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All I can say is: The fae want their children returned. - The children would be humanity.
All I can say is: The fae want their children returned. - The children would be humanity.
(All I can say is: The fae want their children returned. - The children would be humanity. -- nobodyspecial)
If true, that is a bold concept to consider (especially in regards to both ancient and modern history).
If your Woman in Green or one of the other fairies ever took the time to talk to me, and indulge my questions, the first thing I would ask is “why haven’t they acted and returned their children yet?”
They seem to have had plenty of time and resources to restore the fairy-human connection.
Let us use the deluge as a primary references point, and assume the deluge correlates with Meltwater pulse 1B, hypothesized to have occurred between 11,500 and 11,200 years ago. The impression I have is the fairy-human connection deteriorated during antediluvian times, meaning atleast 11,200 years ago.
With that much time to have passed, and with the abilities they have (what I could do with a small army who could create portals, move freely between the materialistic universe and the Absolute/fae realm, and shape-shift…), how could such a force not be able to do what they want?
What’s stopping them from acting to have humanity returned to them?
Unlike many empire builders, Genghis Khan embraced the diversity of his newly conquered territories. He passed laws declaring religious freedom for all and even granted tax exemptions to places of worship. This tolerance had a political side—the Khan knew that happy subjects were less likely to rebel—but the Mongols also had an exceptionally liberal attitude towards religion.
While Genghis and many others subscribed to a shamanistic belief system that revered the spirits of the sky, winds and mountains, the Steppe peoples were a diverse bunch that included Nestorian Christians, Buddhists, Muslims and other animistic traditions.
The Great Khan also had a personal interest in spirituality. He was known to pray in his tent for multiple days before important campaigns, and he often met with different religious leaders to discuss the details of their faiths. In his old age, he even summoned the Taoist leader Qiu Chuji to his camp, and the pair supposedly had long conversations on immortality and philosophy.
Source: History.com: ten things you may not know about Genghis Khan
Nestorianism, Christian sect that originated in Asia Minor and Syria stressing the independence of the divine and human natures of Christ and, in effect, suggesting that they are two persons loosely united.
The schismatic sect formed following the condemnation of Nestorius and his teachings by the ecumenical councils of Ephesus (431 CE) and Chalcedon (451 CE).
Source: Britannica
Lastly and most importantly for people looking for some form of official confirmation of fae-like entities existing - on page 27, you will see the author listed a very interesting conclusion:
individuals doing this process should "be intellectually prepared to react to possible encounters with intelligent, non-corporal energy forms when time-space boundaries are exceeded."
I urge the reader of this to look at who this analysis and assessment was written for... If that doesn't sound like at least some form of official acknowledgement of fae-like entities, then I don't know what does.
It does make me wonder if the resets of the past, such as that of Genghis Khan and other major conquests in history that destroyed significant knowledge deposits, were preemptive strikes by the fae to limit man’s threat OR were they preemptive strikes by a human element wanting to limit/conceal certain knowledge.
Imagine if the "racket" of war that General Smedley Butler described (ratical.org...) was not about money, but about controlling/limiting access to the Absolute (and by extension, limiting access to the fae). Just a thought that's fun to ponder if nothing else.
wow thats interesting , i cant even imagine seeing one let alone a conversation