electric-wonder:

bloodgarden:

valkania:

Russian art student Peter Pavlesnkiy wrapped himself in barbed wire. The confused policemen attempted to untangle and remove him from the public square — first by putting a blanket to hide the horror, then with wire cutters. The protestor was gashed and cut by the self-imposed net.
‘The action symbolises man’s existence in a repressive legal system, where any movement causes severe reaction by the Law as it bites into the body of the individual’

In love with the symbolism behind this

ihavenohonor:

A TABLE OF SEPHIROTHIC CORRESPONDENCES, From Fludd’s Collectio Operum.

The diagram has been specially translated from the Latin as being of unique value to students of Qabbalism and also as an example of Robert Fludd’s unusual ability in assembling tables of correspondences. Robert Fludd ranks among the most eminent Rosicrucians and Freemasons; in fact, he has often been called “the first English Rosicrucian.“ He has written several valuable documents directly bearing upon the Rosicrucian enigma. It is significant that the most important of his works should be published at the same time as those of Bacon, Shakespeare, and the first Rosicrucian authors.

TAKEN FROM: The Tree of the Sephiroth, THE SECRET TEACHINGS OF ALL AGES by Manly P. Hall

holy-mountaineering:

The Rites of Eleusis were a series of seven public invocations or rites written by Aleister Crowley, each centered on one of the seven classical planets of antiquity. They were dramatically performed by Aleister Crowley, Leila Waddell (Laylah), and Victor Benjamin Neuburg in October and November, 1910, at Caxton Hall, London. This act brought Crowley’s occult organization the A∴A∴ into the public eye.

scrollofthoth:

Made a new cover for Of Little Faith. It still sucks, but not as bad as the last one.

You can get it for free on Smashwords and Kobo.

Of Little Faith

The old gods are returning, or have they always been here?

Odin wakes to the call of a dying warrior crying out to be taken to Valhalla. Roused from his centuries of slumber, the All-Father wanders the Earth until he finds gods old and new. Do they have the answers he seeks? How does an ancient god of war find his place in the modern world?

A musing on the nature of religion and spirituality. We may no longer need a patriarch, but do we need to rediscover our divinities?

James L. Wilber is a writer, game designer, and ceremonial magician. Find out about more of his works at jameslwilber.com.

My Babylon, his serial novel about the occult and dark desire is coming to Kobo July 30th.