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Meh, i've been through a lot of shit.. I don't trigger that easy. If I posted a single pic of my dick, i'd be a famous Porn Star.
 
Goodnight Xork rest up brother

I slept a good 5 hours due to etizolam. Somehow I am not tired now either but need to catch up on sleep.

I could use some stimmmmmms soon. I think once I move out of FR there will be some brain cells that need slaughtering.

I have some left upstairs and want to do them... but this is what the kids call a bad idea.
 
The Terrible Curse of Macha
“But I warn you that a great evil will come upon Ulster because of this.”

Look up this old Irish curse.

Point is: Don’t fuck with witchcraft and witches.

—Wizard
Hell nah don't fuck with them. I have a black cat that lives beside my house lol. It just chills there sometimes and just stares at it. I have had dreams with this particular cat in it. It's probably my guardian or something. I have no idea, but i've seen some mind blowing shit. I also read tons of Astrology (Scorpio). Pluto is my ruling planet (Death, Destruction, Taboo, Occult, Power)
 
This 2,000-year-old scroll is covered with mysterious words in Aramaic. (Miomir Korac/Archaeological Institute)
SMARTNEWS Keeping you current
A Guide to Ancient Magic
In antiquity, love or revenge was just a spell away


Spells were everything
In ancient “binding magic,” it was all about the spells. Unlike modern-day magical phrases like, say, "bippity boppity boo," practitioners of magic in ancient Greek and Rome used spells to “bind” people up to different outcomes in sporting events, business, and personal affairs related to love and even revenge.
As Greek and Roman magic expert Derek Collins writes, binding spells had known formulas and named involved parties, like gods and people, and then connected them to actions or results. You could use a binding spell to invoke an upcoming athletic victory or ensure your happy marriage to a new partner—and to do so, you’d use powerful strings of words passed on by magicians or ordinary people.
 
The more you know about this shit. The less harm it can do to you if someone does try to "Curse" you. I read books on this stuff, and google has some trustworthy sources too.
 
Do y'all astrologers factor in the precession of the equinoxes? I think I recall reading that so much time has passed since the creation of the zodiac tables that the actual signs have drifted somewhat...
Capricorn: Jan 20 - Feb 16
Aquarius: Feb 16 – March 11
Pisces: March 11 – April 18
Aries: April 18 – May 13
Taurus: May 13 – June 21
Gemini: June 21 – July 20
Cancer: July 20 – Aug 10
Leo: Aug 10 – Sept 16
Virgo: Sept 16 – Oct 30
Libra: Oct 30 – Nov 23
Scorpio: Nov 23 – Nov 29
Ophiuchus: Nov 29 – Dec 17
Sagittarius: Dec 17 – Jan 20
 
Well technically the signs have not changed. Constillation s have not changed or "shifted"


If your first response is "Who cares?" we’re right there with you.

But there are a whole lot of people around the world who do take their star signs and horoscopes seriously, and with more than 25 percent of respondents in this recent survey calling astrology "very scientific", there’s a big problem here.

Okay, so here's a bit of background first on wtf just happened.

There’s an educational page for kids run by NASA called Space Place, and it discusses how, some 3,000 years ago, the ancient Babylonians were keen sky-watchers, and thought that the changing positions of constellations throughout the year could be linked to certain behaviours or events on Earth.

And so they invented the zodiac - the circle of 12 constellations based on the apparent path that the Sun takes across an imagined celestial sphere over the course of the year.

"So, as Earth orbits the Sun, the Sun would appear to pass through each of the 12 parts of the zodiac," Space Place explains. "Since the Babylonians already had a 12-month calendar (based on the phases of the Moon), each month got a slice of the zodiac all to itself."


But seeing as this happened 3,000 years ago, things were a bit arbitrary, and for whatever reason, the Babylonians left a constellation out of their zodiac - Ophiuchus.

"Even then, some of the chosen 12 didn't fit neatly into their assigned slice of the pie and slopped over into the next one," says Space Place.

"To make a tidy match with their 12-month calendar, the Babylonians ignored the fact that the Sun actually moves through 13 constellations, not 12."
 
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