Homepage, Store & More
Ancient Psychedelia: Alien Gods & Mushroom Goddesses
Online Book - Chapter 26, Page 556
Back to Online Book Mainpage
/ Next Page (Chapter 27, Page 557)

    God/dess Is Present in the Whole Planet

    The earth is our mother and as I have shown in this book, the religion of the mother goddess in the ancient world was a religion of the earth. It is obvious to many people today that the earth is in imbalance. We need to develop a new attitude and approach to the whole planet and how we live.

    Pets can teach us a lot about ourselves. Animals and humans both mimic each other’s behaviors since we are not all that different. People tend to assume that animals have no souls sometimes or that animals have no consciousness like we do, or since they do not use the higher intellect of their brains for the same things we do, they are not equal to us, in the eyes of god/dess. I don’t think that’s true. When we observe animals from around the world, especially with technology like the internet, we see animals doing some miraculous things. Birds can learn tricks just like dogs. Cats can act like people. Dogs can show extreme emotional devotion. Elephants can hold grudges, animals who are supposed to be bitter enemies can pal along perfectly well. Everything on this earth is alive, and the creatress works through all areas of this world.

    All animals, even tigers to alligators can be tamed and played with if they are raised with humans from birth. The ancient people did not fear dangerous animals like we do today, they lived in harmony with them. Many people consider god to be consciousness in its collective totality. This theory espouses the idea logically, that animals also have god/dess in them. The animals on this planet have as much right to this planet as we do and we should be building their habitat as well as our own to be integrative and harmonious.

    We currently raise most of our animal food we eat, it is not caught wild or live. However, most of the fish we eat from the ocean is harvested directly from nature and this is not sustainable in the long term. I think it’s important that we realize that our ecosystem is what sustains us all and keeps everyone alive. It’s everyone’s responsibility to help make this world a better place for the future. Reducing our footprint is something we all need to work on together, or the mushroom might just do it for us, through its own form of “population control.”


(96m) Socotra Island Yemen
 

(96o) Mt. Redoubt, Alaska Eruption April 21, 1990








































Go Back to Page 555