Friday, June 13, 2025

Sirians: Beings from Another Dimension

The Sirians are often described in metaphysical, esoteric, and New Age literature as an advanced extraterrestrial civilization originating from the Sirius star system, specifically from Sirius A and Sirius B, which are located in the constellation Canis Major, about 8.6 light-years from Earth. Within this belief system, the Sirians are said to be highly evolved beings—both spiritually and technologically—who have played a significant role in the development of human civilization, either through direct contact or by influencing ancient cultures from afar.

According to proponents of this theory, Sirius has long been revered by ancient civilizations. For instance, the Dogon tribe of Mali is frequently cited for their sophisticated astronomical knowledge of the Sirius star system, which they claim was passed down by “Nommo,” aquatic beings associated with Sirius. This knowledge, which allegedly includes awareness of Sirius B—a white dwarf invisible to the naked eye—has been interpreted by some researchers as evidence of contact with Sirian entities. Ancient Egypt also held Sirius in great importance, linking it to the goddess Isis, whose mythological stories align symbolically with the heliacal rising of Sirius, marking the Nile’s annual flooding and the beginning of the Egyptian New Year.

In the context of theosophy, channeling, and galactic spiritual teachings that emerged in the 20th century, the Sirians are said to be part of a benevolent alliance of extraterrestrial civilizations, such as the Arcturians, Pleiadians, and Andromedans, that work to guide humanity’s spiritual evolution. They are frequently portrayed as teachers or guardians who seeded human DNA with higher consciousness or who assist in awakening latent psychic abilities and guiding ascension processes on Earth. In some belief systems, they are described as tall, luminous humanoids with blue or golden skin, while in others they are more etheric, interdimensional entities of light and energy.

Sirians are believed to have contributed knowledge and technologies to ancient Earth cultures, particularly in fields like sacred geometry, architecture, healing, and energy work. Some theories link them to the construction of monumental sites like the pyramids of Egypt, Stonehenge, or ancient temples across South America and Asia, attributing the architectural alignment and precision of these structures to guidance or influence from Sirian knowledge.

Their philosophy, as conveyed through various channeled messages, emphasizes unity consciousness, respect for all forms of life, harmony with nature, and the importance of spiritual awakening and inner growth. They are said to communicate telepathically and work on a vibrational level, guiding humanity through energetic transmissions rather than direct physical contact. Some claim that Sirians are in contact with select humans known as “Starseeds” or “Lightworkers,” who carry Sirian soul origins and are incarnated on Earth to help uplift collective human consciousness during times of planetary transition.

While the Sirians do not appear in mainstream science or astronomy beyond their identity as stars in the night sky, in esoteric and New Age frameworks they are depicted as advanced, enlightened beings who have long been involved in Earth’s spiritual and cultural evolution. Their legacy is said to persist through ancient myths, encoded symbols, and the subtle influence they exert through cosmic energy, channeled messages, and their support of human spiritual progress.



Who is The Ashtar Command?

The Ashtar Command is a concept rooted in the UFO contactee movement of the early 1950s and has since evolved into one of the most elaborate mythologies within New Age and extraterrestrial belief systems. According to its followers, the Ashtar Command is an interstellar spiritual organization or extraterrestrial fleet operating under divine authority. Its mission is to oversee the Earth and humanity’s spiritual evolution, maintain cosmic peace, and aid in the eventual ascension of mankind into higher dimensions of consciousness. The group is said to be composed of highly advanced, benevolent beings who serve what is often described as a universal source or divine will.

At the heart of the Ashtar Command mythology is a figure known as Ashtar Sheran. Described as a radiant, tall humanoid with golden hair and piercing blue eyes, Ashtar Sheran is often portrayed as a Christ-like figure from a higher civilization—frequently claimed to be from the star system Alpha Centauri or aligned with the Pleiades. The first alleged contact with Ashtar came in 1952, when George Van Tassel, an American aviator and mystic, reported receiving telepathic messages from him. Van Tassel, who operated a facility near Giant Rock in the Mojave Desert, claimed that Ashtar warned humanity about the dangers of nuclear war and offered guidance on spiritual development. Van Tassel also channeled messages from other extraterrestrial entities and began hosting large annual UFO conventions that attracted thousands.

Over the years, a number of other individuals claimed contact with Ashtar and the Command through various forms of channeling—most commonly automatic writing, trance mediumship, or direct telepathy. These included people like Tuella (Thelma B. Terrill), who in the 1980s published "Project World Evacuation," a book that claimed the Ashtar Command was preparing a global evacuation plan in case of catastrophic Earth events. The book suggested that millions of spacecraft were on standby to remove spiritually evolved humans from the planet if necessary, a scenario bearing strong similarities to rapture theology from Christian eschatology, but reinterpreted through a cosmic lens.

The Ashtar Command is usually described as a highly organized spiritual-military fleet, operating under the larger umbrella of the Galactic Federation or Confederation, a supposed alliance of benevolent extraterrestrial civilizations. They are said to be here to counterbalance negative extraterrestrial forces, such as the reptilian Draconians or the so-called Archonic entities, which some believers claim are responsible for war, oppression, and the suppression of human spiritual evolution. According to many channeled messages, the Command operates just outside our visible spectrum, in a higher vibrational frequency or fourth/fifth dimension, making their ships invisible to most people.

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, the Ashtar Command became increasingly associated with New Age teachings, often merging elements of Theosophy, Gnosticism, Eastern mysticism, and cosmic spiritual warfare. The messages received from Ashtar and other Command representatives often focus on universal love, inner awakening, the illusion of duality, and the importance of preparing for Earth’s “ascension”—a kind of planetary shift into a higher frequency reality. These messages are frequently apocalyptic or transformational in nature, urging humans to abandon materialism, end warfare, and live in harmony with each other and the planet.

Multiple people over the decades have claimed to be ambassadors or channels for Ashtar Sheran and his associates. For example, in the 1990s, a man named Robert Short claimed that the Ashtar Command was in constant telepathic contact with selected human operatives. Another individual, named Bashar (channeled by Darryl Anka), while not directly part of the Ashtar network, echoed similar themes of extraterrestrial spiritual guidance and cosmic intervention. These themes have since proliferated across online communities, social media platforms, and YouTube channels, where thousands of people claim to have had contact experiences or receive messages from Ashtar Command beings. Some even report being abducted and taken aboard spacecraft for spiritual instruction rather than invasive experimentation, as in more traditional alien abduction narratives.

There have also been prophecies associated with the Ashtar Command, including predictions of mass landings or disclosure events that never occurred. One of the most infamous took place in 1977, when a British television broadcast from Southern England was hijacked by a voice claiming to be "Vrillon," a representative of the Ashtar Galactic Command. The voice urged humanity to abandon weapons of evil and embrace peace, warning of a coming period of cosmic reckoning. The interruption lasted several minutes and remains officially unexplained, though it is widely believed to have been a sophisticated prank.

Despite repeated failed prophecies, the belief in the Ashtar Command endures, particularly among those drawn to New Age spirituality, ufology, and cosmic consciousness narratives. It serves not only as a mythos about benevolent extraterrestrial guardianship but also as a modern spiritual cosmology that blends sci-fi aesthetics with esoteric religious ideas. For some, Ashtar is a literal being piloting a spacecraft; for others, he is an archetype of divine order, appearing in dreams, meditations, and visions as a symbol of universal guidance.

While mainstream science and academia dismiss the Ashtar Command as a pseudoscientific or mythological phenomenon with no empirical evidence, its persistence reflects a deeper cultural longing—for saviors from the sky, for cosmic justice, and for an explanation that transcends the perceived failings of earthly institutions. Whether viewed as sincere religious experience, psychological projection, or modern mythology, the Ashtar Command remains one of the most complex and enduring belief systems in the world of UFO spirituality.

 


Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Useful Links: The Law of One

Do you want to learn more about The Law of One?

Here you can find more information and read about what it is.

https://www.lawofone.info/ 

Or, if you prefer listening/watching videos about it, with someone who explains it in a way that is really easy to understand, check out Gabriel Lugo. He's also on Spotify.

https://www.youtube.com/@GaiaAwakens



Monday, June 2, 2025

Predictions for 2027 - Are We on Borrowed Time?

The phrase “we are on borrowed time” is often used to describe a feeling of impending change, collapse, or crisis—implying that current systems or conditions cannot last much longer. When people connect this idea to the year 2027, they may be referencing a mix of geopolitical predictions, environmental warnings, religious or esoteric prophecies, and conspiracy theories.

Here’s a breakdown of what’s been said or speculated about 2027 and why some believe it’s significant:


1. UFO and Government Disclosure Speculation

  • Some whistleblowers and insiders—most notably David Grusch—have hinted that the U.S. government has non-human craft and encounters they have not fully disclosed.

  • In interviews, former U.S. military and intelligence insiders have cryptically referred to “something coming” by 2027, suggesting the public might learn something paradigm-shifting about extraterrestrial life or advanced non-human intelligence.

  • This has fueled speculation that full disclosure could occur by or around 2027, either because governments will be forced to acknowledge it, or because events will make it unavoidable.


2. Climate Tipping Points

  • Scientists warn that by the mid-2020s to 2030, certain climate tipping points (like ice sheet collapse or Amazon dieback) could become irreversible.

  • Reports from the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) say we must drastically cut emissions before 2030 to prevent catastrophic warming.

  • Hence, 2027 is viewed by some as part of a closing window—“borrowed time”—to avert widespread ecological breakdown.


3. Geopolitical and Economic Fragility

  • The global economic system is under stress: inflation, debt crises, energy struggles, AI disruption, and social instability.

  • Experts have warned of a potential recession or financial collapse by the mid-to-late 2020s due to unsustainable monetary policy and growing inequality.

  • Others anticipate a possible war over Taiwan, a conflict with Iran, or even wider-scale global conflict if current tensions escalate.


4. Technological Singularity and AI Risk

  • Some futurists, such as Ray Kurzweil, have predicted that AI will surpass human intelligence by around 2029—with strong leaps by 2025–2027.

  • The idea of the “technological singularity” worries those who fear uncontrolled AI could disrupt labor, governance, or even become an existential risk.


5. Religious and Esoteric Predictions

  • Christian prophecy circles sometimes cite 2027 as significant based on interpretations of biblical timelines or numerology, especially in relation to the Second Coming or tribulation periods.

  • Remote viewers, like those involved in the old U.S. Stargate Project, have reportedly claimed to see major world changes by 2027.

  • Some believers in The Law of One / Ra Material suggest that Earth will complete a shift into a new density of consciousness around this time.


6. “Borrowed Time” as a Psychological or Cultural Feeling

  • Beyond specific predictions, many people today feel the systems upholding modern life—climate, economy, society—are unsustainable.

  • So “borrowed time” reflects a collective anxiety: that we are continuing as if everything is normal, while underneath, the clock is ticking.

There is no definitive event predicted for 2027 by any official source. But 2027 appears repeatedly in speculative, spiritual, and strategic circles as a turning point year—a time when many believe a reckoning, revelation, or collapse may occur.

Whether it’s based on data, patterns, or intuition, the sense of being “on borrowed time” is a warning to pay attention: to our planet, our systems, and ourselves.



Sunday, June 1, 2025

Abductee Story: Calvin Parker

Calvin Parker was an American man whose life was forever changed by an event he claimed occurred on the evening of October 11, 1973. At the time, he was a 19-year-old shipyard worker in Pascagoula, Mississippi. That night, while fishing with his co-worker and friend Charles Hickson on the banks of the Pascagoula River, Parker allegedly had one of the most widely publicized and perplexing UFO abduction experiences in American history.

According to Parker and Hickson, a strange, oval-shaped craft descended silently and hovered above them, emitting a blue light. From it emerged three strange beings—about five feet tall, greyish in color, with carrot-like protrusions for ears and claw-like hands. The beings floated just above the ground and appeared emotionless. Both men claimed they were paralyzed with fear. Parker said he passed out when one of the creatures grabbed him, while Hickson remained conscious and described being taken aboard the craft.

Inside the craft, Parker described being subjected to a physical examination by a small, floating, eye-like device. He said he was terrified and unsure if he would survive. The experience lasted about 20 minutes before the men were returned to the riverbank, stunned and shaken.

The two men went directly to the sheriff’s department to report what had happened. The sheriff, skeptical at first, left the two alone in a room with a hidden recorder. Rather than catching them in a hoax, the tape revealed both men nervously discussing what they had just experienced, seemingly traumatized. This hidden recording became a pivotal piece of evidence for those who believed their story.

The story exploded in the media, drawing national attention. UFO researchers, skeptics, and government officials all took interest. While some dismissed it as a hoax or hallucination, others pointed to the consistency of the accounts and the men's visible distress as evidence of something extraordinary.

For Parker, the aftermath was difficult. Unlike Hickson, who embraced the public spotlight, Parker shunned attention. He suffered from anxiety, nightmares, and distrust of people. For decades, he avoided interviews, rarely spoke of the encounter, and tried to live a quiet life. He eventually married and worked various jobs along the Gulf Coast, carrying the emotional weight of what he experienced in silence.

In 2018, after decades of silence, Parker finally wrote a book titled Pascagoula – The Closest Encounter, detailing his version of the event. In it, he explained how he had felt compelled to share his story before he died, both as a form of catharsis and as a contribution to the growing body of UFO testimony worldwide. The book was met with renewed interest, especially as the United States government began to declassify information about unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs).

Parker’s account deepened in a follow-up book where he claimed to have experienced further contact over the years, some of it more spiritual or visionary in nature. He also believed that the entities involved were not necessarily evil but may have been conducting research or fulfilling some unknown purpose.

Throughout his later years, Calvin Parker was clear that he wasn’t trying to convince anyone of what happened to him. He simply wanted to tell the truth as he knew it. His calm and humble demeanor in interviews helped many to see him as a reluctant witness, not a fame-seeker.

Calvin Parker died in August 2023 at the age of 68, just shy of the 50th anniversary of the Pascagoula abduction. His death was met with an outpouring of tributes from the UFO community and beyond, recognizing the courage it took for someone so private to share such an extraordinary and life-altering story. To believers, his account remains one of the most credible alien abduction stories ever recorded. To skeptics, it remains a mystery—an event unexplained, but not easily dismissed.