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What are you currently reading?
“The appalling thing in the French Revolution is not the tumult, but the design. Through all the fire and smoke we perceive the evidence of calculating organization.”—Lord Acton
This book is an invitation to the secret world behind the veil of daily events. In its pages you will meet the legendary Cagliostro and the Comte de Saint-Germain as they travel through the royal courts and Masonic lodges of eighteenth-century Europe, fomenting Revolution and working to overturn the social order of their day. Alchemists, magicians, Illuminati adepts, mystics, and Freemasons joined forces with politicians, journalists, scientists, writers, philosophers and libertines in a movement that forever altered the cultural landscape of Western civilization.
Inaugurating two centuries of revolution and upheaval, the French Revolution of 1789 put an end to the concept of the divine right of kings, led to the formal separation of church and state, destroyed the remnants of medieval feudalism, and heralded the values of the Enlightenment as the triumphant banner under which the modern world would be born. Yet it was accompanied by a level of violence whose ferocity spoke more of an exorcism than a political restructuring.
What lessons does the Revolution hold for us today? Do the forces of secret societies and silent conspiracies continue to influence the world?
Historian Una Birch’s classic account was originally published in 1911. Her proximity to and sympathy with the events offer a unique perspective. Secret society expert James Wasserman has made this work accessible to the modern reader with extensive annotations, a history of the Revolution, an introduction that places the Illuminati in context, and biographical sketches of the main participants.
* Highlights the secret activities of the Bavarian Illuminati and the Freemasonic lodges in organizing the French Revolution.
* Traces the influence of the mysterious Comte de Saint Germain as he traveled through the courts of Europe as an Illuminati agent.
* Offers a unique perspective on the Revolution by an author who supported the Illuminati war against Tyranny and Superstition, yet does not shrink from examining the darker side of that event.
* Will help the reader to understand the goals and methods of secret societies operating in the world today.
The Bavarian Illuminati have long been regarded as the secret society most responsible for the ideology and organization of the French Revolution in 1789. The Illuminati declared war against Church and State a decade earlier, and worked feverishly to spread their new gospel of Liberty and Reason. Although they were officially suppressed on the eve of the Revolution, their efforts appear not to have been in vain.
Illuminati recruiting efforts were focused on the powerful and influential — government ministers, educators, the press, authors and philosophers, booksellers and publishers, even religious leaders open to agnostic or atheist views. Many such men belonged to the Masonic lodges of Germany, Austria and France. The greatest success of the Illuminati conspiracy was the French Revolution. Its effects are felt to this day in the political destinies of millions of people. -(Studio31)
_________________
"Sacred Activism is the fusion of the mystic's passion for God with the activist's passion for justice, creating a third fire, which is the burning sacred heart that longs to help, preserve, and nurture every living thing." - Andrew Harvey

Khephra- Number of posts: 700
Age: 44
Registration date: 2008-08-11
Re: What are you currently reading?
Secret Societies: Illuminati, Freemasons and the French Revolution looks tasty. Do report back on how you enjoy it, won't you?
Here's what I'm currently digging into:
Here's what I'm currently digging into:
Inventor of the geodesic dome and the phrase "spaceship earth," Fuller reportedly once had an out-of-body experience in which a voice told him: "You do not belong to you. You belong to the Universe." The cocky, self-assured architect-engineer-poet-futurist, expelled twice from Harvard, who went on to shake the world with his technological innovations and vision of global unity, is brought down to earth in this absorbing biographical study. A lecturer-consultant specializing in Fuller's philosophy, Sieden here attempts to translate Fuller's ideas from the tech-guru's convoluted, jargon-laden style into accessible language. Though many of Fuller's major projects were commercial failures, Sieden succeeds in demonstrating how his search for Nature's underlying rules of harmony and efficiency is relevant to fields ranging from aviation and manufacturing technology to environmentalism, housing, parapsychology and extraterrestrial anthropology.

ankh_f_n_khonsu- Number of posts: 395
Registration date: 2008-09-16
Re: What are you currently reading?
ankh_f_n_khonsu wrote:Secret Societies: Illuminati, Freemasons and the French Revolution looks tasty. Do report back on how you enjoy it, won't you?
Wasserman occasionally takes positions I disagree with (e.g., The Slaves Shall Serve: Meditations on Liberty), but his editorializing was mostly limited to the appendices and his survey of the French Revolution was a decent enough introduction. Although he skipped many relevant factors, the survey serves its purpose competently.
Aside from those few editorial additions of Wasserman's, the remainder was made up of Birch's essays. Her family was intimately affected by the reign and fall of the Emperor, and she writes with authority. She first penned the text in the early 1900s, but aside from some zealous use of commas, it has aged quite well. She begins her discussion with the nature and influence of French Freemasonry and illuminism, then delves into their efforts at toppling the monarchy and provoking revolution. Next, there's a wonderful segment of biopics of relevant personages involved in the Revolution (e.g. Cagliostro, Louis Claude de Saint-Martin and the Count of St. Germain), before a provocative discussion on Madame de Staël's substantive role in toppling the Emperor.
I enjoyed it, but your mileage may vary.
_________________
"Sacred Activism is the fusion of the mystic's passion for God with the activist's passion for justice, creating a third fire, which is the burning sacred heart that longs to help, preserve, and nurture every living thing." - Andrew Harvey

Khephra- Number of posts: 700
Age: 44
Registration date: 2008-08-11
Re: What are you currently reading?
Where'd all the 'bibliophiles' go?

ankh_f_n_khonsu- Number of posts: 395
Registration date: 2008-09-16
Re: What are you currently reading?

Gnosticism was a wide-ranging religious movement of the first millennium ce?with earlier antecedents and later flourishing?whose adherents sought salvation through knowledge and personal religious experience. Gnostic writings offer striking perspectives on both early Christian and non-Christian thought. For example, some gnostic texts suggest that god should be celebrated as both mother and father, and the self-knowledge is the supreme path to the divine. Only in the past fifty years has it become clear how far the gnostic influence spread in ancient and medieval religions?and what a marvelous body of scriptures it produced.
This is the first time that such a rich and diverse collection of gnostic texts have been brought together in a single volume, in translations that allow the spirit of the original texts to shine. The selections gathered here, in poetic, readable translation, represent Jewish, Christian, Hermetic, Mandaean, Manichaean, Islamic, and Cathar expressions of gnostic spirituality. Their regions of origin include Egypt, the Greco-Roman world, the Middle East, Syria, Iraq, China, and France. Also included are introductions, notes, an extensive glossary, and a wealth of suggestions for further reading.
From Publishers Weekly
This book may well be the most comprehensive collection of Gnostic materials ever gathered in one volume. After a dry introduction to current debates about gnosticism (by Meyer) and a luminous, marvelously literary introduction to issues of translation (by Barnstone), the bulk of the text is taken up with primary sources, which are drawn from three continents and span an astonishing 13 centuries. These are helpfully organized into various schools of Gnostic tradition: Sethian, Valentinian, Syrian, Hermetic, Mandaean, Manichaean, and--in an unusual move--relatively late Islamic and Cathar texts. Each grouping of texts is preceded by a brief introduction to that particular section's brand of Gnosticism. What is clear from this sourcebook is the tremendous diversity of thought that exists under the "Gnostic" umbrella, including Christian, Jewish, Muslim, pagan, Zoroastrian and Greco-Roman themes. Many of the texts are being published here in English for the first time, making this a valuable resource for students and scholars.
Library Journal
Recommended for all libraries with an audience interested in religions, alternative spirituality, and early Christianity
About the Authors
Willis Barnstone, Ph.D., former O'Connor Professor of Greek at Colgate University, is Distinguished Professor of Comparative Literature and is in the Institute of Biblical and Literary Studies at Indiana University. A Guggenheim Fellow, poet, scholar, and memoirist, his many books include The Poetics of Translation, The Other Bible, The New Covenant, With Borges on an Ordinary Evening in Buenos Aires, Life Watch, and Border of a Dream: The Poems of Antonio Machado. He has received numerous awards for his work, among them the Emily Dickinson Award, the W. H. Auden Award, and a PEN/Book-of-the-Month-Club Special Citation for translation.
Marvin Meyer, Ph.D., is Griset Professor of Bible and Christian Studies at Chapman University, Orange, California, and is one of the foremost scholars of Coptic and gnostic studies at work today. He is Director of the Albert Schweitzer Institute, a fellow of the Jesus Seminar, and a Pacific Coast regional past president of the Society of Biblical Literature. He is the author of numerous books, including Ancient Christian Magic, The Gospel of Thomas, Secret Gospels, Jesus Then and Now, The Magical Book of Mary and the Angels, and The Ancient Mysteries. Dr. Meyer appears frequently in documentary television programs for ABC, BBC, A&E, and the History Channel.
Book Description
Gnosticism was a wide-ranging religious movement of the first millennium CE—with earlier antecedents and later flourishings—whose adherents sought salvation through knowledge and personal religious experience. Gnostic writings offer striking perspectives on both early Christian and non-Christian thought. For example, some gnostic texts suggest that god should be celebrated as both mother and father, and the self-knowledge is the supreme path to the divine. Only in the past fifty years has it become clear how far the gnostic influence spread in ancient and medieval religions—and what a marvelous body of scriptures it produced.
This is the first time that such a rich and diverse collection of gnostic texts have been brought together in a single volume, in translations that allow the spirit of the original texts to shine. The selections gathered here, in poetic, readable translation, represent Jewish, Christian, Hermetic, Mandaean, Manichaean, Islamic, and Cathar expressions of gnostic spirituality. Their regions of origin include Egypt, the Greco-Roman world, the Middle East, Syria, Iraq, China, and France. Also included are introductions, notes, an extensive glossary, and a wealth of suggestions for further reading.

Frater_NS- Number of posts: 51
Registration date: 2008-08-12
Re: What are you currently reading?
I've found The Gnostic Bible an indispensable addition to my home library! In combination with The Other Bible, there's oodles and oodles of yummy apocrypha! Some of the introductory essays can get a bit biased, but that's rather par for the course, I figure. 
_________________
"Sacred Activism is the fusion of the mystic's passion for God with the activist's passion for justice, creating a third fire, which is the burning sacred heart that longs to help, preserve, and nurture every living thing." - Andrew Harvey

Khephra- Number of posts: 700
Age: 44
Registration date: 2008-08-11
Re: What are you currently reading?
Like Larry Young, Warren Ellis has a fascination with space. That love is readily apparent in Orbiter, a graphic novel dedicated to our desire and need to travel beyond our own world. Following any disaster, NASA is faced with more than procedural concerns. The will of the public to spend money and risk lives in order to reach the stars becomes sapped. For those first few months following a tragedy, there's a very real possibility that space exploration could come to an end. Orbiter is part plea, part inspiration to fuel our dreams of space once more.
As Orbiter begins, the space program has in fact come to a close. Ten years prior, space shuttle Venture vanished following lift-off. It is the final straw that puts a quash on our journey beyond Heaven. Then Venture returns, coated in a veneer of skin, all but one crew member missing. Where has the shuttle been for ten years? How did it suddenly vanish? Where has is been? What happened to the rest of the crew? Ellis uses these questions and the answers to prompt a more important query: Why did we ever stop?
Orbiter is a little deceptive. The first quarter of the book might fool you into thinking this is Ellis' version of Event Horizon, a taught sci-fi thriller with a dark mystery at its core. That's not the case however. As a crack team of former space aces gather to examine the mysterious shuttle, we stay grounded. There are no alien attacks, no demons from hell to fear, not thrills. Instead, we watch as the team thinks out of the box to discover the remarkable truth behind Venture's departure. While this may come off as a bit of a let-down to some, Ellis managing to make each new discovery thrilling.
Ellis might just be the best comics writer we have at turning scientific jargon into easy reading and with Orbiter he's at his peak. Perhaps most surprising is that the normally cynical Ellis is quite optimistic, mixing practicality to flights of fancy. The choice to team up with A Distant Soil's Colleen Doran is a wise one. Her art helps ground some rather fantastical ideas in the real world, making Ellis' theories seem all the more plausible.
Orbiter isn't for everyone. Those looking for vulgarity and bloodshed will be disappointed. Dreamers and space cadets will be thrilled. (IGN)

ankh_f_n_khonsu- Number of posts: 395
Registration date: 2008-09-16
Re: What are you currently reading?
After years of waiting in line, I've finally pulled this off the shelf to give it a read:
Less than 50,000 years ago mankind had no art, no religion, no sophisticated symbolism, no innovative thinking. Then, in a dramatic and electrifying change, described by scientists as "the greatest riddle in human history," all the skills and qualities that we value most highly in ourselves appeared already fully formed, as though bestowed on us by hidden powers. In Supernatural Graham Hancock sets out to investigate this mysterious "before-and-after moment" and to discover the truth about the influences that gave birth to the modern human mind.
Hancock's quest takes him on a detective journey from the stunningly beautiful painted caves of prehistoric France, Spain, and Italy to rock shelters in the mountains of South Africa, where he finds extraordinary Stone Age art. He uncovers clues that lead him to the depths of the Amazon rainforest to drink the powerful hallucinogen Ayahuasca with shamans, whose paintings contain images of "super-natural beings" identical to the animal-human hybrids depicted in prehistoric caves. Hallucinogens such as mescaline also produce visionary encounters with exactly the same beings.
Scientists at the cutting edge of consciousness research have begun to consider the possibility that such hallucinations may be real perceptions of other "dimensions." Could the "supernaturals" first depicted in the painted caves be the ancient teachers of mankind? Could it be that human evolution is not just the "meaningless" process that Darwin identified, but something more purposive and intelligent that we have barely begun to understand?
_________________
"Sacred Activism is the fusion of the mystic's passion for God with the activist's passion for justice, creating a third fire, which is the burning sacred heart that longs to help, preserve, and nurture every living thing." - Andrew Harvey

Khephra- Number of posts: 700
Age: 44
Registration date: 2008-08-11
Yoga of Power
I am currently trying to penetrate one of the most comprehensive books on tantric philosophy in the western world.


The Yoga of Power
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Yoga of Power: Tantra, Shakti, and the Secret Way is a book by Julius Evola. First published in Italian as Lo Yoga Della Potenza: Saggio sui Tantra in 1949. It was translated into English in 1992 by Guido Stucco (who includes a biographical introduction to Evola), and published by Inner Traditions International (ISBN 0-89281-368-7).
An interest in yoga (especially Kundalini) led Evola to write L’uomo e la potenza (Man as power) in 1926 (revised in 1949 with the new title The Yoga of Power).
Table of Contents
▪ Translator's Acknowledgments
▪ Translator's Introduction
1. The Meaning and Origin of the Tantras
2. Knowledge and Power
3. Shakti: The World as Power
4. The Doctrine of the Tattvas: The Human Condition
5. Pashu, Vira, and Divya: The Path of the Left Hand
6. The Assumptions behind Practice and the Means Employed - The Experience of the Subtle Body: The Bodily Postures
7. The Virgin: Release from Bondage
8. The Evocations: The Names of Power
9. The Secret Ritual - The Use of Orgies: Initiatory Sexual Magic
10. The Occult Corporeity - The Serpent Power: The Chakras
11. Techniques Employed to Awaken the Serpent Power
12. The Diamond-Thunderbolt Body
▪ Conclusion
▪ Appendix One - Bardo: Actions after Death
▪ Appendix Two - Shaktism and the Worshiipers of Love
▪ Glossary
▪ Endnotes
▪ Index

Belzebez- Number of posts: 4
Registration date: 2009-04-06
Re: What are you currently reading?
Belzebez wrote:I am currently trying to penetrate one of the most comprehensive books on tantric philosophy in the western world.
I've heard good things about that text... hopefully you'll post some impressions after finishing it.
Following digest #25, I'm delving into One: The Grimoire of the Golden Toad:

It is the first full grimoire-text to treat specifically and from personal account of the Traditional East Anglian ritual called 'The Waters of the Moon': the solitary initiation of the so-called 'Toad-witch'. The textualisation of this magical process was, in this unique instance, undertaken as an extension of the ritual itself - a perfection of its cycle of arcana to a point of individual crystallisation.

ankh_f_n_khonsu- Number of posts: 395
Registration date: 2008-09-16
Re: What are you currently reading?
really enjoying this...

BACK COVER #
This mesmerizing, surreal account of the bizarre adventures of Terence McKenna, his brother Dennis, and a small band of their friends, is a wild ride of exotic experience and scientific inquiry. Exploring the Amazon Basin in search of mythical shamanic hallucinogens, they encounter a host of unusual characters -- including a mushroom, a flying saucer, pirate Mantids from outer space, an appearance by James and Nora Joyce in the guise of poultry, and translinguistic matter--and discover the missing link in the development of human consciousness and language.
From Publishers Weekly
In 1971 ethnobotanist McKenna ( The Archaic Revival ), his brother Dennis and three friends boated to a town in Amazonian Colombia, seeking a hallucinogenic plant that enables the Witoto tribe to talk to elf-like "little men." In psychedelicized ravings interspersed with diary excerpts, McKenna records their experiences after ingesting mind-altering mushrooms and other psychoactive plants. A flying saucer slowly flew over McKenna's head; he calls it a "holographic mirage" of a future technology. Dennis had a revelation about a "psychofluid" that pervades the universe. McKenna flashes forward to Hawaii in 1975 where mantis-like creatures from hyperspace attack his lover, and flashes back to his tantric lovemaking in Tibet and to Indonesia where unrepentant Nazi scientists tried to recruit him in 1970. He posits the existence of a particle of time, the chronon , which conditions matter.

BACK COVER #
This mesmerizing, surreal account of the bizarre adventures of Terence McKenna, his brother Dennis, and a small band of their friends, is a wild ride of exotic experience and scientific inquiry. Exploring the Amazon Basin in search of mythical shamanic hallucinogens, they encounter a host of unusual characters -- including a mushroom, a flying saucer, pirate Mantids from outer space, an appearance by James and Nora Joyce in the guise of poultry, and translinguistic matter--and discover the missing link in the development of human consciousness and language.
From Publishers Weekly
In 1971 ethnobotanist McKenna ( The Archaic Revival ), his brother Dennis and three friends boated to a town in Amazonian Colombia, seeking a hallucinogenic plant that enables the Witoto tribe to talk to elf-like "little men." In psychedelicized ravings interspersed with diary excerpts, McKenna records their experiences after ingesting mind-altering mushrooms and other psychoactive plants. A flying saucer slowly flew over McKenna's head; he calls it a "holographic mirage" of a future technology. Dennis had a revelation about a "psychofluid" that pervades the universe. McKenna flashes forward to Hawaii in 1975 where mantis-like creatures from hyperspace attack his lover, and flashes back to his tantric lovemaking in Tibet and to Indonesia where unrepentant Nazi scientists tried to recruit him in 1970. He posits the existence of a particle of time, the chronon , which conditions matter.

Frater Feeze Fissile- Number of posts: 7
Age: 35
Location: Gulf Coast US
Registration date: 2009-04-07
Rev Psych
Revolutionary Psychology
by Samael Aun Weor

This book is a wonderful introduction to an ancient teaching present in all Authentic Esoteric Traditions. In it Samael Aun Weor gives the foundation for the Esoteric Work (which is: the 'Work upon Oneself') in a format that is easy to read and digest.
The chapters are brief, but the subject matter is profound. This book offers us an opportunity to take a journey into the interior of ourselves: to see the secret causes of all our thoughts feelings and actions. With this knowledge, we can begin our exploration and observation of ourselves which is how we acquire Knowledge of Ourselves:
This knowledge is called GNOSIS.
by Samael Aun Weor

This book is a wonderful introduction to an ancient teaching present in all Authentic Esoteric Traditions. In it Samael Aun Weor gives the foundation for the Esoteric Work (which is: the 'Work upon Oneself') in a format that is easy to read and digest.
The chapters are brief, but the subject matter is profound. This book offers us an opportunity to take a journey into the interior of ourselves: to see the secret causes of all our thoughts feelings and actions. With this knowledge, we can begin our exploration and observation of ourselves which is how we acquire Knowledge of Ourselves:
"The starting point of official science, in its practical side, is the observable. The starting point for the work on oneself is self-observation, the self-observable... The type of knowledge that transforms someone internally can never be achieved through external observation."
This knowledge is called GNOSIS.

rickyrick- Number of posts: 18
Registration date: 2008-08-18
Re: What are you currently reading?
Weor was an interesting character, and his highly syncretic versions of esotericism seem to be gaining in popularity among North American audiences. Do you have previous experience with his brand of "gnosticism"?

ankh_f_n_khonsu- Number of posts: 395
Registration date: 2008-09-16
Re: What are you currently reading?
This volume introduces what has sometimes been called "the third component of western culture." It traces the historical development of those religious traditions which have rejected a world view based on the primacy of pure rationality or doctrinal faith, emphasizing instead the importance of inner enlightenment or gnosis: a revelatory experience which was typically believed to entail an encounter with one's true self as well as with the ground of being, God.
The contributors to this book demonstrate this perspective as fundamental to a variety of interconnected traditions. In Antiquity, one finds the gnostics and hermetics; in the Middle Ages several Christian sects. The medieval Cathars can, to a certain extent, be considered part of the same tradition. Starting with the Italian humanist Renaissance, hermetic philosophy became of central importance to a new religious synthesis that can be referred to as Western Esotericism." The development of this tradition is described from Renaissance hermeticists and practitioners of spiritual alchemy to the emergence of Rosicrucianism and Christian theosophy in the seventeenth century, and from post-enlightenment aspects of Romanticism and occultism to the present-day New Age movement.
Featuring:
Roelofvan den Broek, "Gnosticism and Hermetism in Antiquity: Two Roads to Salvation"
Jean Pierre Mahé, "Gnostic and Hermetic Ethics"
Johannes van Oort, "Manichaeism: Its Sources and Influences on Western Christianity"
Jan Helderman, "A Christian Gnostic Text: The Gospel of Truth"
Gilles Quispel, "The Asclepius: From the Hermetic Lodge in Alexandria to the Greek Eucharist and the Roman Mass"
Jean Pierre Mahé, "A Reading of the Discourse on the Ogdoad and the Ennead (Nag Hammadi Codex VI.6)"
Roelof van den Broek, "The Cathars: Medieval Gnostics?"
Antoine Faivre, "Renaissance Hermeticism and the Concept of Western Esotericism"
Cees Leijenhorst, "Francesco Patrizi's Hermetic Philosophy"
Karen Claire Voss, "Spiritual Alchemy: Interpreting Representative Texts and Images"
Joscelyn Godwin, "Music and the Hermetic Tradition"
Roland Edighoffer, "Hermeticism in Early Rosicrucianism"
Arthyr Versluis, "Christian Theosophic Literature of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries"
Wouter J. Hanegraaff, "Romanticism and the Esoteric Connection"
Jos van Meurs, "William Blake and His Gnostic Myths"
Daniël van Egmond, "Western Esoteric Schools in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries"
Soscelyn Godwin, "Stockhausen's Donnerstag aus Licht and Gnosticism"
Wouter J. Hanegraaf, "The New Age Movement and the Esoteric Tradition"
See here for the Google Books version.

ankh_f_n_khonsu- Number of posts: 395
Registration date: 2008-09-16
Re: What are you currently reading?

THE TREASURY OF KNOWLEDGE Book Eight, Part Three: The Elements of Tantric Practice
The Elements of Tantric Practice sets forth the essential components of the path of highest yoga tantra, a system of meditation that unites wisdom and compassion in its two phases of practice. The first phase, that of creation, relies primarily on the use of the imagination to effect personal transformation. The phase of completion allows the practitioner to perfect the process of transformation by training in methods that manipulate the energies and constituents of the mind and body. The result of this path is the direct experience of the fundamental nature of mind and phenomena.
The Elements of Tantric Practice concerns the meditative processes of the inner system of secret mantra--that of highest yoga tantra--and is based primarily on tantric sources. The author introduces the subject by describing the path of tantra and its underlying principles. The main body of the book deals with two major elements essential to all highest yoga tantras: the practice of the creation phase and that of the completion phase.
For the first phase, Kongtrul describes the visualization sequences in which ordinary perceptions are transformed into the forms of awakening, and explains how these practices purify the stages of cyclic existence---life, death, and rebirth. The creation phase prepares the practitioner for the techniques of the completion phase, which entail focusing directly on the channels, winds, and vital essences that form the subtle body.
Kongtrul presents the key elements of a variety of tantras, including the Guhyasamaja and Yamari, belonging to the class of father tantras, and the Kalachakra, Hevajra, Chakrasamvara, Mahamaya, Buddhakapala, and Tara, mother tantras. All these tantras share a common goal: to make manifest the pristine awareness that is the union of emptiness and bliss. Together these practices constitute, in Kongtrul's words, "a magnificent tradition composed of teachings explicitly set forth in the tantras...cherished by scholars and siddhas of [ancient] India who achieved total realization by relying on it."
More info at SnowLion Publications

amandachen- Number of posts: 76
Location: back in a month - medical problems
Registration date: 2008-08-15
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