Some suggest water has its own memory
And what about being a being of life? Like Apsu,
perhaps an alligator, or a river monster?
And the leviathanic sea creature Tiamat!
Were they a pair prone to battle; or were they
like spiders, feeding on each other after the mating?
O Tiamat, she was chaos! Early Egyptians drew the
distinction between alligator and the behemothic hippo,
when they cursed Apophis, the conqueror-invader
from the North. Sumer, Egypt and the Indus Valley were
civilisations based around rivers. How do we
dispute that water begat known civilisation. Even as the first
deluge story goes that it didn’t rain cats and dogs;
but, in fact, the sluices of the earth had opened!
What is the difference between river water
and sea water. Each giving life to the other!
Or what is the difference between sky and sea,
if they were parted, one from the other, like old mythologies state.
Enki carved the world with his waterworks
and designed a creature that ate of knowledge.
Much later, Oannes, came from the sea to give the world
art, culture and law. When did Ouranos come,
then, with his Rta? You know that King Merovech was dually
conceived – of his father Chlodio and a sea monster;
the Quinotaur who shape-shifted and seduced his mother.
Mythology is not straightforward in stating it – but there are
dragon lineages in earth, fire, air and water. It runs as an inheritance
in our bloodstream to this day. In the old days, fire dragons fed on uranium
to enable them to breathe fire. The more recent Sapiens Man was
not made from clay! The dust and water that settled in a laboratory
test tube was Sapiens. That the Sapienta of Sapiens was knowledge –
not wisdom, nor intuition. His knowledge grew manifold in the Age of Pisces.
So, Saint Paul morphed from Sol Invictus to fish!
Who gave the Americas the laws of civilisation? Was Viracocca, who could
command the weather, a serpent-dragon of earth and air?
Was he a legacy of the Atlanteans? Did the crystal-seeking Atlanteans
(Titans) think water was their enemy? Only to be infiltrated
and deluged by it? What is the Mesopotamian legacy of Oannes (John)?
Was John the Baptist a river-water dragon?
Can we refute mythology as a fiction of disrepute?…
If only the stars could speak louder than their muted
whispers, in their timelessly wandering light?