#11 – Journal 04 – Rendlesham forest, Avebury, Glastonbury, Englishness, & Megalithomania
After a recent trip to various energetic and strangely weird places in the United Kingdom, I was reminded of the power of certain locations and the theories, conspiracies and folklore around doorways to different realities.
In this new Reconsider Simon podcast I look into portals as defined in the mainstream. I delve deep into information derived from whistleblowers who have come forward with very exotic and far out stories of hidden technologies and scientific / esoteric understandings.
Let me take you down the rabbit hole once again. It will be weird and wonderful as always. Enjoy, enjoy!
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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.
Hello podcast collective consciousness. I hope all is well in your world. This is the reconsider Simon podcast. In this audio space I’ll explore consciousness, ufology, high strangeness, the esoteric, spirituality, even the very essence of reality itself.
Podcast number 11, Journal Fall, Reynoldsham Forest, Sotten Who, Orford Ness, Glastonbury, Avebury and Megalithomania. Hey there welcome, reconsider Simon podcast. Slightly delayed with this release.
Yep, been travelling quite a lot, scouring the landscape, video editing and then I got struck down by one of the most horrific sore throats I think I’ve ever had and I was trying to record this at the weekend and I just thought, you know what, I can’t.
My biology is just not allowing this so I just had to stop. Anyway, but I am, enough of my excuses, I am today deep diving into what’s been going on. This is more of a journal style podcast that I try to do every other podcast.
I’ll just do a general talk around what’s going on in my life but then also things that inspired me, things that I’ve been pondering on, things that I’ve watched, things that I’ve read. Yeah, so it’s this general kind of mixed bag.
But in terms of what I’m going to be discussing in this audio piece, I’m going to be talking a lot about my journey, my adventures, which happened quite a while not that long ago but it was quite a few weeks ago.
But it was this big journey that I planned to go on where I was going to travel to Wrennisham Forest, a place I’d never been to before in East Anglia which is in the county of Suffolk. So it’s the east side of the United Kingdom just above London.
There’s a kind of small bit of land that sort of sticks out of the country. like a lump, like a belly, that’s East Anglia. And yeah, that’s kind of where Renish and Forrest is. And I’ve been there a few times that area East Anglia as a child, I think I went to Colchester a few times, but overall never really, really been back there.
Specifically, Renish and Forrest is important because there’s this big UFO interaction that occurred in the 1980s. And it’s perceived as being Britain’s Roswell incident. And then generally I always wanted to sort of soak in other areas around Renish and Forrest that I thought were important to do with this whole UFO story.
And the Sutton Ho, which is quite close by, which is quite a potent sacred site. And so I went there as well. And Orford Ness, now this is, I’d never heard of this place before and it was only until I decided to go to Renish and Forrest.
I was just generally looking on Google Maps and I just started to see this really crazy sort of like military architecture on the coast. So I was like, I’ve got to go there. That looks fascinating. So I did, I went there.
And then after a couple of days, I think two or three days in that area, in the general area of East Anglia and Suffolk, I then travelled to Wiltshire, which I’ve now been to many times before. I’ve done various sort of energetic, sort of dowsing excursions there, visiting the sacred sites, had some sort of quite wild experiences as well, which I’ve talked in previous releases.
But yeah, within Wiltshire, I sort of stayed in a specific area between Wiltshire and Glastonbury, I think it was near Warminster. I was camping around there and yeah, so it just made it easier for me to travel to Glastonbury I went to first and Castle Kerry, which is like a small town near to Glastonbury.
And then I bounced over to Wiltshire and yeah, had a kind of nosy round, Avebury, had some interesting experience and then yeah, then travelled back to Chester, where I’m staying at the moment. And the overall trick was the idea was to film it, was to have a diary, a vlogging diary of my experiences as I go there.
And so I filmed a lot, I took a lot of footage and it took me a while to actually kind of edit down everything that happened in Runnish from Forest and learnt some stuff in terms of like, you know, how to film and what to say and other things.
And yeah, anyway, it took me ages to kind of pull it together, but I’ve managed to upload those episodes to YouTube and Rumble and BitChooch so you can watch that at your leisure. So yeah, it was that kind of excursion.
And then I’d actually had booked tickets for an event called Megalithomania, which in my head I thought it was towards the end of May, but then realised actually the tickets were the beginning of May.
I was like, oh, golly, I’d just literally just been to Glastonbury. So I kind of came back to Chester one weekend and the next weekend I was travelling back down to Glastonbury again. So it was a lot to know what it was going to be.
But yeah, it was amazing. Just various speakers there. There was a guy called Peter Knight, Sue Wallace, Maria Wheatley, Annie Williams, Dr. Martin Sweptman, a Welsh guy that I can’t pronounce his name, apologies, and Howard Crowhurst.
But yeah, it was a fantastic weekend and it was interesting because Glastonbury itself was still, there was a lot of Beltane celebrations going on, so that was kind of happening in the background. There was like a big dragon procession over that weekend and the weather was quite nice, I think I remember it being relatively sunny, a little bit cloudy, but again I camped in this really gorgeous campsite, so that was nice, but it was a little bit noisy in the evenings, but yeah, it was a brilliant context to be in.
So yeah, I’ve been doing a lot of travelling, so I’ve got lots to speak about, so let’s kick off. I think a lot to do with my shift towards maybe being out in the landscape, being out in nature, some of these sacred sites, or exploring some.
you know, fascinating stories like Renish and Forrest, it was really a bit to sort of get beyond the computer screen. And yeah, I mean, I wrote an article for the Reconsider Simon website, which is on there, called Screen Time, and I was just talking about, you know, how much time I’ve spent over my life in front of a computer screen.
And I don’t know about you, but I’m just getting a little bit jaded by it, really, by this sort of technology. And I’m just looking into the sort of in terms of the neurological effects on our brains, but then everything to do with eyesight, issue of blue light that emanates from these glowing screens of your computer or your phone.
And yeah, so it was just an idea in terms of like long -term content creation for this, you know, Reconsider Simon, wherever this is going to take me, I have no idea, still early days. But I just like the idea of maybe fusing, sort of talking about sacred sites and strange stories went outside.
And so yeah, that’s kind of like kicked off this whole inspiration, like what I should be doing in the future. And yeah, one of the first locations was Reynolds from Forests, and it’s always a story that’s really fascinated me, and I’ve never been there before.
So it’s all completely new. And I told you exactly where the location was at the beginning. And yeah, I just, again, I was talking about ideas through a top morning, which is another close quarters contact experience.
And in the kind of video itself, I was really kind of interested how these cultural phenomenon were these big science fiction films that were being released in the late 1970s and early 80s. And you have the Close Encounters of the Third Kind in 1977.
And you have The New Hope, the very first Star Wars also that was released in 1977 Star Wars. And then Star Trek, the reboot of that, the original motion picture in 1979, and the Empire Strikes Back in 1980.
And I understand that a lot of these dates are for US releases in the United States, and this is a different time when film and movies worked in a completely different way. Now, when things are released, they’re really simultaneously across the world.
But I remember back when I was a child, when things were released in the United States, it would take around a good year for things to be released in the United Kingdom. So it’s very, very different.
So I was sort of interested in the whole cultural aspect of UFOs and the folklore and the stories surrounding it. And I just found it weird that you had Todd Morden and then Reynolds from Forest and these really close up encounters and just bright red lights and really strange brightly coloured craft with different coloured lights on it.
And it just looked very reminiscent of some of the interactions that happened within close encounters of the third kind. And remember, I have heard stories that, you know, a lot of Steven Spielberg’s film is based off…
real events that particularly happened. So I just think the cultural aspect of what was going on in the 1980s is really, really important. And again, because it was a different era, like you didn’t have the internet, like kind of 24 hour news and access to Twitter and everyone’s like a citizen journalist at the moment.
And back there was completely different. And so this event happened the 26th of December 1980, but the actual rendition story didn’t really hit the mainstream until 1983. So a good three years afterwards.
And it was, you know, came out in one of the main tabloid newspapers at the time, News of the World, which is now defunct as part of now, was part of Rupert Murdoch’s empire. And it was all the whole story, you know, sealed in terms of its realness through what was called the Holt Memorandum.
So it was Colonel Charles Holt had released the memorandum to the military explaining his experiences and what happened. And it was all on official you know, US military paper. So yeah, it was just real evidence for what occurred back in the 1980s.
And if you look back over the decades in terms of, you know, humans interacting with lights in the skies, with UFOs, with potential extraterrestrial or interdimensional or inter -time intelligences, I mean, who knows where the source of all this is.
Again, I just find it fascinating how there are real defined trends within this kind of era. And you’re talking on the 1950s and 60s where this whole subject is really quite strongly popularized and it was all about flying saucers and metal discs, wasn’t it?
And then you have this 1980s of the top morden and wrenderschirm. It’s all very, very bright lights and colorful lights. And my own experience, you know, I’ve had really bright, bright, etheric stars lights flashing at me over a particular period of time, happened around about two years.
I had real kind of close interactions, some, you know, amazing instances of stories of things where I can, like, say, yeah, definitely that is not a plane, it is not a satellite, that is something else.
And again, it was its own sort of visual look to it. You know, it wasn’t anything to do with, like, flying saucers or, like, bright coloured lights. It was, yeah, just this etheric kind of, also almost like an angel light.
So it’s just weird, like, how these interactions seem to have their own trends. You know, you don’t hear that much of, like, metal flying saucers of the 50s and 60s in terms of people having sightings of those sort of style of craft.
And, you know, why is that, you know, what’s happened? Are these just different beings kind of coming in? You know, what explains this? Are these advanced style of crafts that humanity already has? And they’re just, you know, the 50s and 60s metal flying saucers are just now out of date technology.
I mean, I think you’ve got to keep a completely open mind with this whole subject. But going back to Reynoldsham Forest, I think the whole overall area is really important to talk about and the energies of the land.
That was a real massive focus through the videos I was doing. It was about really connecting with the land energies that were occurring there. And so I took my pendulums, I took my dowsing rods, and even the first night I arrived there and I stayed, I didn’t really want to camp straight away, I just wanted to ease myself into it.
So I booked this, you know, cheapest travel lodge room in Ipswich. It was only probably like half an hour’s drive away from Reynoldsham Forest. It was quite cheap. Actually, the hotel was really pleasant.
I thought I’d never been to Ipswich before, but I had. I’d been there as a child. But I just had this very interesting, potent, energetic experience. And I was like, that’s strange. And this is when I was lying in bed.
I was like, I could really feel the power, I could feel the energy. And I thought, this is really strange because I’m litching in quite a central urban location in a hotel. This shouldn’t be happening.
Because sometimes when I’ve had energetic experiences, it’s when it’s being quite close to nature. So already, like the first night of me being there, I’m having quite amazing energetic experiences. And this is just in Ipswich.
I’m like, wow, you know, this whole area is, there is something to this. So this brings you to Sutton Ho, the sacred site. And, you know, I didn’t really know much about it. And I actually had seen a film before on Netflix called The Dig, which kind of basically dramatised this whole uncovering of this site.
But overall, the Sutton Ho was a really powerful centre of royalty for Anglo -Saxon kings. And the whole site now is under the care of the National Trust. And in the United Kingdom, this is one of the main bodies that tends to look after places of heritage.
So it can be stately homes, it can be an area of natural beauty, it can be a sacred site. And also you have the English heritage as well. English heritage, I think, are the people that have ownership and take care of staying there.
don’t hench. National Trust places are all over the country. They look after Sutton Ho and she arrived there in a car park. There’s a whole centre, there’s a cafe, there’s a shop. They’ve made a whole exhibition of it.
You can do guided tours there, etc. Basically, they’re just these burial mounds, probably about 17 or 20 burial mounds. It’s a nice little place to go to. Then it’s quite close to the stately home where this family with the people that uncovered.
Previously before, they were just these mounds and it was only through their own investigations in the 1930s that they realised it actually turned out to be a really important archaeological site. But if I can bring in some of the information that came from Miglitha Mania, the conference I went to, Kevin Maria Wheatley is like a second generation dowser and has recently released a book on secret ideas to do with Stonehenge.
She was very much talking about these sacred sites and how they have different phases. And she was talking about Stonehenge, its first phase and what it looks like, and then a second phase in the same, another very potent place, specifically in Avery’s, Kennet Longbarrow, a really amazing example of Longbarrow.
But there were different phases. The populations who lived around those areas treated it differently and inhabited it differently and modified it and changed it. And so, you know, when I went to Sottenhos, I had that same idea about, you know, the land is obviously potent with energies, which is obviously, at one point, a very sacred place with particular energies.
And then these Anglo -Saxon kings knew that maybe their energy was there, or they knew it was already sacred. And obviously, when they passed over to the other side, they wanted to be buried in this sacred place, this energetic space, because they were redeemed as important people and they had that right.
So what I’m trying to say, it’s not about looking at these mounds as just like a graveyard, you know, there’s something more going on there. And this site potentially, you know, predates those burial mounds as probably maybe something else going on in the hundreds, if not thousands years before that.
The unfortunate thing is that I think a lot of alternative archaeology doesn’t recognise that, they don’t recognise the energy of the land. And again, you’ll probably know, I’ve mentioned this a million times on this podcast already, you know, the idea of like, location of churches and cathedrals across Europe.
And then, you know, these places, these buildings inhabiting places that are already sacred from very ancient people way before people started to build churches there, again, due to the energies and the reverence that place had already.
And then naturally, people of importance or people who are part of that faith in that respect, Christianity, want to be very close to that site. So this is why you get this, which I always find quite strange, a lot of, you know, old churches and cathedrals at the whole place is basically kind of littered with dead people.
You walk around, you have like… graveyards that wrapped around the cathedral. You go in the cathedral of the church and there’s people in the floor, there’s people in the walls, there’s just dead bodies everywhere.
It’s funny. So then we can now look at rendition forests and the incident that happened there with a certain amount of context because you understand that these energies are there. And originally, who knows, the Anglo -Saxon kings, maybe they had knowledge of this energy and they were on purpose harnessing it for royal power, for their dominance, or maybe just naturally the body’s intuition, they just felt that they had to place their kingdoms there in certain places and it just naturally happened unconsciously.
And then I’ve said this a million times before, again on this podcast, when you have all these sacred sites, when you have these energetic areas in the land, you tend to get these sort of quite potent military presence as well.
You know, that happens in Wiltshire. And when I arrived in East England, you drive around, you drive around Suffolk. It is so evident, there’s so much old military abandoned airstrips and military bases across the landscape, specifically with the Renaissance Forest incident that happens around Woodbridge.
This airstrip is massive and then close by is also bentwaters. Again, these aren’t used anymore, but they were used for decades initially. There was another one I drove past on the way to Shum Forest for the first time.
It was called Myrtle Shum. Myrtle Shum? Yes, Myrtle Shum. I saw that and I was like, whoa, that’s obviously an old military, they’re really evident. You can kind of see obviously that there’s something that was there initially.
It was only a few weeks later I started to look on the internet. I was like, okay, yeah, that definitely was a former military base. Again, what’s fascinating about that area, there was so much experimental stuff going on, specifically to do frequency and development of radar.
It wasn’t only just Myrtle Shum, there was Alford Ness. As I said, before I went there, I’d never heard of Alford Ness before, completely new site to me. It was only looking on Google Maps. I was like, what’s this place?
It’s this strange shingle spit kind of came out from the landscape. I could see all these really amazing kind of Cold War architecture then. I was like, oh, that looks spooky. Alford Ness, as it turns out, has a really long standing place of a lot of experimental technology to do with warfare, development of radar, to do with like bombs, development of bombs, ordinances, to do with development of overall aeronautics and the planes and their technology.
When I visited the site of Alford Ness itself, even at the beginning of exhibition, there was leaflets and there was guides on hand to talk to as well. They’re very open about the fact that it was a very secretive place.
They truly don’t really know what happened there. The people who worked there, they signed their British just official secrets act as well, so they weren’t allowed to say. But there was information there in terms of like I just mentioned about radar development and to do with ordinances and to do with like during the Cold War, there were development of the nuclear bomb as well.
So that surface level of mainstream knowledge was actually there, but is there a deeper level to this? Is this somehow playing to render from forests? And that’s what I was fascinated in. And again, I started to maybe see parallels potentially.
It’s a long shot between ideas of like the Montauk Project and Philadelphia Experiment in America. And that was, you know, happened on this base called Camp Hero. And that, you know, this base wasn’t in the middle of nowhere, it wasn’t in the middle of the desert, like hundreds of miles away.
You know, it was quite close to a population. It was quite close to where people lived and worked, you know, just the general civilian population. So that was quite similar to Orford Ness. But, you know, a lot of strange.
interesting weird things happened at camp here I had to do with this Montauk project and it surrounded a lot of ideas to do with like portal technology and time travel and unfortunate like stories to do with mind control as well which is really unfortunate especially when it’s to do with children.
It’s this idea of frequency that all these bases seem to be messing around with frequency and you know this you know does just play into Wrennisham Forest because you know the main story you’re kind of told about Wrennisham is potentially you know there was a huge stockpile of nuclear warheads there they were storing it secretly and it broke a lot of treaties because of the amount there and so they weren’t technically allowed to be doing that and this is the reason you’re given why these UFOs came in but this is something else going on and again was some experiments going on that were initiating this contact experience so that’s why I think it again it’s important to look at that broader context on the Wrennisham story with all these bases and the experimentation that’s going on I think it’s important to look at it but of course I’m speculating wildly and I talked about some of these ideas in the vlog you know are these extraterrestrials are these interdimensional is there something else you know people are talking about maybe this is strange LSD experiments as well there was one aspect to my visitation of this area that I forgot to put in the video but I thought I’d talk about it here and it was weird like just before I left I was on Twitter and I just saw this someone recorded a flight path you know you can go and there’s like a thing called flight radar you can get on your phone I’ve got it on my phone you can literally see you know if you hear a plane going over your house you can then get your phone out get this app and it can tell you exactly where that plane is coming from and where it’s going to and the majority of the time it’s always kind of commercial aviation people going there holiday people going on business and but you can also see other types of planes as well I mean I where I live at the moment there’s a really annoying police helicopter that keeps coming with me around this area.
It never shows up on the app. Obviously, they want to keep their location secret. But literally, just before I’d been to Renisham, people had videoed this craft that just kept zigzagging around the Renisham area.
And within this Twitter post, they didn’t specifically mention Renisham Forest through all these military bases. But I just thought it was strange, because a lot of the reason people were giving for this plane going up and down was to do with creation of maps.
But then, from my point of view, don’t they use these satellites to create maps? Again, this is wild speculation, but as an area of that energy, are they tracking that in some way? I don’t know. But it just seems strange that they had this very strange aircraft activity going around that time.
They were just going up and down, similar to when someone mows a lawn. You get those very neat lines. It was very similar to that, but I just found it very strange. Overall, in conspiracy circles, in the Twitter space, it’s quite a hot topic at the moment.
The idea of weather manipulation and geoengineering of our natural environment, these ideas are coming up a lot. Governments overall are just generally starting to talk about it more specifically within their climate change debate as well.
Some of these ideas are really quite filtering into the collective consciousness at the moment. So there’s that aspect. I saw another video and I was doing some brief amount of research before leaving and I just came across a video on YouTube from a few years ago of a dog walker who had actually been in Reynoldsham and filmed these white lights in the sky.
So there is continuing activity that happens in these forests as well. And from an energetic and megalithic point of view, there are burial mounds to be found around there. There are small sacred sites around that forest itself.
I still have a lot of footage to go through. I have a lot of video footage for Orford Ness and then Sotten Hoe, where I combine these two into one video where they’re separate videos. I’m not quite sure.
I’ll figure that out when I get to it. But I was doing some research, trying to find some research through Orford Ness, some strange and interesting stories. Admittedly, there isn’t a lot. There was some information to do with one particular scientist there was utilising Tesla technology to produce a death ray.
So there’s that aspect to it really, which I can kind of talk about. But there isn’t a whole lot there. And what I found weird there was that actually it was a BBC article, the British Broadcasting Corporation in this country, and they had an article on Orford Ness and they actually called it Britain’s Area 51, which I found quite strange.
Because I would say, even if you don’t believe in UFOs, are the ideas of extraterrestrial intelligences. The majority of people when they hear the word Area 51, they sort of think UFOs and aliens and conspiracy.
So yeah, I found that’s quite strange that the BBC were specifically calling Orford Nest Area 51 because that does link it potentially to UFOs and extraterrestrial technologies. So that means, you know, not only do we have this idea of frequency, maybe these are the strange experimentation that was going on that kind of maybe plays into the Renaissance story, you know, did they have retrieved craft there?
Were they reverse engineering? Again, this is like pure speculation. But yeah, I mean, these are good things to think about. Another story actually to do the Renisham incident I forgot to mention on the video, was specifically Woodbridge Base, you know, the old disused RAF base was then taken over by the US Air Force during that particular time during the Cold War, you know, specifically when the Renisham Forest incident happened, when it was all disbanded and all the military moved out.
a certain amount of the old buildings are rented out for commercial reasons, so companies would then move in for business purposes. And there was one particular story I came across when a company
There’s a lot of underground, this is another aspect, there’s a lot of underground tunnels under the base. Some people have claimed there’s a lot of hatches that can be found in a forest. I didn’t see anything specific, but it could mean that maybe the base itself is a lot larger than what you see on the surface.
Maybe there is underground facilities, and this is the same for Orford Ness. When I was walking around there, I was very clearly seeing hatches in the land. I could see strange buildings with a door.
It just indicated maybe there was something underneath the ground. I did ask the guys at the time, one of them was quite dismissive of the idea. But yeah, who knows? But anyway, going back to this sort of internet, high -speed internet story.
So yeah, they were using these tunnels to lay cables. And what really, really surprised the telecommunications company that were adding these cables for the internet, they discovered these 1980s cables that had been laid by the military.
And it was quite sophisticated internet technology, internet cabling. And they were saying at the time that this sort of technology shouldn’t have existed in the 1980s. It just commercially wasn’t available.
But obviously, again, this plays into this idea that the military is covert. People have access to technology far beyond what we have in the commercial sector. A large aspect to the story is the idea of some of these multiple UFOs shining these beams, those bright beams of white light.
And they were hitting the ground, and they were searching through some of the nuclear warhead silos and other underground facilities. And there’s this idea, yeah, maybe they were looking into the nuclear warheads that were there.
Maybe they were trying to disable them, trying to warn us from using this technology. But was there something else? Was there an extensive underground facility? was a potential craft that was held there where they were reverse engineering extraterrestrial technology.
Again, this was a reason why they were curious about it. I’ve been reading multiple books at the moment, but one of the books I have been reading is Gary Hestine’s book, Nonhuman, which covers a lot of the different narratives that are happening within the Renaissance Forest incident.
He goes right back to the very beginning. He covers a lot of different bases. Again, he’s this retired policeman and he’s very much taken hold of the Renaissance story and generally comments a lot to do with UFOs because I think he’s had his own experiences.
One aspect of the book I did find quite interesting was an author called Nick Redfern. He’s quite well known, but he had a very different opinion to do with the Renaissance Forest. He’s written a book about it and the same with the Roswell incident.
He’s basically written two books that really debunked the two stories. And I’m not quite sure of the Roswell details in terms of what he wrote about that. And I was listening to a podcast where he was talking about, he was discussing his book, The Renish and Forest Incident.
And he thinks that actually the whole incident was due to LSD experiments. And he brought in a famous biological lab in the United Kingdom called Portland Down. It still operates to this day. And at that time, they were interested in LSD experiments.
And he claimed that actually some of the scientists from this facility were there the night before the 26th of December at Woodbridge itself. So he thinks these scientists were basically spraying LSD in the air.
So these soldiers, these people on the base were actually hallucinating. But then you say, okay, but there was actually potential up close interaction. They were saying they were touching the craft,
But his idea for how this happened was actually they were using sophisticated holographic projection. But my point of view, it does feel a little bit far fetched. But I mean, who knows? Really, I think it’s important to bring this narrative into the story to consider it.
And it does give me pause for thought because one suspicion I do have about The Renish and Forest, if I’m being honest, is why are they so open about this information? You know, this is like decades of secrecy and that still exists to this day.
And you’ve got so much of these like interactions with military personnel, and they’re releasing official documentation on it. And all these soldiers are openly talking about it, you know, they haven’t been told not to talk about it.
So that’s the aspect of the story I do find really, really strange. This is such openness in discussing it. So if we’re looking at this whole story, this whole narrative with real suspicion, that’s an aspect I find really strange, you know, it prevents me a little bit in believing the whole thing, especially with the cultural aspects of all these films, Seinfeld films that have been released at that time, particularly Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
mind, because the stories feel so similar. And again, the visuals feel really similar as well. I think it’s important to say that. It’s important for me to mention that because I didn’t really say that in the video.
So maybe that’s a slight failing. But yeah, I’m saying that now. It does give me pause for thought. But in terms of the rest of Suffolk, I’m going there as an adult with adult eyes. I’m really aware of the landscape.
I’m aware of my surroundings now. When you’re going to this place as a child, you’re maybe not taken in this sort of context, what the places look like really. But I was just mesmerised about how flat it was.
I mean, particularly went to Orford Ness. It’s almost desert -like. I mean, obviously, United Kingdom don’t get desert. We don’t have that sort of climate. I’ve been to deserts in Australia. I’ve been to deserts in South America.
I’ve been to deserts in North America. You just don’t get landscapes like that in the United Kingdom. But. For a certain degree, it does look like a desert. It’s so flat. There’s so many shingled stones there.
It’s really barren. It has this very stark, eerie beauty to it. What is weird is a lot of it is still closed off to the public, even though the National Trust, I think, looks after a large area of it.
The majority of the time was actually closed off, and the reason they gave was because it was breeding season for birds. This is deemed a very natural beauty site and a lot of nature there, and so there were a lot of areas we weren’t allowed to walk to.
That does change periodically, so there’s area times of the year when you are allowed to access more areas of the Orford Nest site itself. But when I went there, unfortunately, it was breeding season.
Another reason some of the guides were telling me about why some of these areas are closed off because they deemed it being dangerous. The architecture there is quite old. It’s quite decayed, and so it could fall in on itself.
It’s a health and safety nightmare legally. This is another reason they gave me why a lot of this area was completely closed off. But I spent a good afternoon there at Orford Nest, and I took a lot of video.
I’m looking forward to editing a video and bringing more information. I can start to talk about the secrecy and maybe ideas to do with Tesla technology, the death ray. Look into that. Sounds exciting.
That’s up and coming. Once I left the bosom of Suffolk, I then drove west, and I was driving towards Glastonbury and Wiltshire. Again, if you’re not in the United Kingdom, Wiltshire is kind of a bottom end of the country.
It’s between counties like near Somerset, which is where Glastonbury is, Wiltshire. You have all a lot of the sacred sites like Stonehenge and of the Avery, a favourite of mine. That’s there. That was the area that I was driving towards.
As I said, I stayed in Warminster in a campsite nearby there, and it was perfectly placed. I was right slap. banging the middle between the two places, so I could easily get to Glastonbury and Avery.
And so, yeah, the first day that I was there, I didn’t go straight to Glastonbury itself, I drove to Castle Kerry. And the reason I went there was based off some of the map dowsing I’d done, you know, prior to this.
And I’d utilize, you know, the maps and my dowsing rods and my pendulums when I was walking around Venerable and going to specific areas, some of them places I unfortunately forgot about. But yeah, in Castle Kerry, there was a location on the top of this hill, Lodge Hill, where it actually marked up on my map where my pendulum said I should go to.
So I was like, okay, I’m gonna make this part of this video, I’m gonna talk about that. So before I went to Glastonbury, you know, I went to Castle Kerry and specifically to Lodge Hill. And I had been to Castle Kerry before, I think I mentioned on another podcast as a designer, there’s Clark Shoes there, quite a famous heritage brand, the United Kingdom, I think they’re quite popular in places like Japan.
A lot of the Clark shoes are well -known for the heritage, for their shoe design, and there’s this whole area called Street, which is, I think it was pretty much built by Clark Shoes. It’s a very old brand, and so I’d been there as a designer to work for them for a period of time.
And, you know, weirdly in Glastonbury, there’s no train station. The nearest train station is Castle Carey, so that’s how I knew about this place. I’d only ever really been to the train station and had a taxi take us to the Clark’s headquarters, so I’d never really seen Castle Carey itself.
But actually, when I arrived there, and I’m parked, it’s like, whoa, this village is really beautiful. It’s like a small town, largest village. It is a really stunning, like, cute little place. Anyway, so I parked my car in this car park, and then initially had problems locating this hill, and eventually found, like, a path to take me to the top.
Now, it wasn’t really the most stunning, the most beautiful place in the world, and there was a lot of, you know, strange, you know, mobile phone aerials there, pylons, electrical pylons. So there actually was quite a lot of dirty energy there, but weirdly, just energetically, I just felt so much love.
It was actually a really powerful, energetic experience, and I did catch it on film. And it turns out, yeah, it was the most energetic place for me that particular day, more so than Glastonbury itself.
So the amazing thing about this experience was it was all based off using the pendulum. You know, the pendulum sent me there. I was using that in combination with the map, and I had that experience. I can’t remember explicitly, you know, the reason why I was sent.
I think it was for my own self -healing, but it just goes to show you can have these really powerful earth energy experiences when using the pendulum in combination with a map. So after that really powerful experience at Castle Kerry, I’d made my way back to the car, and yeah, by this point in the day, it was just turning out to be a really hot and sunny one.
And I just managed to then drive through the various country. road of Somerset and it was really stunning. I made my way to Glastonbury, parked up in one of the main car parks there and you know a place had never actually been to before in Glastonbury itself was Glastonbury Abbey so I made a beeline for there.
Initially I thought maybe it wasn’t actually open because they were doing a lot of building works at the entrance. They actually looked closed but I managed to figure out there was a temporary entrance around the corner so managed to gain entrance to it as an entrance fee to kind of get in but yeah I mean just a really stunning location.
This then starts to tie into megalithomania which I went to two weeks later. They had a talk on a gentleman called John Michelle and I’ve read one of his books before and it was really quite complex and didn’t really get the gist of most of it because it includes a lot of quite highbrow mathematics and sacred geometry but the book was called Dimensions of Paradise.
And here’s actually a book summary on the book itself. It goes, the priests of ancient Egypt preserved a geometrical canon, a numerical code of harmonies and proportions, that they applied to music, art, statecraft, and all the institutions of their civilization.
Plato, an initiate in the Egyptian mysteries, said it was the instrument by which the ancients maintain high principal standards of civilization and culture over thousands of years. In the dimensions of Paradise, John Michel described the results of a lifetime’s research demonstrating how the same numerical code underlies sacred structures from ancient times to the Christian era.
In the measurements of Stonehenge, the foundation plan of Glastonbury, Plato’s ideal city and the heavenly city of New Jerusalem, described in the vision of Saint John, lie the science and cosmology on which the ancient world order was founded.
The central revelation of this book is a structure of geometry and the number representing the essential order of the heavens and functioning as a map of paradise. Overall, I think he’s a very well -known chap and highly respected individual.
He died in 2009, unfortunately. But yeah, I mean, as you can tell by that extract, it’s really, really powerful stuff. And it’s kind of information and numerology that I really struggled with because it is so dense, so much in terms of like mathematics and mere numbers don’t really compute that well.
So I got the gist of some of the theories and kind of the general synopsis of the book itself, but it was a real hard slog. It was a hard read to kind of get involved with. But it is like a really fascinating idea that, you know, in order to have order in a society, you’ve got to have all these structures, these numerical geometric structures to make sure that things work in harmony.
And maybe this is a… reason why our society is so chaotic, so kind of disordered, because we don’t have these underpinnings like, you know, threading throughout our society. But in this book, Dimensions of Paradise, he talks about Glastonbury Abbey at length and some of its geometry and some of this numerology.
So that’s when I really became quite aware of Glastonbury Abbey and some of its power, so it was a really exciting experience to be able to visit. And again, it’s a really stunning location, very green, lots of really beautiful gardens, and the sun was out, so incredibly peaceful experience.
It was great to be able to learn about the history of Glastonbury Abbey itself, because I wasn’t really aware of a lot of it. But one of the most powerful experiences, I think, of that particular day was the whole King Arthur came into my vision, came into my life.
And yeah, I knew about the legend, I knew the cursory idea of the story itself, and I was very much a fan of Disney, the original cartoons. that one as a child and like Sword in the Stone is that one it represents the whole King Arthur legend when King Arthur was a child and yeah it was just fascinating coming across this proposed grave uh you know resting place for King Arthur in Guinevere and the monks apparently you know uncovered his remains and her remains and then relocated them to a more central location in the abbey itself and made more of a thing of it.
I’m aware overall you know cross united kingdom the various place it tried to lay claim for King Arthur himself even I’ve spoken I think on this podcast about this theory that King Arthur’s buried in Hove in Brighton there’s this kind of long barrow burial mound down there and people there’s a you know seen it was a an important person like a chieftain that was buried there and some theories were surrounding maybe it’s like King Arthur but this whole King Arthur thing is really off the back of me having a conversation with a member of my family about being English and what that means and me feeling like I don’t really have any real affiliation with my country you know as born in the United Kingdom I’ve always really maybe kind of identified more with the with that with being British you know being a collective part of all those countries.
I was born in England but you know really close to the television on our tv because we were so close to the you know the border of the two countries and you know having my parents had a very lucky to have a holiday home in Scotland as well so we spent a lot of my childhood in Scotland so I have a real affinity with that place as well you would go there that all of the Easter holidays the whole of summer you know five six weeks and so I spent a lot of time there and so that’s why I’ve always had that real affinity really with you know the overall collection of all these countries together and if I’m being honest that I’ve always felt maybe slightly jealous of being Scottish because they had a real strong identity.
But being English, you know, what do we really have? You know, really thought deeply about what does it mean to be English and does it really matter? You know, because I really identify the idea of like reincarnation.
We have all these experiences not just on earth but in the larger galactic plane. So does it really matter? You know, but maybe it does to have like a sense of place and, you know, maybe this is a failure of mine to kind of really understand and sort of rediscover my own Englishness.
I mean, you have all these ideas, these cultural ideas of what it is to be English, you know, it’s government. The big thing is obviously the monarchy, which I’m not, you know, massive fan of these days.
So, you know, they really have an affiliation to that. You know, it’s food, it’s music, obviously that the music especially has always been a huge export to the But these are all cultural things. In a way, it’s quite disposable.
It’s consumerism, you know, like, a lot of the time people are relating to consumerism, they’re relating to brands, and there’s no real deep spiritual connection with the land or the story, and this is why, you know, the legend of King Arthur is an interesting one and the way it sort of popped up, because it was, again, this idea of Englishness and, like, how I relate to it really, sort of, came up in my life and simultaneous to this whole idea of, like, King Arthur came as well, and it was just fascinating that I was in Glastonbury at the same time, the Isle of Avalon, and, you know, Glastonbury itself was such an eccentric English place to be as well.
I’ll admit, maybe about 10 years ago, the idea of nationalism and really relating to your country, I would have struggled with, I would have looked down on people that perceived themselves like feeling strongly English and the idea of the flag of St.
George. Yeah, I would have looked down on people, but I kind of realized now that that was wrong. And I think there is a real global push, you know, sort of the hidden hand, some of the global, you know, unfortunate controllers of the world.
I think they are trying to break down nation states and countries and that idea of place and that idea of belonging in some way and then trying to convince people to be part of more of a global community, which, you know, in the face, it does seem like a good thing.
But I think they have more nefarious ideas towards why they’re doing this. And again, I like to look at humanity as a global community. You know, that’s important. And again, I’ll go back to the idea of reincarnation and having countless lifetimes.
And they’re all just labels, you know, one lifetimes would have been a man, one lifetimes would have been a woman one lifetime and might have lived on Mars. I mean, who knows? There’s always kind of like transitory labels that you kind of have and, you know, are they really important?
But at the same time, we are in a physical world, and I was born in a physical location, you know, specifically Chester. And so that is part of my heritage, that is part of my human story of this lifetime.
So, you know, maybe it is really important. And you know, it’s come into my now my 40s to really explore the idea of me being English. And not only that, you know, what defines me as an English person as well, but you know, I’ve been sort of really unpicking ideas what it is to be a man.
And because I have this whole idea about the fact that, you know, a lot of people, we haven’t really been initiated into adulthood, you know, you have your childhood, and you’re a teenager, and then you become an adult, but there’s no real initiation, you might have a party might have an 18th birthday party or 16th birthday party, or a 21st.
But you know, it’s a kind of hedonistic celebration, there’s not a spiritual underpinning to the transition. you know, in terms of the Western world, are we walking around as sort of like adult children?
Because you’ve never had that initiation like some tribal cultures might have had. Of course, there are certain religious traditions within Christianity. I mean, I was christened and then, you know, if you can go on to be confirmed, I was never actually confirmed.
So in a way, maybe that is some sort of transitory ceremony, sort of saying, hello, you’re sort of now moving our childhood into a more responsible adult. The same with Judaism as well. There’s more of a ceremony there.
But I would say on the whole, I think, you know, we don’t really, there’s nothing that really marks that occasion. The same could be said for where we’re born, you know, when we’re birthed onto the land, you know, where we’re brought up, you know, where we spend most of our time, we have that real affinity with the land around us, our surroundings, and the people around us.
And we don’t really mark that, you know, especially with Western cultures. And there’s a real sort of danger these days, especially in the mainstream, when people sort of talk in those terms about maybe celebrating their culture and, you know, the land around them, that they are maybe potentially racist and you’re excluding other people from the world because you’re celebrating your Englishness in some way.
So in many ways, that sort of conversation has really kind of got out of control a little bit. So this might be why, you know, especially in Western traditions, why people are really struggling because people feel untethered, because we’re not relating back to things like this.
You know, these are kind of labels, obviously, you know, manhood and being English and being 40. But they’re important things to reflect back on. And, you know, it’s the hero’s journey. It’s sort of alchemy, isn’t it?
And at each stage, you know, you’re transforming to a different person, hopefully, all the time you’re developing into something better. But maybe… Maybe it’s really, really important to kind of look back and to sort of see where you started and where you are now and to celebrate these milestones.
And through that process, through that reflection, through that celebration, it kind of grounds you as a human being, you know, maybe this is really important actually, me just talking about it now, I just had this like massive epiphany as I’m saying these words, like maybe how important it is and how little we do to do these things.
So the whole King Arthur encounter became quite a cosmic experience, quite a profound thought and those thoughts carried on. I spent a few hours at Glastonbury Abbey just sort of muting around, doing a little bit of filming, just enjoying the environment.
It was really beautiful, the sun was out, it was really warm, it was lovely. And then I decided to, you know, make my way towards Glastonbury Tor, you know, wanted to walk up to the top of the hill. And on the way there, I realized actually the Challiswell Garden was still open.
It was getting quite late, but I could spend a good sort of 45 minutes hour there. So I thought, yeah, why not? Let’s go inside. If you don’t know about it, it’s a beautiful manicure gardens, a great place to sort of, you know, contemplate there and just sort of sit and think with lots of little alcoves and place to sit.
But it has one of, Glastonbury obviously is a very famous place for its sacred waters. And there’s a red spring that goes through these gardens, this Challiswell Gardens. It’s a red spring because it has a high iron content in the water itself.
You know, so I went in there and there’s lots of opportunities. You can, you know, take your shoes and socks off and you can dangle your feet in the water and just enjoy the grounding experience. I had all my tools of divination there as well, like my pendulums on my dowsing rod.
So I decided it’d be a good opportunity to charge them up in the healing sacred waters. But yeah, it’s just lots of nice little place to kind of sit in. I just spent a lot of time just sort of thinking about this idea of Englishness in King Arthur.
I mean, what a perfect place to do that in Glastonbury of all places. And it just kind of hit me, this idea of Avalon in King Arthur. And even on the way there, like this is leading up to the Beltane celebrations.
There are people walking around in very English kind of style costumes, you know, harvest festival style costumes in the United Kingdom. I don’t know what happens in the other places in the world, but we used to do a lot of sort of strange dancing when we were kids to do a harvest festival in springtime.
And we’d sort of dance around a main pole, all of these things. But what was even more brilliant about that particular day that I didn’t realize I was pondering all these ideas to do with Englishness in King Arthur, it was actually was St.
George’s Day. Actually, I think like looking back, the reason why people were probably walking around in costume. was specifically to do with St George’s Day. I was completely unaware that that was happening.
It was only until, unfortunately, I looked on the news later on that day, I could see there was some altercation between people who were celebrating St George’s Day and some of the police in London. That’s unfortunate.
But I was like, wow, it actually is St George’s Day. I was grappling with all these ideas. Maybe I was tapping into the collective consciousness, maybe that why these ideas were kind of coming up. So again, this was a really powerful revelation.
There I was in Glastonbury, eccentric Glastonbury, on St George’s Day, being to Glastonbury Abbey, sort of coming to contact with the whole King Arthur legend. Found it really profound and then ideas through the Isle of Avalon, which at the time, I’d never really kind of pondered what that meant.
Apparently, it used to be an island of apples and, you know, that whole area of Glastonbury. It’s very, very flat around. There are various kind of hills. you know, where Glastonbury Tor is, but at the time it potentially would have been completely flooded so you would have these islands and so this is where the Isle of Avalon comes from or the Isle of Apples and I guess would have been a whole load of orchards there and overall, you know, the county where Glastonbury is in is called Somerset and there’s a huge culture and affinity with the whole apple, you know, being a fruit and there’s a lot of cider, various places make their own sort of very powerful cloudy cider and yeah, so it’s a real affinity to the apple in that county specifically.
But it may be, it looks like, maybe King Arthur, the legend of King Arthur is my through route to England and I was listening to a podcast and someone sort of said this quite profound thing that, you know, culture can be manipulated, you know, so you shouldn’t really try and draw like strength or identity from it and it should be your heritage really that you kind of, you draw strength and grounds you to the land.
So this is one of my next tasks really is to get really acquainted with the whole legend of Arthur and as a king I think the whole legend surrounds him actually uniting the whole country as a whole so he’s sort of seen as this great uniter so maybe there’s something powerful in that, you know, I did say before, you know, not really don’t have affinity with a monarch in obviously King Arthur is a monarch so there is that and so yeah but it’s going to be an interesting journey and I did a little bit of research in the internet, you know, what’s the best book to buy and I bought this book it’s called Le Morte .Arthur and I received it, you know, delivered by Amazon the other day and it does look quite of a heavy read so we’ll see how I go with it because in quite old English.
So there you go that’s my King Arthur and Glastonbury experience, I, you know, spent a good hour maybe in the child’s world. garden, pondering all those big ideas, having those revelations. And then I made my way up to Glastonbury tour, then walked up to the top.
Beautiful, clear day. You could see miles around, so that was lovely. And that pretty much wrapped up my day in Glastonbury and it was lovely. And the next day was my final day of the trip. And I was going to Avebury and walking around the surrounding areas, visiting some of the sacred sites around there.
And as you probably know, Avebury is famous for its big stone circles, and I think it’s a lot more interesting than Stonehenge, because you can get right close to the stones themselves. And there’s just lots of other kind of places to kind of check out as well.
So there’s a lot of freedom, kind of like walking around the landscape, seeing things. And what was strange, I kind of arrived at Avebury. A lot more, a lot more of a grey a day, wasn’t as nice in terms of the sun.
And parked my car up and I started to walk through Avebury, and I just actually started to feel a little bit weird, so energetically a bit. kind of all over the place. I was very grumpy, wasn’t in a great mood.
So I spent a bit of time just kind of, you know, meandering around the stones, a little bit of filming. And it wasn’t until I kind of moved away from the central location of baby itself and away from the stone circles that I really felt a lot better.
Now I was trying to clear, I was like trying to add loads of protection as well, maybe something energetic, maybe I was attacked by something. It was really strange, but you know, when I kind of finally got away from the stones and from Avery itself, I started to feel a lot more positive, a lot better.
And I was kind of walking over to the top of the hill and I was going to walk down to Silbray Hill and then to West Kennet Long Barra afterwards. And as I was walking around the landscape, you know, something occurred to me that, you know, I just had that, you know, run the negative experience around the stones of Avery.
And, you know, now I’ve visited quite a lot of stone circles in my life now. And, you know, I’ve never had like a really power, I felt energies, there’s definitely energies there, but it’s never been like a pleasurable healing experience, which, you know, is strange, it’s interesting.
And, you know, some of the most powerful experiences of being in the landscape where there’s nothing there, you know, there’s no megalists, there’s no stone circles, there’s no barrows or earthworks or sort of iron age forts.
And, you know, the most pleasurable healing experience has just been in sort of pure nature. And that’s interesting, you know, why has that happened? Why is that? Again, I was specifically in that area to film, so I did a bit of filming, I had my dowsing rods with me as well, so I did a bit of dowsing to do with the Michael line and the Mary lines, the energy, the Ley lines that go through that area.
And then also checking out the energy at West Kennet long barrow as well, and seeing some of the geodesic spirals there, very healing energy that comes from kind of feminine water underneath that long barrow itself.
And after I’ve done all that, I then drove to my favourite place. which is near Alton Barns and the Alton Goddess, and I’ve spoken about that again on this podcast, had some rather incredible experiences there energetically.
So I just paid my respect, spent probably about an hour or two. It was now starting to get dusk, so yeah, just got in my car and then drove back. But it’s just, again, it’s just this idea of time, you know, because, you know, like now this week, I’ve spent quite a lot of time in front of a computer, I’ve sort of and all the days they sort of emerge into each other, you know, it just sort of goes so quickly, the week’s gone so quickly, it’s now Friday tomorrow and it’s just, you know, gone in a blink of an eye.
But what’s weird, that trip just felt like I’d been away for weeks, you know, because like so much happened and it was only six days, but I managed to pack in so much, you know, so much happened, I saw so much, it was great.
But yeah, I just wanted to mention that strange time dilation that seems to happen between… when you go outside and when you’re inside, it’s always quite strange to me. So that pretty much concludes the details of my trip.
I should be releasing some videos in the near future, which I’ve edited some more. It’s always taken me a lot longer than I thought it was going to be. But yeah, the whole process generally has been quite fun.
And yeah, so on to the next topic, which is megalithomania. And as I said, I’d already bought tickets for this a while ago. And in my head, I just thought, that’s the end of May, it’s fine, I’ve got ages.
And then when I actually kind of looked at the tickets, I was like, oh God, it’s actually the beginning of May. And I’d only just been in Glastonbury’s, had a weekend back at home and then traveled down to Glastonbury again.
And yeah, as I mentioned, it was a good timing because a lot of Beltane celebrations still going on. It was a dragon procession. So there was lots of people dressed in various colorful outfits. So yeah, Glastonbury was most strange and interesting, I think.
And overall, the actual event itself was in Glastonbury Town Hall, which is pretty much opposite Glastonbury Abbey. And yeah, I camped in this lovely campsite. So yeah, I had that kind of experience as well.
But one of the original founders of megalithomania, I’ve seen speak at various conferences, I think for the first time it was contact in the desert, Hugh Newman. And I was drawn into a lot of his research to do with giants.
And I still haven’t got around to reading this book. It’s got some very compelling evidence to do with evidence of giants, you know, skulls and skeletons being found throughout the world, particularly in America.
So yeah, I sort of suggest you search that out, get some fascinating information. I think over these past few years have been very much like UFO aliens or cosmos centric, and so have been brought closer to the land and, you know, spending more time researching megaliths and earth mysteries.
So yeah. a lot more grounded subject matter and megalithomania on a whole is a good resource for various content. I feel a lot less well read in those subject areas in terms of megaliths. Never spent more time within the conspiracy, more time within UFOs and aliens and the idea of star seeds.
That’s been very much my bag for quite a while and so yeah it’s like uncovering a whole new subject so I’m still kind of wet behind the ears in that respect and it’s very much evident when I was you know at the conference just the people there we just had a lot of deep knowledge even the guy I was sat next to is very very knowledgeable about the whole subject but the overall event wasn’t purely just an indoor conference setting they did have physical tours as well that various sites scattered around the local landscape within Wiltshire and other areas and I didn’t attend any of those I was purely there for the conference which is on the Saturday and Sunday.
and you could get a physical ticket or you could also buy an online ticket which I still think you can get now as well so if you want to catch up with some of the talks they they filmed the whole event pretty well so that was yeah you can kind of watch it from the comfort of your home whenever you want.
So I arrived classically town hall quite early in the morning on saturday you know how it is when you first count that first night takes your world to sort of settle in to the rhythm of things I didn’t speak particularly well but yeah one of the first talks that happened was a guy called Peter Knight and Sue Wallace people I’ve never heard of before but an incredibly powerful talk really exciting and just kind of really set the tone for the entire conference really and they were discussing a lot to do with sacred sites specifically to do with caves which is really interesting to me because I was talking about a few podcasts ago I went to Mam Tor in the Peak District and there was a lot of caves there there was one called The Devil’s Arse and I was just actually just talking about how much of a slight fear that I have with places like that due to claustrophobia and just the fear of the unknown and it again it was just quite synchronous in terms of them talking about caves and you know especially the ancients using caves as a kind of portal you know looking at the rocks and it all kind of brings into ideas of shamanism both of the researchers were talking about how rocks were really seen as portals they were you know a barrier between their ancestors and kind of other worlds other realms which I thought was fascinating and especially you see those quite iconic sort of hand prints where they sort of painted around the hand themselves and that’s existed there for thousands of years it’s sort of incredible and they tried to recreate it themselves and you kind of see actually how talented they were and how they created it seems quite a simple thing but in reality when you try and recreate it you don’t get same effect as they had and as you know a lot of these very prehistoric caves you’d have those again iconic hand prints where you’d obviously place the hand there and they’d paint around it sort of leaving that imprint and you can then obviously put your hand over the top so you’re really deeply connecting with your ancestors and some of the caves also have paintings of various animals and you know potentially these are powerful totems of animal spirits that are projected through the rocks themselves as well and you know the ancestors had deep reverence for caves where sunlight would periodically come into those caves you know particularly over the solstice so you’d find that when caves were maybe just in pure darkness throughout the year there was no sunlight coming in there they wouldn’t have so much reverence but when you had a cave where sunlight would come in it period periods of time you know within the year or within the day they were seen as quite sacred So there’s a real correlation between sunlight coming into caves and then you know how you find various cave paintings and there’s a real correlation between the two.
I guess before the construction of buildings that we all inhabit these days um yeah caves are really seen as places of initiation not just shelter but deeply spiritual places some of them and there’s a whole idea about facing your fears in a dark cave and I very much feel the fear when I go into certain caves I kind of feel that claustrophobia that darkness that that cold air kind of gives me shivers and but these two researchers Peter Knight and Sue Wallace were really talking about that’s where the magic is when you’re really facing your fears in these dark caves for long periods of time you know you kind of be able to really connect with yourself connect with your ancestors and have quite powerful spiritual experiences.
So it’s pretty funny really I was only just mentioning a few podcasts ago about the Peak District and Castleton and Mametor and the caves around there and the fear that I’ve had and it’s not just that those particular caves it’s like overall you know there’s some caves in Scotland I’ve been to and I can’t even venture in so far before I start to get a little bit scared and you know I just voiced that didn’t I a few podcasts ago and then now I’m sat in front of these two people and they’re specifically talking about caves and that fear of caves and that fear of a darkness and actually you should really lean into that you know lean into that fear because that’s where the magic happens that’s where interesting things can occur so it feels like that’s going to be one of my future excursions where it is to find a very deep dark scary cave and sort of try and tackle my fear and try and find something whatever that is.
Through the talk they actually discuss some of the locations of caves that they’ve been to and quite handy a lot of them are UK centric and then more specifically they were talking about a cave called Thor’s cave which is in the Peak District, which is only in two hours drive away, so that’s very much a place that I think I should probably visit next quite soon.
But they were talking about other caves as well, as King Arthur’s Caves. Harking back to, I was talking about the Isle of Avalon in King Arthur, that’s quite interesting. That’s in the Forest of Dean and Adeline’s Hole, which is in Somerset.
I’ve no idea of any information about to those locations, but yeah, future locations would be good to maybe explore at some point in the future. But the cave thing really has come into my vision in a big way, similar to the King Arthur and the Isle of Avalon.
Just quite exciting, these two things that come into view. I like the idea of the caves being a portal, I find that a fascinating idea. They very much were a portal for the ancients, particularly if they’re in a state, psychedelic state, like they’ve taken some kind of psychedelics.
know, part of their spiritual practice. And if you’re staring a rock in a dark cave, I’m sure you’re going to see some quite wild, powerful imagery. A really good pop cultural reference. The idea of caves being a portal, which I suggest you check out, is a film called Palm Springs.
It’s a comedy. It was released on Amazon a couple of years ago, I think. But yeah, it’s quite a big favourite of mine. The landscape in Palm Springs, I’m quite fond of. That desert landscape, you know, really appeals to me.
But I won’t spoil the storyline too much, but the premise is that this guy gets quite drunk at this wedding and then stumbles into this glowing red cave. And then he just finds that he’s stuck in some time loop and he has to experience this wedding day, you know, every day.
It’s very much like Groundhog Day, just repeating that same experience over and over again. But yeah, I thought it was pretty funny when it was released. So for your homework after this podcast, I suggest you watch and seek out that film.
Very much recommended. But yes, again, this is one of those fascinating experiences when you voice a certain thing into the ether, into the cosmos, into the podcasting space that I’m scared of caves and then it echoes back at you.
It’s like, well, you need to go in a cave and get over that and experience something quite deeply spiritual. So it looks like I’m going to have to be searching out a deep dark cave. Maybe Thor’s cave is a good one to start with, because it looked quite spectacular in the pictures.
So yeah, watch this space. But overall, I mean, it’s not just European traditions that have perceived caves as being quite sacred places. Even now they’re seen as very spiritual places, particularly kind of Eastern traditions are very, very important.
You know, wise learning and sort of practicing a lot more things like Qigong with China. There’s a set of mountains called the Kunlun Mountains. And these have a lot of mythology to do with dwellings where the gods and goddesses lived and people would go there to pilgrimage, you know, Dharis or Buddhists, and they were seen as places of enlightenment.
People would go there for e -long periods of time to practice that, you know, whatever they practice spiritually and to gain enlightenment. I used to follow this practice at a center called Body and Brain.
You can find them all over the world, but it originates from Korea. But the original guy I found is quite sort of older guy now. His name is Ilchi Lee, and that’s it. But yeah, he claims he gained enlightenment.
He went to the equivalent in Korea, there’s again there’s a set of caves there, deeply spiritual caves, and he went there to fast and just practiced his, you know, physical movements there in these dark caves.
And it took him 21 days and he came out and he had this epiphany, this enlightenment, and he started this whole movement called Body and Brain, which originally was called Dan Yoga. But over the passage of time, they sort of rebranded and sort of changed their name a little bit.
There’s a real mixture between Kei Gong and other Eastern mysticism arts and yoga as well. It’s a real mixture of those things. But just on a side point, he claimed that he gained enlightenment within 21 days.
And 21 days is like a regular thing that always seems to pop up. I mean, because that’s the amount of time that Buddha spent meditating. Same thing. He sort of just meditated faster, didn’t eat, didn’t move under a popular tree.
And he gained enlightenment after 21 days. So that seems to the magic timeframe. So if you want to gain enlightenment, you’ve got to do what you want to do over 21 days. So maybe that’s what I should do.
Go to Thor’s cave and just stay there for 21 days and not eat and meditate and then come out floating Buddha. But going back to the idea of caves and these two individuals that were talking about that, they were also bringing into the conversation the idea of sound resonance and how that’s really important.
And they would take their shamanic tools, they would take drums in there and sort of also chant in there. And the resonance, the sound is a huge part, they think, of what the initiation process might have involved for the ancients in caves.
And so that’s quite a big part of the experience as well. It’s like the idea of music, the idea of sound. And again, just another offshoot, the idea of caves, you know, they’re seen as like, in a way, portals potentially to the underworld.
There’s loads of myths and legends and even bring in sort of ufology, the UFO folklore, the idea of inner earth people or inner earth beings living underneath the ground. And the cave system would be an entry point to gain access to this whole new realm, particularly looking to some of the stories of Native Americans.
And they sort of talk about the ant people that during times of like earth movements and big catastrophes, that the ant people came out of these caves and then brought the humans into the Native Americans, into some of these caves.
systems to protect them from whatever was happening outside to kind of keep them safe. If you want to get even more weird, I was actually talking about this recently with a friend I was trying to find these video clips and it’s an interview between a reporter an American reporter and a former US army person and his identity was scrambled and his voice was sort of changed but he was talking about this thing called the Kandahar giant and about these US soldiers were on patrol in a remote area of Afghanistan and they came across this cave and essentially his big giant came out of like bright red hair and attacked them and then obviously they had all the weaponry with them and managed to sort of kill him unfortunately and this giant was then flown allegedly by a helicopter back to a base.
So yeah it’s quite a wild story but does really feed into the idea that giants potentially existed. on the surface of this earth but not just in the past but actually still exists to this day. I mean who knows if that’s true but it’s an interesting story to consider.
So as you can hear caves are strange and interesting places and so yeah watch this space in the future. Another actually thinking about another cave story that I do have is when I went to Barcelona. I went to this amazing area outside of Barcelona.
What’s it called? Montserrat that’s it and it’s got this fascinating rock formation and it’s perceived as being a deeply spiritual place for Christianity and there’s a big church cathedral on the top of this Montserrat mountain and it has this thing called the Black Madonna which is this Madonna statue but it’s actually black like real dark ebony wood I think and it’s really perceived as quite a spiritual place.
People go there you know to pilgrimage etc and this whole area of Montserrat is quite remote as well. I think there’s you can go on quite long heights quite quite long walks across the top of the hills and you come across quite remote monasteries and I think still to this day it’s an active monastery and sometimes you get these monks that you know live there in complete silence and you know completely remote situation away from everyone but throughout this you know entire landscape and it’s very otherworldly some of the rock it just looks like you’ve on Mars to a degree but again they have loads of deep caves in there and it’s just lots of strange stories to do with people going missing in these caves and people being in a trance light state and then just just walking up to the mountain and just disappearing they have these visions and lots of stories very much like Indiana Jones where you’re having sort of former Nazi people during World War II trying to find these very esoteric items and then I think that was at one point they were trying to find the holy grail and they were convinced men maybe it was in Montserrat, so they traveled over there to investigate more.
So that whole area is like really fascinating, particularly because all this kind of very, very strange cave network underneath the mountains themselves. I probably should do some kind of podcast or video in the future to do with Montserrat.
It’s a really fascinating area. When I was there, I was quite taken aback visually by what it was like, but then just the energies as well are quite special, I think. And it’s just got loads of very strange, spooky stories surrounding the whole place.
So yeah. So moving away from the Basque region of Spain, traveling back to Glastonbury. I think that concludes everything I have to say about, you know, general summary to do the cave talk. It was really good.
And then the second speed to come on was Maria Wheatley. Yeah, I’ve mentioned her again numerous times in this podcast. She’s a second generation dowser. Her father was quite a famous dowser. and wrote various books and did a lot of research in that area and she’s kind of continued on in that vein but she has her own you know educational institution called esoteric college I think it is and she’s written various books as well and she does various tours in Egypt and also around the Wiltshire area and she’s very active on the scene and specifically this talk that she had at megalithomania was to do with her new book that had just been released to do with Stonehenge it was the secret history of Stonehenge.
Overall not that well versed in the whole history of Stonehenge itself we’ve got little tidbits of information here and there and so yeah I was interested to learn more about what she perceived as being the hidden history of Stonehenge and quite powerful at the very beginning as you started to talk about how Stonehenge has a missing altar stone an actual fact that the royal family still have that altar stone they still have it and many people don’t know that and so officially she was going to she’s contacted apparently the palace and was officially going to ask for the you know the altar stone to be returned back to the site itself and so I assume she’s had that call now she’s obviously had that official conversation with them I have no idea what the results were of it and but at the time that’s what she was planning to do so that was quite an interesting story in itself I knew to a certain degree that Stonehenge has changed a lot over the decades and they had some quite brutal reconstruction excavation that happened over a period of time over the 50s and 60s and sort of it was reconstructed but then also quite badly done and using a lot of they filled in a lot of aspects with concrete which seems like the worst material in the world to to be introduced into a sacred site like that so there’s some aspects of the stones which have been completely filled in by concrete and so Maria was showing pictures to do with that you know what’s been lost lost.
But then also just the archaeologists at the time in their wisdom were seeing some of the angles of the stones being wrong and straightening the stones so they were completely changing the mathematics and the geometry of the place itself.
Maria is explaining a lot of the stones were leaning at particular angles because they were supposed to. That was like part of the whole formation of the stone circle itself. It weren’t supposed to be standing completely straight up.
That’s like a very regular thing throughout the world with stone circles. They have this very particular angle they lean into. She also discussed how much Stonehenge has changed over the history and it’s always really actually been in some sort of flux and different civilisations have taken over ownership of Stonehenge and they’ve altered it.
It’s always been altered quite regularly and changed it for their own spiritual practices. But overall it’s always been there to try and harness these powerful Earth energies. a coil of a dragon. She showed various drawings what it might have looked like throughout the ages, you know, how Stonehenge has changed.
And it’s not just the constitution of the stones and how everything aligned, it was also the overall entry point, the journey, the initiation journey, to get there from when they travelled to the coast of the United Kingdom, the route through to Stonehenge.
Obviously it’s quite a long landlocked location, it’s quite a treacherous journey, so that journey itself changed throughout the eons as well. But overall it was a great talk, really powerful talk, and she has so much energy, she’s very eloquent in sort of discussing some of these ideas.
And you know there’s a big push at the moment as well because the government are planning to build this tunnel, this road where it goes underneath Stonehenge itself, and it’s going to cost an enormous amount of money.
And she was talking a lot to do with that about how they’re trying to stop this from happening, and it seems a really bizarre thing to do, to be honest with you. And you know, it’s strange actually because Stonehenge itself, I visited it multiple times, and it is when you drive past it the first time because it is like, you know, perceived as being this wonder of the world, and it’s like seeing a celebrity because you’ve seen it in pictures for so long.
And when you finally see it you’re like, oh wow, there it is. And to me it always looked a lot smaller than I thought it was going to be. And I’ve never really been close to the stones because obviously they don’t allow you to get close unless you go on some kind of guided tour, or obviously go for the solstices as well, you gain access then.
But I’ve never really had that much of a strong affinity with Stonehenge, it’s never like spiritually or energetically really grabbed me. I don’t know why, but I would like to do more explorations around Stonehenge itself because I know overall the landscape itself, it’s not, you know, just that isolated place.
There’s so much going on around it in terms of like burial grounds and long barrows. So in the future I should really explore more I think. But another big synchronicity for me at this event, you know, see.
seeing all these various lectures, all these various researchers and talkers. And overall I’m planning, hopefully all going well with my health over the summer to maybe do like a car trip to Europe and then drive around Spain and Portugal.
So I’ve been there before, but only in isolated places. You know, I’ve been to a place like Barcelona, I’ve been to Madrid, been to Lisbon, mainly been sort of cities. And so I’m quite keen to sort of potentially, because I’ve never driven through Europe before.
So I think that’d be quite good fun. And thankfully my car passes MOT, so it’s good for a year. So that’s good. So yeah, hopefully all going well. That’s one of my plans this summer is to do that. And I have been wondering overall, you know, where can I visit?
Where’s going to be quite sacred? Where are there going to be interesting energies to check out? And actually, lo and behold at this event, there’s a lady called Annie Williams, I’ve never heard of before.
And I think she’s an American, either living in France or Spain. I can’t quite remember. but she’s written a book called The Guardians of the Dragon Path and it gets this ancient alignment, an ancient star path and her herself is very much into sound.
I think she’s a professional harpist and she does various like sound healing therapies and I think she’s written various books before I think and but she was talking about, I think in this book, about the north of Spain is this path that includes dolmens and meniers and other various sacred places and they all kind of line up in this line, like a ley line.
So yeah, this could be a good book for me to get just to give me a guide to maybe where I should be going in the coming months. So again, that was quite synchronous to us and the fact that she was there talking about these areas and actually talking about Montserrat in Barcelona.
I think that’s one of the locations on this ley line itself. So there you go, that’s Annie Williams. For the life of me, I actually can’t remember something what she was talking about and so I think I’m going to have to go back and get the book and then obviously get more of an understanding of some of her research.
But then on to another speaker. I’m going to talk about all the speakers. I’m just going to talk about the ones that really kind of resonated with me. They’re all good, you know, don’t get me wrong. There was some fantastic information but there were some people that really stood out to me just as my own personal journey.
It kind of really correlated what I was looking at at that particular time and one of the speakers was a gentleman called, I’m going to butcher his name, Gwillyn Moores Bard and he was discussing a thing called the Taliesin which is I’ve never heard of before and it’s a famous legend, a famous story within Wales and again having lived quite close to the Welsh border for much of my childhood.
I still haven’t heard of this story but it’s very much a story about initiation. Earlier on I was talking about the idea, that lack of transition, that lack of ceremony, you know, pinpointing when a person goes from childhood to adulthood, you know, that initiation, that transition to the two milestones in a person’s life.
And the teleassing, I’m saying that right, was very much initiation when you want to become a bard, a storyteller. And I wasn’t quite aware, like, how sacred and how special the idea of a bard and a storyteller is in Welsh tradition.
I guess it’s very much a Celtic thing. You get that an island, they’re always perceived as being great storytellers. And yeah, so I guess it’s a similar kind of cultural thing. Again, I’m harking back to the idea of, you know, Englishness, what do we have that is sacred and special?
So yeah, that’s a bit of a confusion point for me. And I can see with these Welsh traditions, Irish and Scottish, very much storytelling is a big aspect of who they are as a culture. Anyway, so this gentleman was discussing this this myth called the Taliesin.
and it was a completely new thing for me. But yeah, again, it was just a very synchronous thing because I’ve been talking about this idea of initiation and that I’ve never really had any sort of initiation into anything.
And it was just a fascinating story about how this guy, he tells a story that I’ve never really heard of before, gives a brief synopsis, a brief summary, but then also just starts to find actual physical locations in the wealth landscape where this initiation journey would have started and where it potentially would have ended.
Because for much of Wales and the cultural reference, it’s always perceived as being a legend and not really having any physical location to some of these places that it speaks about. He actually says, no, no, this is actually kind of a real thing and this initiation journey potentially existed.
It’s not only in the Welsh culture that this story is well known and well understood. According to Guillen, it’s also well understood and used within juridic traditions as well, so it’s very much part of their cultural reference point.
But I think that’s enough of the theory. I think you need to hear the actual story. I found this resource off a website and it’s written by Daniel Morden and apparently he’s a Welsh storyteller and author.
I will leave a link in the description for you to check out for yourself. It actually feels like a slightly different version to what I heard at megalithomania. I’m sure there are many different variations depending on who’s telling it, so I guess that’s probably part the parcel of the whole kind of myth really.
But the following one written by Daniel goes as follows. There once lived a witch who had a silent son. She resolved to brew a potion of inspiration for him which would transform him into the most famous bard poet -singer storyteller in the world.
She gathered mysterious ingredients and then stole a local lad named Guillen. to tend to the potion. After a year and a day the potion would be ready. The first three drops would be pure inspiration and the rest of the potion poisoned.
It was her intention to kill Guion. Once the potion was ready to prevent him from revealing the secrets he had seen while in her home. She was out when the great moment arrived. Besides the cauldron Guion saw a bubble like an eye rise to the surface of the liquid and the sliding on the bubble there were three shining drops of pure inspiration.
The bubble burst and the three shining drops splattered onto the back of Guion’s hand. Before he knew what he had done he had licked off the liquid and so it was that Guion swallowed the potion intended for the son of the witch.
And the moment he did so his perception changed. The shadows were darker than ever they had been before. The flames were brighter. The smells subtler. He heard and understood the many languages of humanity, and also the languages of the birds, the beasts, every living thing.
He could see into the future, as you and I remember the past. And he knew the moment she discovered what he had done, Cardwin would kill him. He fled. Cardwin returned to her home and set off after him.
He became a hare, then she became a hound and pursued him. He became a salmon and leapt into a lake. She became an otter. He leapt from the lake as a bird. She became an eagle. He flew over a farmyard, changed himself into a seed, fell and hid in a heap of seeds.
She became a hen and swallowed him. Cardwin took human form and returned to her home, content. But in the months that followed, her belly began to swell. She gave birth to a son, and it was Guion. The moment she looked upon him, Cardwin understood he had outwitted her.
He had become the only living creature she could not kill, her own flesh and blood. She felt the same love for him as she felt for her silent son, who sat by the fire. William went on to become a great bard, whose poems are still enjoyed to this day.
He was known as the talicelline, which means shining brow. So that’s the end of the talicelline, as written by Daniel Morden. According to Guion at the conference, there was a slight variation actually at the end that I remember.
I think Surdwin, when the baby was actually born, couldn’t bring herself to kill the baby, but also couldn’t bring herself to actually live with it either. So put the baby in a river, and then I think it got swept out to sea.
So there’s a kind of slight ending to the story itself. But it goes to show that the story is very much based off an actual journey of initiation. for bards and for storytellers. You know you have the setup of an apprentice and a master, a master storyteller in the olden days potentially would have some kind of apprentice where they’d be conveying their knowledge onto them and part of that whole process they’d have to go through a period of initiation before they became a master, before they became a bard in their own right.
I guess this work gets really interesting because if this tale, this myth is very intrinsic to the heritage of what it is to be Welsh, just this story of initiation. And it very much starts to sort of tie into what I was talking about with the Isle of Avalon in King Arthur perceived as being this actual myth and not a real character but tied within this there’s real heritage and real Englishness involved in that whole story so it could be an equivalent story.
Let’s not forget many cultures back in the day. very much would convey information and ideas and stories and concepts through spoken word, not necessarily written down. It would be, you know, oratory people sharing stories in person.
But during the course of his talk, Willyn actually went on to provide potential real -life physical evidence through various extracts of poetry and literature found throughout the years, pointing to real locations of actually the forgotten root of this initiation.
So he starts to bring a physicality to the whole story that it’s not just this etheric, you know, story that existed that was kind of created actually had real -life physical locations and was a real -life physical initiation that people would go through.
From what I remember, he had a actual physical starting point of this initiation, initiating at Baller Lake in Wales itself. And then the initiation route would then, you know, slide down through the country to the coastline of Cardigan Bay.
And it was from his point of view actually probably would involve psychedelics as well as part of that initiation ceremony itself. But it’s pretty amazing to me how all these ideas are starting to form in front of me as I start to speak and discuss with myself and like people around me that idea of initiation and we’re not having that kind of transition from adulthood, you know, from childhood and then also talking ideas to do with Englishness.
It feels like all these things, these concepts are starting to actually materialise as a possible route for me to kind of follow. So Willyn was a very clear speaker, very precise. I think overall he’s quite engrossed in the idea of mythology and Welsh storytelling and then part of what he does as well.
I think he’s a musician himself. I will leave a link to his got a YouTube channel. He’s quite active on it. He’s always seems to be releasing various content. It looks quite interesting. So if you want to learn more, you can.
can. But yeah, definitely this talk was one of the ones that kind of really stood out to me, and that happened on the Sunday, actually, the sort of day after, you know, the Saturday. But one of the final talks that really stood out to me towards the end of the day on the Sunday was by a gentleman called Howard Crowhurst.
Again, I’ve never heard of him before. According to the guy who was sat next to me, he’s pretty well known within megaliths and that whole world and has done a lot of amazing research. And looking on his websites, he’s written various books.
He’s English, I think, but he lives full time in France. And so a lot of his research is bilingual. Some of it is written in English and some of it is written in French. And I think a lot of the research is centered around sacred sites around France, obviously, because that’s where he’s located.
But actually, on that Sunday, he released a quite well -produced film from what I can see. I haven’t seen the whole thing, but it’s called Megalith’s Forgotten World, and it’s free to watch on YouTube.
and again I’ll put the link of that in the description but yeah he had a really powerful talk and he was speaking a lot about the alignments in various places around the united kingdom with some really amazing research which can’t quite remember all the specific details and but yeah it was quite mind -blowing some of the information was really really quite powerful but I will leave you to investigate more if he piques your interest um overall he was a really good orator um well spoken very very clear and uh also he had a really good sense of humor so it kind of made the talk quite funny as well so yeah he’s highly recommended conclusions now I have some conclusions this is being quite a long podcast I think and overall has been a very enlightening few weeks lots of things have happened lots of new ideas to ponder on having these amazing mini adventures and it just goes to show you know life is one big synchronicity when you’re sort of really tuned in you ask questions things start to unfold in front of you and it can you know take the form of people speaking at a conference it can take the form of you watching a youtube video it can take the form of you seeing a film you know a piece of art um a whole range of different outputs for you to kind of really carry on with your journey I think this is what we consider Simon is about I’m not an expert in any means of all these things but I’m totally inspired all these areas of megaliths and earth mysteries and earth energies and ufos and the mysteries of life I’m all interested in and I’m not an expert within any of them but generally myself I’m having this journey I’m I’m picking it I’m trying to record as I go it’s funny I’ve had to record this podcast in sections because I’ve started to do my day job again I’ve started working so which is good because it gives me money but then I have less time to do things I’m passionate about like like this and even through the process of recording this you know I’ve asked in questions through this podcast and then new answer for just materialized as I’ve been working on this, which has been quite fantastic.
One of them was, at the beginning of the podcast, I was talking about Reynolds from Forest and more particularly, you have these 1980s really close contact UFO experiences and there was a lot of sci -fi films that were being released around that time.
Specifically, Steven Spielberg’s film Close Encounters of a Fair Kind, just visually, a lot of the things that they were conveying in that film are quite similar to what people experienced during the Reynolds from Forest, but then also potentially Todd Morden in Yorkshire as well.
And as luck would have it as the universe revealed itself, I saw that Steven Spielberg is penned to release a film in 2026 about UFOs, who’s returning back to the subject. And I know this is off the back off because I remember I think it was about 2023 that I did see an article saying that he believed UFOs existed.
and but he perceived them maybe them being humans from the future so that does make me wonder that he released the statement that actually maybe this film is something to convey that idea I don’t think that is a possibility I think you know maybe humanity there are different strands of humanity and different timelines and they developed in a slightly different way and maybe their return for some particular reason and so I think that’s probably maybe part of it but yes obviously from my point of view I don’t think it’s the whole story because you know that’s looking at it you know entities just existing on this plane and I think there’s a whole load of different facets to this in terms of extraterrestrials but inter -dimensionals as well and ultra -terrestrials are whole various different layers and probably layers that we don’t even understand yet either so that’s a cool little tidbit of information so I really look forward to seeing how Steven Spielberg treats this new UFO film that could be quite interesting and again relating to another situation that occurred through me talking on this podcast and I was discussing my comments through the isle of Avalon on the whole Glastonbury visitation and a couple of days ago I was listening to a conversation between exo -politics founder Dr.
Michael Saller he’s an individual Australian guy he lives in I think it is in America I can’t remember quite where in America but yeah originally he was into geopolitics he was an academic in geopolitics and then very much got inspired by Dr.
Steven Greer’s disclosure movement way back in the early 2000s and yeah he just switched really as a sort of full -time academic in geopolitics into exo -politics and it’s that whole idea the interaction between extraterrestrials and space and humanity and he’s very much a founder of that whole of that methodology and he brings a lot of gravitas to it as well because he is such an academic researcher as well and he’s you know he does bring quite a broad breadth of information and insiders to the table.
Anyway, but he was on, I think he was on an Egyptian trip. He was doing a tour around Egypt with a lady called Sarah Breskman and he did an interview. Well, they’re actually both in Egypt. And Sarah Breskman is from the whole Dolores Cannon sort era or the hypnotherapist where you’re regressing client back to past lives to potentially heal like disease conditions which are carried over into past lives or negative patterns or emotional patterns and they can kind of heal this through regression.
And, but it’s looking at past lives, not purely just on the earth plane, but on a galactic level. So this is kind of what QHHT is. And Sarah Breskman has basically done a lot of work with clients all over the world and has released various books on some of her research with some of their clients permission.
And I know one of the first books was to do with the whole… subject of Atlantis, that mythical land Atlantis, and so she had a lot of information that came from past lives, potentially from some of her clients.
And she’s also had a raft of clients all talking about past lives in Egypt. But anyway, so Dr. Michael Saleh was interviewing Sarah Bresman in Egypt while they were on this trip and majority of the conversation was around Egypt and some of the information they’d uncovered.
But she did at the end, towards the end of the interview, actually talk about she was coming out with a new book about the Isle of Avalon. She had data from her clients and they’re all talking about this.
So again, really synchronous to us because I’ve been talking about this on that particular podcast this week as I’ve been recording. I was listening to that video and then she mentioned about the fact she was releasing this new book.
And so yeah, I’m quite interested to learn more what’s going to be in this book. And you’d like anything, you know, whether it be remote viewing or channeled information or QHHT, there’s always that slight possibility that it could be distorted.
You know, you don’t know quite what entity is kind of coming through, but I think you’ve got to look at all data points. It’s the same with dowsing, the same with using pendulums or dowsing rods. I think you’ve got to question sometimes, you know, some of the information that kind of comes through, not dismiss it or discount it, but just look at the broad picture of all information.
So I think you’ll agree that was very fortuitous how it all unfolded again. So yeah, that’s everything, I think. There was one thing, I don’t know about you, but the energies have been particularly up and down at the moment, quite intense.
The weather here in the UK has been particularly in the north of the country, been very wet and windy. And I don’t know if that’s off the back off. I know we’ve had some quite intense solar storms, a lot of solar energy coming from the sun.
And I don’t know whether that in some ways affected the weather because it’s going all over the place at the moment. And I had this very this week, I was asleep and I got woken up probably about two, three in the morning.
and the energy in the room in my bedroom was really intense. I actually felt like my body was actually levitating. It was really, really bizarre, but it just felt deathly silent outside. There was a lot, I couldn’t hear anything.
And generally I was just going, you know, trying to get back to sleep because I had work the next day and I kept waking up because the energy was so intense and it was just very kind of like feeling levitation.
My body was getting lighter and lighter and lighter. It was really strange. It’s not like scary, but it was quite intense. And then the following day, the day after, I had a similar experience, but not as crazy as that.
I had a lot of kind of throbbing in my forehead, my sort of third -eyed area. So I don’t know about you, but the energies overall have been quite interesting of late. So yeah, just thought I’d mention that.
Cool, well that wraps it up. Thank you so much for joining me. I’ve been Reconsider Simon. You can catch me on my website, reconsidersimon .com. on all major podcast platforms hopefully you’ll be able to get the podcast from there and then overall I have video streaming as well within Rumble, Bitch Suit, YouTube, Odyssey and I have a sub stack as well and so I’m trying to update all those various kind of outputs so if you can show some love give me a like give me a subscribe it all helps and I will catch you in the next one.
Take care, bye – bye.
Resources
https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/suffolk/sutton-hoo
https://www.forestryengland.uk/rendlesham-forest
https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/suffolk/orford-ness-national-nature-reserve
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20230106-the-eerie-emptiness-of-britains-area-51
https://www.youtube.com/@MegalithomaniaUK
https://theaveburyexperience.co.uk/
https://martinsweatman.blogspot.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UD3cD4Lz520&t=80s
https://www.youtube.com/@HowardCrowhurst
https://rumble.com/v4x39t6-ancient-egypt-extraterrestrial-visitors-and-human-ascension.html
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/video/detail/B09234WQ34/ref=atv_dp_share_cu_r
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