• David Hudson: Farmer and Ormus

    This is a recording of David Hudson, who is a cotton farmer in Arizona who happened upon Ormus accidentally as a precipitate on his land. He has spent millions working with science labs to confirm it’s composition and attempted to obtain patents. I am not so aligned with his interest in Ormus. But it is… Continue Reading

  • Experiment With Ormus

    This is an interview with people who agreed to document their experience with Ormus, lead by the interviewer in the radio show with the filmmaker who made “All the Gold You Can Eat”. It is interesting as those who took it varied in terms of their background, but all were effected. Half way through, the… Continue Reading

  • All the Gold You Can Eat

    A new film/documentary on Ormus. Here is a link to the film’s site, where you can rent the film, or watch the trailer. Here is another link, to a radio interview with the filmmaker. Film’s Website: http://www.allthegoldyoucaneat.com/ Filmmaker’s Interview:

  • Glass 1.1 | Project

    I am bumping this project to the top of my notes, as I was reminded of it today; in particular how it relates to spin coherence and those who have worked with a newer element called Ormus: Posted a new project under Becoming Objects. Read the full description. Glass 1.1

  • Translucent Number 2

    The silence here is more meaningful and has more strength than a thousand hours spent trying to create meaning or a lifetime spent trying to construct an antidote for injustice. We live in these bodies. When they are strong they carry us across surfaces and vertical walls. And as we travel we forget everything except… Continue Reading

  • Interior

    “You seem all poetic and fragile to me this evening. And it’s just as though I can feel you imprisoned inside yourself, which fills me with anguish.” –Simone de Beauvoir, from Letters To Sartre

  • Memory, Poetry and Rising

    “And it is not yet enough to have memories. You must be able to forget them when they are many, and you must have the immense patience to wait until they return. For the memories themselves are not important. Only when they have changed into our very blood, into glance and gesture, and are nameless,… Continue Reading

  • Holding on Comes Easy

    “For this is wrong, if anything is wrong: not to enlarge the freedom of a love with all the inner freedom one can summon. We need, in love, to practice only this: letting each other go. For holding on comes easily; we do not need to learn it.” —Rainer Maria Rilke, from Selected Poems

  • Psychologist Behind U.S. Torture Program

    Link to an excellent short documentary on James Mitchell, the Airforce psychologist who helped design the advanced interrogation techniques which are now considered as torture. It is a rare face to face interview. Via Jeremy Scahill, on Twitter. https://news.vice.com/video/the-architect?utm_source=vicenewsfb