just I mean he had a big um he prophesized that something really big would happen in
April, which it hasn’t happened. You know, it was like a new knowledge was going to come into the human sphere and it was going to involve Egypt and the Sphinx and there was going to be something under the poor uh which hasn’t happened. Maybe something energetic kind of shifted. There definitely has been a huge amount of shifts this year. So maybe it is linking to that. And there’s this thing called the star of regular was going to align with the sphinx but nothing seems to have happened. I
haven’t really noticed anything apart from the energy kind of shifted. But again there’s just so many stories of people having feminine presences and within Portugal there’s this Fatima thing where apparently this apparation Fatima appeared to these shepherd children and stuff and gave all these prophecies and ancient knowledge and weirdly kind of the Vatican seem to squester all of this knowledge and they’re releasing it at different times. So, it’s kind of going through the
filter of the Vatican. So, how much of that information is true or not, I don’t know. But there does seem to be a recurring theme of this like feminine presence like appearing to people. Whether it’s like, you know, look in biblical terms, you have like Archangel Gabriel appearing to people or the white lady in uh Chris Bledsoe or Fatima to these children in Portugal. And I’m sure there are many others across the world. Whether these are genuine entities, genuine energies, I don’t know, like
guides, guardians in some way, you know, uh potentially guiding humanity in a certain direction or releasing information to help people on their spiritual journey or whether it’s just an out andout trickster force. I don’t know. But again, using my own model of my own consciousness, my own body, these things are going to be linked to you. Whether that’s a good aspect to your energy or maybe a shadow aspect to your your energy and bringing it again back to Jibralta and the idea of pillars of
Hercules. Obviously that’s a very masculine archetype Hercules and Melqua and Jesus Christ where these characters all kind of the same entity or energy and the pillars of Hercules kind of represent that. But actually some people see these as functioning the pillars of Hercules as functioning Mary and shrine. So, Virgin Mary, Mary and shrine where you have our lady of Europe on one pillar and our lady of Africa on the other pillar. So, again, a complete flip. So, it not being masculine being
more of a feminine presence. So, yeah, and just another bit of information to add into the mix. But talking about apparations across the southwest of Spain, again, there are many, many olive trees everywhere. And there are many stories of apparations linking to Mary and the connection to olive trees, which is fascinating. And going back to the Phoenicians, it’s actually claimed that the Phoenetians introduced olives and olive trees to these environments in the Mediterranean. Olive trees are so important to so many
cultures across the Mediterranean, whether that be Italy, Spain, Greece. I mean, Croatia, there’s so many where olives and olive oil is the foundation to like their cuisine. And it’s just fascinating. Never thought you could also use the oil to burn light. So it has a very allegorical kind of you know creating light in the darkness as well but there’s a very intrinsic link to you know these olive trees specific sacred olive trees and also apparations of the Virgin Mary and you know just kind of
theorizing is there a link to this and semin feminine sacred waters as well because a lot of these very dusty kind of desert-like environments like in now they have a lot of powerful spiritual water underneath and when that’s kind of combined with some of these olive trees is that kind part of the mechanism that helps some of these apparations and it’s well known sacred waters, spring waters, holy wells across the world, people have reported miraculous healings, you know, powerful spiritual
experiences. And the same thing has been reported with olive trees. Certain sacred olive trees that are linked to the mother Mary. People have reported, you know, drinking the oil of these particular trees or eating olives have had the same effect, the same miraculous healing. And I was very much influenced by Maria Wheatley uh you know the sort of master dowser. I’ve sort of seen her talk multiple times and she kind of taught me dowsing but she along with other dowsers sort of speak about feminine and masculine water and
masculine water being the you know the yang water coming from the sky rain water and actually the yin water which is underground spring water which has a lot more oxygen in it and obviously has a lot of stories linked to apparations and and spectacular healings. uh you know underground spring water being feminine and just being incredibly incredibly healing. So maybe that interaction with feminine waters and the olive trees just creates like a really powerful energy. You know, bringing it again back to the general theme of this
this podcast about the idea of convergence, you know, thresholds, portals, the olive tree just spans again all of these various cuisines, whether it’s Spanish, Greek or Italian and others, you know, it’s a portal for that. Um, but also spiritually, I mean, the olive tree is revered in so many different spiritual traditions, whether it’s Celtic, the Romans, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, they all have irreverence for the olive tree. And actually really really weirdly when I was researching some of this information
about kind of olive trees and its links to the Virgin Mary, Mother Mary and some of these other goddesses uh like in the background there’s a a rather weird niche musician, US musician called Oliver Tree and he died recently under really mysterious circumstances. there was a helicopter mechanical problem and he sort of jumped from a helicopter or something. But it’s really really strange because apparently I mean apart from his name Oliver Tree Olive Tree and he just died when I was kind of
doing this research which is bizarre. Uh but you know a lot of his music videos involve him dying. Some of them falling from a helicopter crash apparently. Um, and then I’ve seen loads of videos online when he was having problems with his his label, Atlantic Records, which is strange when you talk about the Atlantic Ocean. Um, and he was kind of calling them out saying that they weren’t treating right anymore. They wanted to leave and they were basically just mothballing his album that he spent
sort of months doing. He traveled around the world recording his album. They weren’t going to release it, so he’s looking to change record labels. But actually there’s lots of videos of him uh talking about various conspiracies about some of the connections with elites that he has and you know basically talk about some of the information he’s kind of found out and he did a lot of trips to Antarctica and he was trying to look for alien bases and hidden tunnels and things. So he was
quite a free thinker and so I can’t help but think he was maybe sort of taken out because you know cuz I think you know the music industry is a bit of a mafioza kind of industry and if you’re no longer useful or either dangerous they will basically kill you but it’s just so so weird that I was doing this research do olive trees and the Virgin Mary then he sort of died and his kind of name popped up and I was like oh yeah Oliver tree how bizarre. So yes, that’s a bit of weirdness to end on. So in summary,
tying a bow on this in conclusion conclusion. Um I can’t think of anywhere else in the world that I’ve come across. Yeah, maybe I haven’t thought so deeply about some of the places I’ve been to, but just with Jibralta, it’s just fascinating. It’s just interesting how I never ever thought I’d ever go back there ever again because the first time I went there, I was like, nah, this place is just not interesting in any way, shape, or form. and just I’ve been proven so
wrong like going back and actually having a really nice time really enjoying sort of bumbling around you know exploring and researching and again just the weather when I was there was just absolutely spectacular I just remember the light even looking at some of the footage it’s just so cristine crystalline and just so beautiful the light that’s coming out from the sky that day it was just amazing but I just can’t think of anywhere in the world with so many layers of narrative and story it’s just really really bizarre
and I don’t think a lot of researchers or people really kind of think about Jibralta. Obviously, it’s an anomaly because you have like mainland Spain. It must been a constant irritation to the Spanish. To have Britain just, you know, holding on to this tiny speck of land that overlooks the straight of Jibralta. It must infuriate them. But I just think a lot of this is all energetic. It feels like, you know, some of these shadow systems are kind of feeding it off this energy in some way. And when you have an
enormous amount of light, you have the shadow there. And this is when you have this like huge convergence of so many things like you know the the earth energies and the culture and the countries this all kind of opposing forces and it just creates this interesting sort of dynamic but I just kind of blown away when I was sort of reading about you know Jibralta being the gates to the Hades to the underworld or hell and again just an hour and a half up the coast in Los Canister Mecca where I live now which is perceived as
paradise or heaven you know the moorish kind traditions just bizarre. And again, I was talking about the these Griffin birds that are kind of flying between. I just thought, “Oh my god, you know, all of these things are having real meaning for me.” I think there’s probably a lot of people wouldn’t give it a second thought, but I’m just like just really seeing the symbols. I’m just really seeing all the synchronicities all the time like that. And every time I dig deeper, I just there’s more and more and
more. It’s just wild. But it’s like, you know, again, that grand convergence of the known world and the unknown. And then there’s all the sort of unknown myths and legends which a lot of people know about and you know you know how far back do these stories go? How far back are they known under different names? Uh and then how much how many kennels of truth are in some of these stories particularly like the pillars of Hercules and the idea of like you know the gods marrying up with mortal women.
I mean is there something to that? Um, but again, you have some of these real world physical events potentially and myths, but then you have the current, you know, paranormal events around that wrapped around that, whether that’s spectral ghosts appearing on the hill or or UFOs or your orbs in the sky. Uh, so yeah, again, it’s just a place of convergence of so many different things, but again, it all for me, it all kind of comes back to that polarity of male and female, and it just seems to be in
everything. Everywhere I look, it’s kind of there. That narrative is there. Even, you know, looking at some of these conflicts again, you know, talking about the battle of Trafalga. So, there you go. That’s Jibralta. I recommend it. I I think I wouldn’t want to give the impression like it’s really really ancient looking like maybe I mean up the road on the Spanish side if you go to Refa which is quite a big uh location for water sports like kite surfing and wind surfing because of the constant
wind there and there’s a really beautiful like medieval kind of old town which is stunning which is a great sort of tourist place to go and Jibralta is not really like that and the Spanish side is not like that at all there is some grimy elements of the Spanish side without a doubt and I think maybe that the first time I went maybe I couldn’t really look past that. Um, but overall like the energy and just the sort of natural environment of the straight of Jibralta, it’s just stunning. And
obviously the weather tends to be always good and hot and sunny. So that’s always a plus point. But yeah, again looking at this whole area with new awakened more spiritual eyes, there’s just so much going on, such a small space. But thanks for joining me. Sorry there might have been a few noises with birds in the background. And where I’m living at the moment, they’ve got chickens and rolls and stuff, so that might have bled into the audio. But yeah, that gives it texture and character. Um, but yeah, just to remind
you, uh, you can catch me on YouTube or Rumble or Bitshoot. I have a Substack as well or the reconsiderment.com. And I’ve literally just made a Etsy store as well. Uh, so I’m going to start creating some t-shirt designs with some of my illustrations. Um, so yeah, I’m just gradually kind of building some of the products on there. So, please do check that out. I think it’s etsy.com/shop/reconsittersimon or you can go to my website and there’s a a banner up there you can kind of click.
It’s a great way to support me as well. Anyway, I hope you’re well wherever you are in the world and I will see you in the next one. Take care. Bye.


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