[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: VMs: The definite Theory



In a message dated 6/19/2004 2:23:24 PM Eastern Daylight Time, rilampis@xxxxxx writes:


Hello to all,

I have been a watcher of the list for some time and, in spite of the
enduring enthusiasm of many of its members, I don't think that, after these
years, "we" are any closer to the solution of this puzzle. Aside from some
theories about some Swahili influence and the contribution of intelligent
penguins from Antarctica, just about every other lead has been researched,
thoroughly studied and at the end discarded.

A short while ago, someone proposed a compilation of all the possible
explanations as to the origin of the manuscript. Reading the daring
proposals put forth, I want to contribute mine; with the (obvious)
difference that this is not another possible answer, but a certainty.

Here it goes.

The solution to the VMS mystery has to do with what we call the "invisible
world". That is, one of those invisible, inhabited mental dimensions that
intimately interpenetrate our world. Those spirits desired to mimic our
customs by producing a manuscript that described their dying world (that is,
human mental energy changes produced the annihilation of their world).

The manuscript was dictated, in trance, to some humans, who were only the
unaware executors of those energy impressions, but couldn't understand what
it was all about.

At present, the difficulty of getting some human sense out of the manuscript
derives from the non-human logic employed by its compilers, and by the
disappearance of that original group. What is left is a smaller group (what
we could call the "keepers"), not too friendly to humans, who want to defend
the meaning of the manuscript, and from which is advisable to stay away.

Because of these reasons, the VMS has defied all attempts to its
decipherment, since it takes a non-human brain to understand its logic. But
difficulties and challenges have never stopped mankind. Human nature being
what it is, someone will keep on trying and, within ten years, somebody will
be able to unlock the manuscript's meaning. That would be done through a
modification of the "hard-wiring" of the discoverer's brain. That is, the
price of victory would be what humans classify as madness.

That is the story (if you like to understand how we arrived at it you can
look at www.spiritaction.net).

In any case, this is my contribution to the collective effort.

But count me out on the details...

Cheers,

R. Lampis


No offense, but I'm sticking with my 8th c. Welsh/Cornish findings.....  ;)
T.E. Ackerson