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Read Part 1|| Stardust|| When You Remember Your Celestial Origins
Satan strived to master the world called Earth. He defied the commands of the Godhead and parodied its commands so much so that humanity did not know in which direction to turn to receive the true word of the universe.
He caused twin names to be hated and despised because Adam had harkend unto the voice of his female half, Eve. He listened unto the temptations that proceeded out of her lips, warning that Evil was to bring dishonor upon the planet and those evolving toward their divine sparks.
We are told that Adam listened to Eve, his female counterpart, and ate from the Tree of Knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden. What happened in fact was that Eve acted as the medium or ear to her male half and gave him the knowledge of what Lucifer had contrived to do against evolution.
She also told him God’s commands concerning Lucifer’s future:
Evil was to be used to strengthen Man’s purpose for good, by causing him to reincarnate over periods of timelessness and thus work his way back to the point in the divine plan when error or evil originated.
I discovered this passage in The Wisdom of the Soul, published in 1962 by the Knights Templar of Aquarius. This makes much more sense to me than the psyop narrative in the scripture. The serpent is the kundalini/sacred energy, which was demonified. Next, the divine feminine principle was removed from the equation of creation.
How very silly.
When Stars Collide
Stardust is a Hollywood film combining fairy tale, romance, and adventure. It unfolds during an ambiguous period—a fantastical blend of 19th-century Victorian England and a magical sky realm that includes the mystical kingdom of Stormhold.
The meeting of the main characters, Yvaine and Tristan, is a pivotal and magical moment. Tristan, a young man from the village of Wall, sets out to find a fallen star to present to his Victoria, a beautiful but relatively shallow spirit who demands material things from Tristan as a show of love. You know diamonds instead of forever. His love is misplaced, but he doesn’t know it yet.
To Tristan’s surprise, the star is not a glowing piece of rock—it's a woman, Yvaine (Claire Danes). Having fallen from the sky, Yvaine is initially confused and disoriented. She glows with a beautiful and mysterious celestial light, and the reality of the situation takes Tristan aback.
Despite his expectations that the star would be a mere stone to bring back to the woman he wants to marry, he quickly realizes she is a living being with her consciousness. Yvaine initially doesn't trust him and sees him as a potential threat.
Tristan believed she was simply an object of value. Yvaine, however, sees through this and resists asserting her independence. The two are very different, yet they are the same. Yvaine is a celestial being (heart/soul) bound by her own rules, while Tristan is a magical king who doesn’t know it yet and is driven by his desires (ego) and curiosity.
Twin flames are often said to originate from the same energetic source or “star,” split into two souls to experience duality. Together, they have a fast path to ascension if they so choose. When they reconnect, it’s as though the pieces of a celestial puzzle come back together, reigniting the original light of their shared essence.
As the movie progresses, their connection begins to deepen; Tristan self-realizes, while Yvaine starts to glow with love.
But at first, it is a fraught and uneasy encounter, a bit like the one between me and the man who would lead me to the Lion’s Gate portal, put me back on my soul’s path, and change my reality forever.
Enter Snuffalapugulus || Imaginary or “Real”?
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