• Palantír, Power, and the Antichrist: Peter Thiel’s Secret Theology of Control
    Mar 18 2026

    Part three of the Great BASH series profiles Peter Thiel as a systems architect who fuses Girardian diagnosis, Schmittian politics, transhumanist immortality projects, and Opus Dei networks—while delivering closed lectures in Rome on the Antichrist and sponsoring surveillance infrastructure (Palantir) named after Tolkien’s seeing‑stones (made by the "antichrist" figure in the stories).

    The episode traces his intellectual formation and political investments, exposes the Palantir contradiction and the orange‑ray theological wound behind his refusal to surrender to death, and shows how secrecy and curated power risk fulfilling the very apocalyptic threats he warns about.

    As a remedy, the post presents five contemplative counter‑voices—Richard Rohr, Cynthia Bourgeault, Barbara Holmes, Brian McLaren, and Mirabai Starr—offering inward practice, restraint, and open authority as the alternative orientation the density transition requires.

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    46 mins
  • Karma as the Law of Responsibility: A Raian Process Perspective
    Mar 18 2026

    Karma as the Law of Responsibility Building 4th Gathering | March 17, 2026

    What if karma isn't punishment — and isn't even a scorecard? In this episode, Doug Scott, MA, MSW, LCSW presents a framework drawn from the Ra Material and his own Raian Process Metaphysics that redefines karma as inertia — the simple physics of consciousness in motion — and connects it to what Ra calls the Law of Responsibility.

    The presentation begins with Ra's striking definition from Session 34.4: karma is inertia, and forgiveness is the brake. The two concepts are inseparable. From there, Doug traces the Latin etymology of responsibility — re-spondere, "to pledge back" — revealing that responsibility is not burden but response-ability: the growing capacity to answer the Creator's eternal calling embedded in every being's nature.

    Using his Law of Three framework (what he calls teleopotentiation), Doug maps the karmic dynamic onto three forces: the Original Desire as the Affirming Force — the Creator seeking to know itself through us; the Veil of Forgetting as the Denying Force — the necessary resistance that makes genuine choice and growth possible; and Responsibility as the Reconciling Force — the conscious holding of tension between calling and constraint that produces genuine transformation. When that tension goes unresolved, karmic inertia rolls forward. When forgiveness — for-giefan, Old English for "giving away completely" — is applied, the wheel stops.

    The community discussion that follows is wide-ranging and deeply personal. Participants explore forgiveness as the recognition of shared divinity, the Vedic distinction between mutable and immutable karma, the connection between Jung's shadow complex and karmic inertia, and the clinical principle that forgiveness does not equal approval. Doug shares a personal story of being scammed during COVID and the conscious choice to forgive. Others offer stories of family reconciliation, the practice of compassionate imagination in everyday frustrations, and the contemplative insight that karma may perpetuate through our attachment to doership — and that true release may involve surrendering the illusion of separate agency altogether.

    The evening closes with a quiet recognition: the brake is always available. Right here. Right now.

    Topics covered: Ra's definition of karma (Session 34.4) — The Law of Responsibility and its etymology — The veil of forgetting as essential resistance — Teleopotentiation and the Law of Three — The knowing-without-doing gap — Forgiveness as metaphysical brake — Shadow work and karmic patterns — Vedic perspectives on mutable and immutable karma — Forgiveness as radical acceptance — The relationship between doership and karmic perpetuation

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    57 mins
  • The Chlorophyll of Karma
    Mar 17 2026

    Karma as Inertia, Not Punishment

    The central reframing Tim offers is that karma is not a ledger of debts to be paid but a form of spiritual inertia — actions set in motion that continue until a higher principle intervenes. Drawing from Ra's definition in Session 34.4, karma is presented as momentum that persists until the "braking force" of forgiveness is consciously applied. This reframes the karmic process from something punitive into something almost mechanical — a kind of spiritual physics awaiting transformation.

    Forgiveness as the Stopping Principle

    The discussion circles repeatedly around forgiveness as the means by which karmic inertia is halted. Forgiveness here is not a sentimental gesture but a developmental achievement — the natural fruit of grief fully processed, of consciousness brought to bear on what was previously unconscious. One participant raises the question of whether forgiveness can ever be unconscious, and the group converges on the view that it must involve conscious response — aligning it with what another participant frames as the law of responsibility, where responsibility itself means "the duty to respond."

    The Photosynthesis Metaphor

    Tim develops an extended analogy between karma and photosynthesis. Just as chlorophyll absorbs light energy and can create blockages, so too do our energy centers absorb experience. But photosynthesis transforms that absorbed energy into something life-giving. The invitation is to see karmic processing not as the shedding of burdens but as the transmutation of experience into spiritual nourishment — CO₂ becoming glucose, suffering becoming wisdom, catalyst becoming love.

    The Unavoidability of Engagement

    Through the banana metaphor, Tim explores the paradox that action generates karma, yet inaction — the banana left to rot on the counter — is itself a form of failure. The sunflower does not hide from the carbon dioxide surrounding it; it metabolizes it. Avoidance is not harmlessness. True ahimsa (harmlessness), Tim suggests, is expressed not through withdrawal but through love-saturated engagement with the world.

    Individual and Collective Karma

    The discussion expands from personal karma to collective responsibility. If a nation commits acts of violence, do its citizens bear karmic weight? Tim raises this directly in relation to current military actions, and the question remains deliberately open. The implication, however, is that entanglement is inescapable — we are all woven into the collective knot — and our response to that entanglement is itself the karmic work.

    Shadow Work and Identity Release

    One participant shares a personal account of processing childhood shadow material — discovering that a wounded inner child had fused its identity with the story of victimhood. The healing came in two stages: first, simply sitting with and accepting the wounded part (rather than immediately trying to fix it), and second, releasing the attachment to the victim identity itself. This testimony grounds the evening's more abstract discussion in lived inner work, illustrating that karmic processing is not theoretical but deeply embodied.

    The Angulimala Story: Redemption Through Return

    Tim concludes with the Buddhist story of Angulimala — the murderer who, upon encountering the Buddha, undergoes a sudden awakening and is sent back to serve the very community he devastated. The story encapsulates the evening's core themes: that no karmic burden is beyond redemption, that transformation requires facing what one has become, and that the deepest healing often emerges from the most broken places. The detail that Angulimala becomes the patron saint of childbirth carries a poetic resonance — the one who took life becomes associated with its most vulnerable beginning.

    Grief as the Central Processing Unit

    A participant with a background in psychiatry offers a model of grief as the foundational emotional process through which karmic material is metabolized. The grief cycle — from shattered expectations through anger, sadness, and a "tomb phase" of reorganization — culminates in the capacity for forgiveness. This maps onto the evening's larger framework: forgiveness is not the starting point but the harvest of a long interior journey, and when the grief process is derailed into bitterness or hopelessness, unprocessed karma carries forward.

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    50 mins
  • Terra’s Autoimmune Crisis: When One World Attacks Itself
    Mar 16 2026

    This episode offers a bold diagnosis: humanity behaves like a single organism whose unresolved wounds have become autoimmune — attacking its own tissue. Drawing on genetics, history, and a spiritual map of development, it argues that many conflicts (notably the Israeli–Palestinian crisis) reflect deep intertwinings of ancestry and trauma rather than absolute separation.

    It reads current politics as symptoms — American dominance culture, Israeli survival anxiety, and Iranian resistance — showing how real wounds get captured by leaders who weaponize identity. The result is a cycle where fear hardens into policy and hostility becomes a source of meaning.

    The remedy proposed isn’t naïve pacifism but a shift toward heart-centered discernment: to resist harm without becoming the same consciousness that produces it, to recognize the other as part of the same body, and to choose service over domination even under pressure.

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    15 mins
  • The Great BASH and the Orange-Ray Shadow at a Human Threshold
    Mar 12 2026

    Something bigger than politics is unfolding: escalating rhetoric, territorial grabs, economic shocks, and large-scale military strikes. Using the Law of One and a chakra-based model of human development, this episode frames our moment as a liminal passage from third to fourth density, where unresolved identity wounds (orange ray) are being amplified by emerging heart-centered energies—producing what the host calls the Great BASH: Bellicose Attitude, Aggressive Actions, Scarred and Scared, and Hope through Hostility.

    The episode argues that healing begins with clear-eyed diagnosis and personal work: refusing the myth of redemptive violence, doing the foundational orange-ray work of self-knowledge and shadow integration, and practicing recognition instead of retaliation—offering Francis of Assisi’s example as a model for encountering the other without becoming what we oppose.

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    16 mins
  • The Jesus Prayer: Efficacy and Metaphysics
    Mar 5 2026

    In this episode, community member Troy Caldwell — a retired psychiatrist with decades of training in spiritual direction — presents on the Jesus Prayer as a practice of contemplative recollection. Originally prepared for a spiritual formation class at his church, this teaching invites us into one of the oldest and most widely practiced forms of Christian meditation.

    Troy begins by distinguishing petition from contemplation: where petition asks God for things, contemplative prayer is simply about being with God — and allowing that proximity to transform us. The still point, drawn from T.S. Eliot's Four Quartets, is the inner axis of the soul: the place where the ego's striving falls quiet and the living water of God's presence can be found.

    The Jesus Prayer — Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner — has been used continuously for over 1,500 years in Eastern Christian traditions. Troy walks us through its technique (breath-synchronized repetition, gentle return from distraction), its biblical roots (the blind beggar Bartimaeus, the parable of the tax collector), and a careful unpacking of its words. Sinner means one who has missed the mark — a person in need, not a condemned person. Mercy translates from the Hebrew chesed — steadfast love, covenant faithfulness, enduring kindness.

    The group practices three minutes of the Jesus Prayer together, then opens into shared reflection. Members describe varied relationships to the prayer's language, adaptations that have made it their own, and the consistent experience of being carried to stillness — a drop from head to heart where something larger than the self moves through.

    The Law of One is woven in: Yehoshua carries the meaning "the Whole incarnates as a particular," and Ra's teaching in Session 10.14 provides the metaphysical complement — "The moment contains love. That is the lesson/goal of this illusion. The exercise is to consciously seek that love in awareness." The mercy asked for in the Jesus Prayer is precisely this: eyes opened to the wholeness already present.

    The episode closes with a discussion of sin, separation, and paradox. If sin is the active reinforcement of the illusion of separation — and if separation itself is the necessary condition for the experience of return — then both the fall and the recovery, as Julian of Norwich saw, are expressions of divine mercy. The opportunity for wholeness is always available. Every catalyst is an invitation to choose it.

    "The moment contains love." — Ra, 10.14

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    42 mins
  • One Seeker's Perspective on Ra's Notion of Simultaneous Time
    Feb 4 2026

    Episode: Simultaneous Time Presenter: DeMarcus December 16, 2025

    The Eternal Present

    What if the past isn't gone and the future hasn't yet to arrive—but both exist right now, accessible from this very moment?

    In this Ra Contact Night presentation, DeMarcus guides us through one of the Law of One's most mind-bending concepts: the simultaneous nature of time. Moving from the macro scale of the Creator's experience down to the intimate terrain of our personal lives, he explores how the illusion of linear time serves as a deliberate construction—a container created by the Logos so that the Infinite might experience itself through focused, sequential unfolding.

    We examine how higher density beings navigate time as freely as we navigate space, how the higher self operates from what we would call our future while remaining available in the eternal present, and how probability/possibility vortices branch endlessly from each moment of choice. The conversation turns practical as DeMarcus shares how engaging with these concepts has opened access to forgotten memories and dreams that later manifest in waking life.

    The group wrestles with the paradox at the heart of this teaching: How does the Creator learn if everything already exists? How do free will and determinism coexist? Nathan offers a striking analogy using AI to describe how the mind/body/spirit complex totality renders all parallel lives simultaneously, while Doug explores how the higher self might receive our experience in wholeness even as we live it moment by moment.

    Films like Interstellar and Arrival are recommended as experiential portals into these concepts that language struggles to convey.

    As Ra reminds us: "The seeming contradictions of determinism and free will melt when it is accepted that there is such a thing as true simultaneity."

    Key Topics:

    • The eternal present and the Creator's 360-degree access to all experience
    • Why third density alone experiences time linearly
    • The higher self, mind/body/spirit complex totality, and life programming
    • Parallel existences and crossover between incarnations
    • Why time seems to speed up as we age
    • Practical applications: quantum leaping and engaging the past

    Ra Material References: Sessions 13, 16, 36, 70, 82

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    56 mins
  • Mystery-Clad Being: The Primal Rhythm of Being and the Heart of all Reality
    Feb 4 2026
    Mystery-Clad Being The Primal Rhythm of Being and the Heart of All Reality by Doug Scott, LCSW I. The Nature of Mystery We have just heard [previous presenter] speak beautifully about the theme of mystery. I want to build on that foundation with a particular question: What is the nature of the mystery that we are exploring? Mystery is not that which cannot be known. Mystery is that which can never be exhausted in all the ways of knowing. It is infinitely knowable—which means we can spend eternity exploring it and never arrive at complete comprehension. Not because it withholds itself from us, but because it is inexhaustible in its richness. This is a crucial distinction. Mystery is not ignorance. It is not a wall we cannot penetrate. Mystery is an ocean we can swim in forever, each stroke revealing new depths, new currents, new wonders. The fullness of mystery—what we might call gnosis—is not a destination we arrive at but a horizon that recedes as we approach, always inviting us further. Ra describes this with precise language when speaking of the fundamental rhythms of intelligent infinity: "The basic rhythms of intelligent infinity are totally without distortion of any kind. The rhythms are clothed in mystery, for they are being itself." (27.7) Clothed in mystery. Not hidden by mystery. Clothed in it—the way a body is clothed, the way we wear our appearance. Mystery is not what conceals being from us. Mystery is being, wearing its own inexhaustibility. So tonight I want to ask: If being itself is clothed in mystery, can we nonetheless discern something of its shape? Its flow? Its fundamental rhythm? Can we, while honoring the inexhaustibility, trace patterns that appear consistently across Ra's teachings—patterns that might illuminate something primal about the nature of reality itself? II. Being as Verb: Does It Have a Shape? Notice that Ra says the rhythms are being itself. Not that being has rhythms. Not that being does rhythms. The rhythms are being. This is being as verb, not as noun. Not a thing that exists, but existence itself as dynamic, self-processing oscillation. What does Ra tell us about the shape of this rhythm? In Session 27.6, we find a remarkable description: "Intelligent infinity has a rhythm, or flow, as of a giant heart beginning with the Central Sun... the presence of the flow inevitable as a tide of beingness without polarity, without finity; the vast and silent all beating outward, outward, focusing outward and inward until the focuses are complete. The intelligence or consciousness of foci have reached a state where their, shall we say, spiritual nature or mass calls them inward, inward, inward until all is coalesced. This is the rhythm of reality." A giant heart. Beating outward, outward... then inward, inward, inward until all is coalesced. This is the shape of being itself: a circulation. Not linear progression, not random chaos, but rhythmic circulation—emanation and return, expansion and coalescence, systole and diastole. III. The Primal Desire: Joy Seeking to Know Itself But why? Why does being beat outward and then inward? What drives the circulation? Ra gives us the answer in the most fundamental teaching of all: "The Creator will know Itself" (27.8). This is the First Distortion, the primal movement from undifferentiated unity toward manifestation. Not "wants to know" as if lacking something—but will, an active, ongoing, generative drive. Here is the crucial insight: This desire is not experienced as lack. It is experienced as Joy. The Creator's desire to know Itself is not a hunger born of deficiency but a fullness seeking to express and discover itself through infinite perspectives. Joy is the fundamental affective quality of being itself. And this Joy can only be fulfilled through experience. The Creator cannot know Itself through static contemplation. Self-knowing requires circulation—going forth into differentiated expression and returning enriched by what the journey has gathered. This means experience is circulation. The going forth and the returning are not separate from experience—they are experience itself in its most fundamental form. IV. The Heart as Locus of Circulation If experience is circulation, and circulation has a pattern—outward, inward, coalescence—then we can ask: Is there a center to this circulation? Is there a locus where the three movements meet? Ra speaks directly to this in Session 82.7: "There is a center to infinity. From this center all spreads. Therefore, there are centers to the creation, to the galaxies, to star systems, to planetary systems, and to consciousness. In each case you may see growth from the center outward." A center from which all spreads. This is the ontological definition of a heart—not merely an organ that pumps blood, not merely a chakra that processes emotion, but the locus of circulation itself. Wherever being localizes—whether as universe, galaxy, star, planet, or person—there exists...
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    46 mins