tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5646036473759190862.post3006338465385275038..comments2023-02-12T00:29:04.325-08:00Comments on Flesh Tome: Entheogens in Maya RitualAaronhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09148685928867957858noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5646036473759190862.post-12364146789187099152023-02-12T00:29:04.325-08:002023-02-12T00:29:04.325-08:00So, actually our gods/demons taking human form and...So, actually our gods/demons taking human form and giving superior orders creating new waves of "ILLUMINATI/PROPHETS etc..." were drugs/dragons taking control of our mind/body/spirituality and using/feeding on us, for their rebirths through human interactions?Sp3ranzahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07355877837169589744noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5646036473759190862.post-67262792331987252812012-07-15T12:40:12.629-07:002012-07-15T12:40:12.629-07:00I have found plenty of evidence supporting the pro...I have found plenty of evidence supporting the proposition that Mesoamerica, the high cultures of South America, and Easter Island shared, along with many other New World cultures, elements of a Pan American belief system so ancient that many of the ideas may have come from Asia to the New World with the first human settlers. I believe the key to this entire belief system lies, as proposed by Robert Gordon Wasson, in early man's discovery of the mind-altering effects of various hallucinatory substances. The accidental ingestion of these hallucinogenic substances could very well have provided the spark that lifted the mind and imagination of these early humans above and beyond the mundane level of daily existence to contemplation of another reality.<br /><br />My study of pre-Columbian art and iconography began in 1996, inspired by a theory first proposed over fifty years ago by my father, the late Maya archaeologist Dr. Stephan F. de Borhegyi, that hallucinogenic mushroom rituals were a central aspect of Maya religion. He based this theory on his identification of a mushroom stone cult that came into existence in the Guatemala Highlands and Pacific coastal area around 1000 B.C. along with a trophy head cult associated with human sacrifice and the Mesoamerican ballgame. Despite the reluctance of the archaeological community to accept a theory of a mushroom cult among the Maya, he supported his theory with a solid body of archaeological evidence as well as historical evidence found recorded in various Spanish chronicles and Aztec codices.<br />For more on this subject read BREAKING THE MUSHROOM CODE: by Carl de Borhegyi at mushroomstone.comCarl de Borhegyihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01988311749706376046noreply@blogger.com