The Star of David is two overlaid pyramids.
Yeah, that seems obvious.
It predates the Hebrews.
Why did they adopt it as their symbol?
They know it's a secret to winning the pyramid game, they just don't know the secret.
It's their holy grail.
So, they are trying to figure out their own symbol?
Yes, it is a reminder.
Do you know what it means?
Of course.
It's the 7 steps of the pyramid game.
The 7th step is the completion of the game.
The secret is to keep the game going.
"Remember to play" scrawled on a dirty mattress in the middle of nowhere in Ecuador was a big clue.
If you look at the symbol you see the inversion of a triangle lines up with the 6th step.
The 7th step ends the game, so you get to the 6th step and head back down.
When you get to the bottom of the inversion, you head back up.
You avoid extremes.
It's the best advice I can give you if you want to survive anything in this game we are all playing.
You can't juggle the extremes.
You will blow up.
You can get to the edge of the 7th step and take a look.
If you take a look, the power will suck you in.
So, you're saying don't look.
That's the best advice.
The curious will look.
Yeah, then they are in trouble.
Did you look?
Yes.
How are you still here?
Tao.
Do nothing.
I saw gobs of power and did nothing.
What's up at the top?
Heaven's Gate.
You go through the gate and the story ends.
It's an exit from the game.
It's a portal?
Yes, you could say that.
Where does it lead?
I don't know, I didn't go through it.
I think it leads to Heaven.
Seems logical since it's Heaven's Gate.
If I had to guess I think it leads to the dropping of the body and being free to explore the cosmos.
Part of that freedom involves your story to tell.
The story you believe will be the story you tell when you walk through Heaven's Gate.
Got it.
What about the other end?
You mean the descent of the inverted pyramid?
Yes.
You head into the darkness.
You mean Hell?
Sure.
It's like going back in time.
The climbing of the pyramid is the future and the coming back down is the past.
Living in the past can be Hell.
The future is aways Heaven for the dreamers.
Is this like Jacob's ladder?
Yeah.
Coming back down leads to a time when you were nothing.
Well, I think I was something.
You didn't have a body.
I wasn't some body.
Does that mean I was nothing?
You weren't material.
In your culture that belief means you were non-existent.
Yeah, I get that.
What do you think?
I don't follow along with culture and I believe I was something before incarnation.
Alright, so then peering into the darkest of the dark would allow you to see that.
Did you do that?
I think so.
What did you do?
Well, I ran into the Devil and then I had these thoughts of it being time to go.
Once I did nothing about these situations, I was able to go further into the darkness.
What did you see?
Light.
What do you mean?
The darkness twists into light at the apex.
From this I understood the same process at the top.
The light twists into the darkness.
The past became the future and the future the past.
Do you understand this?
I'm not sure.
I know Eros comes from the future to cause attraction in the present which becomes the past.
So, I think the inverted triangle represents Eros.
The upward triangle represents the past becoming the future therefore it is the life we perceive with our senses.
The inverted pyramid is the trajectory of the story from the writer and the upward pyramid is the performance of the story.
So, if you want to change your story, you invoke the power of the inverted pyramid which is the future manifesting in the past.
Well, it comes into the present, but I get what you are saying.
Are we just making this up?
What do you think?
If I believe it, then it's true.
A true illusion.
Nobody knows what the fuck that hexagram symbol means.
This seems like the best explanation I've heard.
Okay, I'll keep going then.
Does this have something to do with the Akhet of ancient Egypt?
Yes, the Goddess of the East and West.
Of birth and death.
Of the dawn and the setting sun.
Horus and Set.
Haremakhet.
Sphinx.
So, the hexagram symbol is of the sphinx?
No, it's the symbol for the Akhet.
The Akhet is the Goddess.
It's her pyramid cult.
The Akhet is the portals of East and West when light becomes dark and dark becomes light.
There's your twist.
The rising and setting of the sun twists reality from light to dark and back again.
The answer is right in your face if you look.
How the fuck do you know this?
I'm a know-it-all.
It makes you intolerable.
Clearly.
The writer has to be a know-it-all because what he writes is gospel.
It's the truth.
It's only the truth because you made it up.
Yes, as you know, belief is truth.
I conjure truth out of nothing.
I thought you got the nothing from the Goddess?
Yes, it's her ideas.
I turn them into beliefs.
Who or what is the idea?
It's Eros.
Where is he from?
Well, first of all, he or she is gender fluid.
Let's not designate them as either or.
Okay, so what are Eros' pronouns?
I'm going to ignore that question.
Anyway, Eros is from the future, and he meddles in the present which becomes the past.
You mean they, don't you?
Oh, for fuck sakes.
Yes, they.
You are going to be summoned by HR for misgendering and pronoun violations.
I'll do better.
I think the origin of everything is from the future which is the top of the pyramid.
If you climb to the top, then the future and the present combine and that makes everything blow up.
You are left with the Benben stone at the apex, and it represents the phoenix rising from the ashes of the destruction of this world.
How do you know this?
I made it up.
We are missing the past.
That's the descent into darkness via the inverted pyramid.
It's nighttime.
I think the writer is from the future, but he hides in the past.
Yeah, he's fucking clever, eh?
Yeah.
That's why you can't find him.
You know he's from the future, so you go looking for him there, however it ends up he lives in the past.
What is he doing in the past?
Rewrites.
Got it.
Everyone wants changes and a rewrite.
Why is the writer male?
Isn't that sexist?
The Goddess is female.
Do you want the Goddess to be masculine?
That's twisted.
Didn't the ancient Egyptians sometimes depict the Goddess with an erection?
Yes, at Karnak temple there is such a depiction and then I know they depicted the distant Goddess Neith with an erect phallus.
What was that?
A hard on.
Yeah, I know; I meant why did they show her in that way?
They were demonstrating unity before creation.
There is a Goddess, then the masculine power is the phallus, and he has a stiffy because of Eros.
You have a way with words.
That's a compliment.
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