02-28-2011, 06:37 AM
(02-27-2011, 04:34 AM)BlatzAdict Wrote: Yossarian u asked me to speak unguarded... This is it.
Thanks, I appreciate it. You have a great perspective.
I agree that all society is Luciferian, which is partly why I don't watch the news, why I avoid lots of other media in particular.
I stick to things that I feel are uplifting.
I think there is a lot of merit to your way of seeing things but when I watched The Holy Mountain I just had a lot of trouble getting past the shock value. I couldn't focus on any deeper allegorical or metaphorical meanings because... I was shocked by the imagery from the very beginning.
You are one of the people on this forum who supports the HH from ATS interpretation of events right? There is something to be said for looking at the philosophy of the STS people and figuring out how it applies to your life. I'm a big believer in using discernment to separate truth from falsehood in all things, which is partially why I even bothered to watch The Holy Mountain in the first place.
There are lots of people who are born into the Luciferian religious structure but who are not obviously STS. I think it's likely that a huge proportion of Luciferian people are actually on the STO path but are stuck in this STS hierarchy as their catalyst.
What I'm saying is that just because the movie is Luciferian does not mean it was made by an STS guy. However I find the STS elements to be the most powerful and jarring. Note that STS people seek enlightenment as well, and they do it through personal effort, through sweat, through intelligence. One of the defining characteristics of STO is faith, love, service, something that is not really implicit in a movie about ascending The Holy Mountain.
Where is the service to others in seeking enlightenment for yourself based on personal effort? This is not a loaded question, it's genuinely something I ask myself and think about.
Anyway your experience with The Holy Mountain parallels my experience with Hellraiser. I watched Hellraiser and imbibed all of these positive lessons from it that apply to my own life, but the main idea centred around a recognition of that which I am not. It helped me to see something and say, "Yes, that is not me" and realize it on a level that I had not realized it on before.
I went into The Holy Mountain (this was a long time ago) with the same thought but was triggered and shocked enough by the powerfully disturbing imagery that I basically stopped watching. Some part of me thinks that by seeing the evil I let the evil into me I guess.