This Morning
Sep. 2nd, 2015 01:43 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Yesterday i walked into Sittingbourne as it was such a nice sunny afternoon. Had steak and chips at the pub and then Phil turned up. We left sometime after ten in the evening. I do not remember much after that nor the short train ride home. I was a Lillie tiddly.
This morning i watched two episodes of Charmed. The end of season 1 where the cop Andy (Pru's lover) gets killed by a demon with Tempus trying to wind time back for the demon to kill the charmed ones, and then followed by the first episode of season 2 in which Abraxas steals the Book Of Shadows.
Interestingly, the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung wrote a short Gnostic treatise in 1916 called The Seven Sermons to the Dead, which called Abraxas a god higher than the Christian God and devil that combines all opposites into one being. In Carl Jung's 1916 book Seven Sermons to the Dead, Abraxas is a representation of the driving force of individuation (synthesis, maturity, oneness), referred with the figures for the driving forces of differentiation (emergence of consciousness and opposites), Helios God-the-Sun, and the Devil.
I also picked up two self-adhesive hooks from Wilco for a quid, so that one would replace the broken one in the kitchen and one for my bedroom door to hang up clothes on a hanger.
I might pop over to Rainham later, as i did not go to see the guy at Past sentence bookshop to sell some books. I rang first but got no reply, so i suspect that he did not open yesterday. I might go on Thursday,
This morning i watched two episodes of Charmed. The end of season 1 where the cop Andy (Pru's lover) gets killed by a demon with Tempus trying to wind time back for the demon to kill the charmed ones, and then followed by the first episode of season 2 in which Abraxas steals the Book Of Shadows.
Interestingly, the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung wrote a short Gnostic treatise in 1916 called The Seven Sermons to the Dead, which called Abraxas a god higher than the Christian God and devil that combines all opposites into one being. In Carl Jung's 1916 book Seven Sermons to the Dead, Abraxas is a representation of the driving force of individuation (synthesis, maturity, oneness), referred with the figures for the driving forces of differentiation (emergence of consciousness and opposites), Helios God-the-Sun, and the Devil.
I also picked up two self-adhesive hooks from Wilco for a quid, so that one would replace the broken one in the kitchen and one for my bedroom door to hang up clothes on a hanger.
I might pop over to Rainham later, as i did not go to see the guy at Past sentence bookshop to sell some books. I rang first but got no reply, so i suspect that he did not open yesterday. I might go on Thursday,
no subject
Date: 2015-09-02 04:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-09-02 05:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-09-02 11:55 pm (UTC)WOWZA, was Carl stoned to death for that book? :o
Hugs, Jon
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Date: 2015-09-05 04:35 pm (UTC)After the week you had, you needed the break!