Movie implies "moving pictures" aka captured moments artificially moved to distract the viewer from natural momentum.
That's how a movie occults the force of nature within the mind of each watcher.
The way they're using...logos
Logos/logic/reason can only be shaped within natures way of procession. The latter moves linear; the former circular.
blindfold
Folding implies "to yield to pressure"...being implies expression (life) within impression (inception towards death). Yielding to pressure implies suicide.
It's natural impression (perceivable inspiration) which gives sight to each beings expression (perception shaping perspective)...others tempt ones consent to fold suggested information until ones sight becomes blinded.
initiation
Inception implies the initiation of life into the process of dying...an internal separation of potential within procession aka an analysis.
Few invert initiation by tempting one to join in synthesis aka using a masonic joint, and suggested information as mortar, to brick consensus among many.
one pant leg up
What's a leg up? An aid (war-time tax) and a boost (push from behind) aka "Here's your burden to carry; now march and fight".
There's gonna be some "who knows what" going on in this shit. Like, what do you think they put in there. Who knows, but betcha sacrificed kids were involved. lol. Adrenochrome or some shit.
===================================
Watching a freemasonry initiation video. He came in blind folded, one pant leg up. Now they make him drink from a goblet. What did they make him drink?
Based on descriptions of the ritual for the first degree of Freemasonry, the candidate is often offered a symbolic drink from a cup or goblet as a test of their conscience or sincerity.
The drink itself is typically a harmless, symbolic beverage, such as water, or sometimes a mixture described as sweet and bitter water (or two cups, one sweet and one bitter, one of which is tasted).
The ritual significance of this moment, which often occurs after the candidate is prepared (blindfolded, one trouser leg rolled up, etc.), is not the substance itself, but the challenge and the moral lesson conveyed. The candidate may be told that if they have any deceit in their heart, the drink will turn to poison, and the subsequent exchange confirms their commitment and sincerity to the fraternity.
They drink that "bitters" stuff mixed with water?
That is correct. In some historical or certain traditional rituals, particularly within the degrees of the Scottish Rite or the French Rite, the element of bitterness is a crucial part of the ceremony, even if the primary liquid is just water.
The drink is commonly referred to in Masonic context as the "Cup of Bitterness" (or Calice d'Amertume in the French Rite).
The purpose is entirely symbolic:
The Content: It is often described as bitter water or a bitter liquid, sometimes paired with a sweet liquid, or the candidate is offered a sweet liquid which is immediately contrasted with the idea of bitterness.
The Symbolism: It is meant to remind the initiate that life is a mixture of joy and sorrow, and that misfortune and afflictions (the "bitterness") must be faced with "calmness and resignation."
So, while the liquid may simply be water with a bitter substance added (or a separate cup of bitter water), your understanding that the ritual involves that "bitters" concept is right on the money. The goal is to drive home the moral lesson, not to consume a particular cocktail ingredient.
===========================
I never had that bitters, shit. Over the past few years was gradually trying out all the coolers they have at the vendor and liquor store. Then all the imported beers. The coolers though, from a beer vendor. One time had this:
Pampelonne. Sparkling wine cocktails. Blood orange spritz. Natural flavors of lime, cinchona bitters, and blood orange delicately folded into fine french wine. 250ml small can.. like who makes a can that small, 1 cup. 6% alcohol. Ingredients: wine, carbonated water, sugar, natural flavors, fruit juice, citric acid. Blended and bottled by Pampelonne. Modesto, CA.
I took a picture of this shit and saved the file as "worst tasting drink i've ever had lol.jpg". Here, let me upload that.
It's like 1 cup.. No expiry date. I had a sip, it was like.. WTF. It was just such an "odd", "terrible" taste. I think it had that "bitters" shit in there.
Oh.. saw a video of a guy chugging one of those. lol. Check this out:
I'm thinking, this is a similar shit they put in that Pampelonne. I had a couple sips and had a couple other cans. It was so terrible was going to bring it to work to watch a guy down it, but booze at work, bad idea. So threw it out. The empty can in the empties bag was stinking up the kitchen and I had to put it in it's own sealed bag.
Oh, here.. I'll ask.. lol
==============================
Is cinchona bitters, like Angostura bitters?
Cinchona bitters and Angostura bitters are related, but they are not the same product.
Here is the relationship between them:
Angostura Bitters Contains Cinchona: Cinchona bark is one of the many ingredients used to make Angostura bitters. Angostura is a proprietary blend of over 40 ingredients, including herbs, spices (like cinnamon and cardamom), and botanical bittering agents like cinchona (Peruvian bark) and bitter orange peel.
Angostura is the classic aromatic bitters style.
Cinchona Bitters is a Type of Bitters: "Cinchona bitters" is a general category that refers to any bitter tincture primarily made with, or highlighting, the bitterness of cinchona bark. Cinchona bark contains quinine, the substance that gives tonic water its distinctive bitter flavor and is known for its anti-malarial properties.
In summary:
Product Definition Key Relationship
Angostura Bitters A specific, proprietary brand of aromatic bitters. Cinchona is one of its many bittering ingredients.
Cinchona Bitters A general term for bitters where the cinchona bark is the dominant flavoring/bittering agent. May be a commercial product or a homemade tincture focused specifically on the quinine bitterness.
So, you could say Angostura is a type of aromatic bitters that uses cinchona, but a bottle simply labeled "Cinchona Bitters" is likely a different, more bark-forward product than the famously complex Angostura.
============================
Yeah this Pampelonne, might be even worse than Angostura bitters. I don't know, I never had that shit and don't plan on ever trying it. lol.
Movie implies "moving pictures" aka captured moments artificially moved to distract the viewer from natural momentum.
That's how a movie occults the force of nature within the mind of each watcher.
Logos/logic/reason can only be shaped within natures way of procession. The latter moves linear; the former circular.
Folding implies "to yield to pressure"...being implies expression (life) within impression (inception towards death). Yielding to pressure implies suicide.
It's natural impression (perceivable inspiration) which gives sight to each beings expression (perception shaping perspective)...others tempt ones consent to fold suggested information until ones sight becomes blinded.
Inception implies the initiation of life into the process of dying...an internal separation of potential within procession aka an analysis.
Few invert initiation by tempting one to join in synthesis aka using a masonic joint, and suggested information as mortar, to brick consensus among many.
What's a leg up? An aid (war-time tax) and a boost (push from behind) aka "Here's your burden to carry; now march and fight".
There's gonna be some "who knows what" going on in this shit. Like, what do you think they put in there. Who knows, but betcha sacrificed kids were involved. lol. Adrenochrome or some shit.
===================================
Watching a freemasonry initiation video. He came in blind folded, one pant leg up. Now they make him drink from a goblet. What did they make him drink?
Based on descriptions of the ritual for the first degree of Freemasonry, the candidate is often offered a symbolic drink from a cup or goblet as a test of their conscience or sincerity.
The drink itself is typically a harmless, symbolic beverage, such as water, or sometimes a mixture described as sweet and bitter water (or two cups, one sweet and one bitter, one of which is tasted).
The ritual significance of this moment, which often occurs after the candidate is prepared (blindfolded, one trouser leg rolled up, etc.), is not the substance itself, but the challenge and the moral lesson conveyed. The candidate may be told that if they have any deceit in their heart, the drink will turn to poison, and the subsequent exchange confirms their commitment and sincerity to the fraternity.
They drink that "bitters" stuff mixed with water?
That is correct. In some historical or certain traditional rituals, particularly within the degrees of the Scottish Rite or the French Rite, the element of bitterness is a crucial part of the ceremony, even if the primary liquid is just water.
The drink is commonly referred to in Masonic context as the "Cup of Bitterness" (or Calice d'Amertume in the French Rite).
The purpose is entirely symbolic:
The Content: It is often described as bitter water or a bitter liquid, sometimes paired with a sweet liquid, or the candidate is offered a sweet liquid which is immediately contrasted with the idea of bitterness.
The Symbolism: It is meant to remind the initiate that life is a mixture of joy and sorrow, and that misfortune and afflictions (the "bitterness") must be faced with "calmness and resignation."
So, while the liquid may simply be water with a bitter substance added (or a separate cup of bitter water), your understanding that the ritual involves that "bitters" concept is right on the money. The goal is to drive home the moral lesson, not to consume a particular cocktail ingredient.
===========================
I never had that bitters, shit. Over the past few years was gradually trying out all the coolers they have at the vendor and liquor store. Then all the imported beers. The coolers though, from a beer vendor. One time had this:
Pampelonne. Sparkling wine cocktails. Blood orange spritz. Natural flavors of lime, cinchona bitters, and blood orange delicately folded into fine french wine. 250ml small can.. like who makes a can that small, 1 cup. 6% alcohol. Ingredients: wine, carbonated water, sugar, natural flavors, fruit juice, citric acid. Blended and bottled by Pampelonne. Modesto, CA.
I took a picture of this shit and saved the file as "worst tasting drink i've ever had lol.jpg". Here, let me upload that.
https://i.imgur.com/JjvYw8g.jpeg
It's like 1 cup.. No expiry date. I had a sip, it was like.. WTF. It was just such an "odd", "terrible" taste. I think it had that "bitters" shit in there.
Oh.. saw a video of a guy chugging one of those. lol. Check this out:
Angostura bitters
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angostura_bitters
Watch this guy.. he yanks out the plastic stopper in it, pours it all in a glass and drinks it all.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/LSUtMaOY_jQ
I'm thinking, this is a similar shit they put in that Pampelonne. I had a couple sips and had a couple other cans. It was so terrible was going to bring it to work to watch a guy down it, but booze at work, bad idea. So threw it out. The empty can in the empties bag was stinking up the kitchen and I had to put it in it's own sealed bag.
Oh, here.. I'll ask.. lol
==============================
Is cinchona bitters, like Angostura bitters?
Cinchona bitters and Angostura bitters are related, but they are not the same product.
Here is the relationship between them:
Angostura Bitters Contains Cinchona: Cinchona bark is one of the many ingredients used to make Angostura bitters. Angostura is a proprietary blend of over 40 ingredients, including herbs, spices (like cinnamon and cardamom), and botanical bittering agents like cinchona (Peruvian bark) and bitter orange peel.
Angostura is the classic aromatic bitters style.
Cinchona Bitters is a Type of Bitters: "Cinchona bitters" is a general category that refers to any bitter tincture primarily made with, or highlighting, the bitterness of cinchona bark. Cinchona bark contains quinine, the substance that gives tonic water its distinctive bitter flavor and is known for its anti-malarial properties.
In summary:
Product Definition Key Relationship Angostura Bitters A specific, proprietary brand of aromatic bitters. Cinchona is one of its many bittering ingredients. Cinchona Bitters A general term for bitters where the cinchona bark is the dominant flavoring/bittering agent. May be a commercial product or a homemade tincture focused specifically on the quinine bitterness.
So, you could say Angostura is a type of aromatic bitters that uses cinchona, but a bottle simply labeled "Cinchona Bitters" is likely a different, more bark-forward product than the famously complex Angostura.
============================
Yeah this Pampelonne, might be even worse than Angostura bitters. I don't know, I never had that shit and don't plan on ever trying it. lol.