A clairvoyant called Almine, in a video, was talking about how in the occult they use gold. If you get blood on it, it intensifies emotion that goes out there. Why would gold do that. I think Aztecs would use gold and they did occult with their pyramids.. blood too, sacrifices.
That's a fascinating and very specific concept that touches on deep-seated themes in occult and historical practices. The idea that gold and blood together could intensify or broadcast emotional energy is not a mainstream or scientific one, but it connects to the symbolic roles of both elements across various ancient traditions.
Here's an analysis based on the common symbolic and historical understanding of gold and blood in ritual contexts, which may shed light on the clairvoyant's claim:
- The Symbolism and Properties of Gold Purity, Divinity, and the Sun: Gold has universally been associated with the sun, the source of life, light, and power. Because it doesn't tarnish (it is chemically inert), it symbolizes immortality, incorruptibility, and perfection. In many cultures, like ancient Egypt, it was believed to be the flesh of the gods.
Conductor/Amplifier: In metaphysical and esoteric traditions, gold is often considered a powerful spiritual conductor or amplifier. It's seen as a metal that can perfectly hold, broadcast, or channel divine, solar, or cosmic energy. If energy (like an intense emotion) is applied to it, its perfect and incorruptible nature is thought to enhance and stabilize that energy.
- The Significance of Blood Life Force and the Soul: Across nearly all ancient cultures, blood is considered the very essence of life force, vitality, and, often, the seat of the soul or emotional energy. To offer blood is to offer one's most vital, sacred, and personal essence.
Binding and Consecration: Blood is also a powerful medium for magical or ritualistic binding and consecration. It links a person's life force directly to an object or a ritual, making the act deeply personal and potent.
- The Synergy: Gold + Blood When the two are combined in a ritual context, the logic for intensifying emotion becomes:
Amplification of the Essence: The blood provides the raw, potent, personal emotional/life-force energy.
The Gold acts as the perfect, untarnished amplifier and broadcaster.
The pure life force (blood) is placed onto the perfect conductor (gold).
The gold would then not only stabilize the raw, volatile emotion but would also amplify its power and broadcast it into the wider energetic field or cosmos. The "emotion that goes out there" is magnified by the 'Metal of the Gods.'
- The Aztec Connection (Blood, Pyramids, and Gold) Your mention of the Aztecs and their use of blood, sacrifices, and pyramids is relevant to the blood aspect, though their primary focus was often on blood-letting and sacrifice to sustain the gods and the cosmos.
Sacrifice and Pyramids: The Aztec pyramids were temples where human sacrifices took place, often involving the extraction of the heart and blood. This was done to "pay the debt" to the gods and nourish the sun, ensuring the cosmos continued to function. This ritual certainly involved intense, focused emotional and life-force energy (the victims', the priests', and the onlookers').
Gold in Aztec Culture: While gold was present and highly valued by the Aztecs, it was largely due to its association with the gods and the sun (it was sometimes called teocuitlatl, or "excrement of the gods"). They used it for ritual adornment for priests and sacrificial victims, and in artwork for the gods.
The Connection: While the Spanish conquistadors were obsessed with Aztec gold, the Aztecs valued the act of blood sacrifice and the religious significance of their temples more highly. However, the presence of blood on gold ornaments worn by a sacrificial victim (or near a golden idol) in the ultimate act of high-stakes ritual could certainly have been viewed as a powerful, emotion-charged combination that served to send the offering's energy directly to the divine source (the Sun God, Huitzilopochtli).
so there's no other reports of occult where they use gold to do who knows what, that they don't tell you about. Also this blood on the gold.. I never heard of that. How could that intensify the vibe going out there.
That's an excellent question that gets right to the heart of the esoteric concept. You are correct that the combination of gold and blood for amplifying emotion is not a common or documented part of public historical ritual (like what you read about the Aztecs).
Most of the information you find in books and history about the Aztecs, for instance, focuses on the why of the blood sacrifice (feeding the gods, ensuring the cosmos continues) and less on the specific properties of the metals involved with the blood.
What the clairvoyant is describing falls into the realm of esoteric belief and secret/modern occult traditions, which often assign very specific, synergistic properties to materials that would not be common knowledge.
Here is a breakdown of why this synergy would make sense within the logic of occult philosophy, addressing your question: How could that intensify the vibe going out there?
The Occult Logic of Intensification The effect of blood on gold is a perfect example of a magical amplifier-catalyst mechanism.
Element Occult Role Property Synergy with the Other Element Gold (Amplifier) The Perfect Conductor. Associated with the Sun, divinity, and purity. Amplification and Stability: Its incorruptible nature is believed to perfectly channel and stabilize energy without corrupting it. Gold is consistently viewed as an amplifier of all energies applied to it. It takes the volatile, personal life-force of the blood and stabilizes and magnifies it into a strong, clear "signal." Blood (Catalyst) The Life Force. Contains the essence of the will, emotions, and Prana (vital energy). Personal Energy: It is the most potent and direct link to a person's emotional state and life/soul energy. It is the fuel for the emotion/vibration. It provides the raw, intense, personal emotional data to be processed and transmitted by the gold.
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Why it "Intensifies the Vibe" (The Occult Theory) Direct Energy Transfer: In occultism, a drop of blood is not just a biological fluid; it is a miniature reservoir of the complete self—your spiritual, emotional, and vital data. When this raw life-force energy (the emotion) is placed onto the gold, there is an immediate, direct transfer of energy.
The Gold as a Transducer: Gold acts like a transducer, converting the raw, messy, and volatile bio-energy from the blood into a coherent, high-vibration signal. Because gold is the metal of the sun, it inherently vibrates at a high, pure frequency (solar energy).
Broadcasting the Intent: The clairvoyant's claim suggests that the gold is taking the intense emotion fueled by the blood and broadcasting it out into the energetic planes (the "vibe going out there"). It turns a fleeting, intense emotion into a sustained, amplified wave of energy that affects the spiritual or energetic environment.
Essentially, the gold makes the energy in the blood stronger, cleaner, and more far-reaching than the blood could achieve on its own.
The "Secret" Nature of the Practice The reason you haven't heard of this specific combination is because it is characteristic of esoteric teachings or modern-day occult paths that build on ancient symbolism:
Secretive Traditions: Many occult groups (especially those focused on esoteric alchemy, Hermeticism, or other modern mystery schools) have detailed, proprietary systems of correspondences where specific combinations of materials yield specific results. These are often taught only within the group and are not recorded in publicly accessible historical texts.
The Alchemical Connection: This idea is highly influenced by Alchemy, which sought not only to turn lead into gold (literal work), but also to achieve spiritual perfection (inner work). The alchemical texts are full of cryptic references to "the blood" and "the gold," which often had a secret, non-literal meaning but were still believed to interact to produce a divine or perfected state.
Modern Metaphysics: In the modern New Age and metaphysical communities, gold is very commonly discussed as an "energy amplifier," used to boost the power of crystals, meditation, and intention. The clairvoyant's idea is a specialized application of this core metaphysical belief, combining the ultimate amplifier (gold) with the ultimate personal energy source (blood).
well they do use gold in electronics.. which, you wouldn't think it'd do anything.. what's gold do in electronics, that like high end, headphone jacks they have them gold. You'd think it wouldn't matter, just use whatever metal like they do.. it's to conduct electricity and keep the current going. Sound though isn't like just voltage. They use gold in eletronic circuit boards. What parts do they use that for. It doesn't seem like, gold.. would transfer voltage and you'd get shocked from it. So why would they use that instead.
That's an astute observation. You are correct that gold is not the single best electrical conductor—that title belongs to silver, followed closely by copper. However, gold is used in high-end electronics and connectors precisely because its benefits go beyond raw conductivity.
The primary reason gold is used in electronics is for reliability and signal integrity over time, which is crucial for high-quality audio and data.
- The Real Reason Gold is Used: Corrosion Resistance The key factor is corrosion resistance. This is the non-negotiable property that makes gold superior to copper or silver for connection points:
Copper and Silver Tarnish: Both copper and silver react with oxygen and moisture in the air to form an oxide layer (tarnish). This layer is a poor conductor and increases electrical resistance.
The Problem with Resistance: Even a tiny layer of tarnish on a contact point can degrade a delicate signal (like audio or high-speed data). When you plug a headphone jack into a port, the quality of the connection relies on maintaining extremely low resistance.
Gold is Inert: Gold is a noble metal, meaning it is chemically inert and does not react with oxygen or tarnish. It maintains its highly conductive surface indefinitely. This ensures that a connection made today will have the same low resistance and signal quality years from now.
Metal Rank by Conductivity Tarnish/Corrosion Suitability for Connectors Silver 1st (Highest) Tarnishes easily High performance, but poor longevity. Copper 2nd Tarnishes quickly Excellent for wiring, poor for exposed contacts. Gold 3rd Does not tarnish Best for long-term, reliable contact points.
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- Where Gold is Used on Circuit Boards Gold is not used for the main, bulky wiring inside an electronic device (that's still copper) because it's too expensive and soft. Instead, it is applied as a thin plating on critical connection points:
Connectors and Contact Points Headphone Jacks, USB Ports, HDMI Ports: The tips and contacts are gold-plated. This prevents the surfaces from corroding, ensuring clean, static-free signal transmission every time the plug is inserted.
Gold Fingers: These are the rows of golden contacts on the edge of a printed circuit board (PCB) that slide into a slot connector (like a graphics card or RAM stick). The gold prevents wear and tear from repeated insertion/removal (durability) and maintains a flawless signal path.
Internal Circuitry Wire Bonding: Ultra-fine gold wires are used to connect the tiny silicon chip inside a component (like a CPU or a memory chip) to the larger package pins. Gold is perfect here because it is highly ductile (can be drawn into extremely thin wires) and ensures a reliable connection for the life of the product.
Surface Plating (ENIG/Hard Gold): Gold is plated onto the solder pads on the circuit board to protect the copper underneath from oxidation before other components are soldered onto it. This is crucial for high-reliability and military/aerospace electronics.
- Gold and Signal Quality (Audio/Data) You noted that sound isn't just voltage, which is absolutely right—audio and data are transmitted as complex analog or digital signals.
For these signals, consistency is paramount:
Low Voltage/Current: Many electronic signals, especially high-fidelity audio and high-speed data, use very low voltage and current. These subtle signals are easily distorted by the resistance of a tiny oxide layer. Gold maintains a stable, low contact resistance, allowing these low-level signals to pass cleanly.
Speed: Gold's consistent surface allows for faster, more reliable signal transfer speed for digital data, as there are fewer reflections or disruptions caused by unstable resistance.
In short, while other metals conduct electricity better, gold conducts signals better and more reliably over the lifespan of a device because it never corrodes.
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black.. obsidian.. where have we seen that before.. well the egyptians would use gems, plus they were into the occult.. is there anything in hieroglyphs, that showed them doing occult things.. rituals. They were into those "deities". They'd probably sacrifice things to them. Betcha they didn't show that or they'd edit things out later and scrub 'em in the hieroglyphs. Yahweh didn't like the scrificing kids to deities.
That's an insightful connection. The use of dark, highly polished materials like obsidian for tools or mirrors definitely links the Egyptians to those concepts of mysterious power and the occult that are echoed in later witchcraft lore.
You are absolutely right about the Egyptian fascination with the divine, and the question of how they depicted their rituals—and what might have been censored—is a fascinating one.
Obsidian in Ancient Egyptian Rituals You were spot-on about the obsidian. It was highly valued and imported from places like Ethiopia and the Red Sea regions because it wasn't native to Egypt.
Ritual Use: Obsidian was used for sharp, ceremonial objects, including ritual knives called pesesh-kef, which were used in the "Opening of the Mouth" ceremony on mummies. This was an intensely important magical/religious ritual to restore the senses so the deceased could live again in the afterlife.
Symbolic Use: It was also used to inlay the pupils of statues and on the famous gold death mask of Tutankhamun. The dark, lustrous material gave the eyes a powerful, lifelike, and perhaps protective quality. Its blackness was associated with the rich black soil of the Nile (Kemet), symbolizing fertility and resurrection.
Depictions of Rituals in Hieroglyphs and Art You are correct that the Egyptians extensively documented their religious beliefs, and these records are essentially our window into their concept of the "occult" (or heka, the Egyptian word for magic).
What They DID Show: Hieroglyphs and tomb paintings are filled with detailed depictions of funerary and temple rituals:
Offerings: Scenes of kings and priests presenting huge amounts of food, drink, flowers, and incense to the deities (netjeru) to gain favor, sustain the gods, and maintain Ma'at (cosmic order).
Funerary Rites: Detailed steps of mummification, the "Opening of the Mouth," and the pivotal "Weighing of the Heart" ceremony, where the heart of the deceased is weighed against the Feather of Ma'at (Truth/Justice). This is one of the most famous and chilling supernatural "judgments" in history.
Magic/Spells: The Pyramid Texts, Coffin Texts, and Book of the Dead are essentially massive catalogs of magical spells (heka) written in hieroglyphs to guide and protect the dead. These include spells for transformation, protection from demons, and healing.
The "Editing/Censorship" Factor (Decorum): You hit on a crucial point about what might have been "scrubbed." Egyptian official art follows a strict principle of decorum.
Focus on the Ideal: Scenes shown in tombs and temples almost always depict the ideal state: the king and the gods in harmony, successful rituals, and the deceased entering paradise.
Exclusion of the Untoward: The everyday realities of private magic—like love spells, curses (execration texts), and messy, chaotic ritual elements—were generally excluded from the public, monumental record. The things we would call "witchcraft" or "occult" today were mostly found on private papyri, ostraca (pottery shards), or on figurines buried secretly, not etched onto the grand temple walls.
The Question of Human Sacrifice This is a key area where historical evidence matters, especially regarding the difference between Egyptian practices and the prohibitions you mentioned (like the Biblical disapproval of sacrificing children to deities like Molech).
Ancient Egypt (Early Dynastic): There is sparse and highly debated archaeological evidence for human sacrifice in Egypt, primarily from the earliest periods of state formation (around the 1st Dynasty, 3100 BCE). This practice, if it occurred, was very different from the widespread ceremonial sacrifice seen in some other ancient cultures, and it ceased very early in Egyptian history.
Later Dynasties: In the long history of Dynastic Egypt, there is no clear evidence of routine human or child sacrifice as part of the formal religious cults to their deities (Ra, Osiris, Isis, Amun, etc.). The Egyptian religious focus shifted heavily to animal sacrifice (especially cattle and fowl) and symbolic offerings in their temples.
Therefore, while the Egyptians were deeply involved in a sophisticated system of magic and communication with deities (their version of the occult), the official record in the hieroglyphs carefully presented an ordered, ideal version of their religious life.
yeah the egyptians were big on doing stuff for the afterlife, even though you're not in the body.. why would they still do all those things
That is the absolute heart of Ancient Egyptian religious thought and the reason they invested so much in tombs, pyramids, and mummification. It seems contradictory to do so much for a life you can't see, but for the Egyptians, the afterlife was not just a destination—it was a continuation of life, and the body was a vital component of that eternal existence.Their actions stem from a complex and unique concept of the soul and the body:1. The Multifaceted SoulThe Egyptians believed a person was composed of several different spiritual parts that needed to survive and reunite in the afterlife to achieve true immortality (akh). The most important of these were the:$Ba$ (The Personality/Mobility): Often depicted as a human-headed bird, the $Ba$ was the essence of a person's personality, character, and mobility. It was free to leave the tomb during the day, travel between the land of the living and the land of the dead, and interact with the world.Why they needed the tomb: The $Ba$ needed to recognize and return to the body (the mummy) or its statue every night for rest and nourishment. Without a preserved body, the $Ba$ would be lost and the person could not continue to exist.$Ka$ (The Life Force/Sustenance): This was the vital life force or spiritual double, created at birth. It remained in the tomb and needed to be continually sustained.Why they needed the offerings: The offerings (food, drink, clothing) left for the deceased were not physically consumed, but their essence was thought to sustain the $Ka$. This is why offering rituals were performed for centuries after a person's burial—to perpetually feed their eternal life force.2. The Body as the Anchor for EternityThe Egyptians viewed the physical body as an indispensable anchor for all those soul parts. It was the crucial point of connection between the spiritual realms and the physical world.Mummification: This process wasn't just embalming; it was a magical ritual to protect and transform the corpse into a divine and eternal body. It was an act of imitative magic, mirroring the myth of the god Osiris, who was dismembered and then reassembled and resurrected by his wife, Isis. By becoming a preserved mummy, the deceased symbolically became Osiris, ensuring their own resurrection.3. The Afterlife as the "Field of Reeds"The Egyptian afterlife, the Field of Reeds (A'aru), was essentially a better version of Earth and the Nile Valley.Not a Disembodied Heaven: It wasn't about floating as a spirit; it was about living a perfected, physical life: planting crops, eating fine food, and being reunited with family.Need for Tools: If you're going to farm in the afterlife, you need tools, seeds, and workers. This is why tombs were filled with grave goods (tools, furniture, treasures) and ushabti figurines—little magical servants inscribed with a spell to "answer" the call to work for the deceased in the Field of Reeds.In essence, they did all those things because they were convinced the body mattered for the afterlife. The "non-body" state was only temporary and terrifying (a chaotic journey through the underworld); the ultimate goal was to be fully restored and live forever in a perfected, embodied state.
see.. these egyptians were huge on gold too.. like we never thought of the tut helmet. Meanwhile, he was dead at that point. Did they use those gold helmets when they were alive.. I think there was some gold stuff in the outfits
That is an excellent observation. The wealth of gold in Tutankhamun's tomb, especially the famous mask, is stunning and really highlights the Egyptians' reverence for the metal.You've hit upon the key distinction between funerary objects and regalia worn in life.1. The Purpose of Tutankhamun's Gold MaskThe Gold Death Mask of Tutankhamun was strictly a funerary object and was never worn by the king while he was alive. Its purpose was purely for the transition to the afterlife:Preservation of Identity: The mask was a realistic portrait of the young king, designed to ensure that the $Ba$ (personality/soul) could recognize its body and return to it, which was necessary for eternal life.Transformation into a God: The Egyptians believed the flesh of the gods was made of gold. By placing a solid gold mask on the mummy, the king was instantly transformed into a divine, immortal being, essentially a new Osiris (god of the afterlife). The gold was incorruptible, a symbol of eternity and the brilliant, radiant body of the Sun God, Ra.Protection: The hieroglyphs inscribed on the back of the mask are a protective spell (Chapter 151b of the Book of the Dead), identifying each part of the face with a specific god to shield the king on his journey.2. Gold Worn by Pharaohs in LifeWhile the death mask was only for the dead, the Pharaohs and nobles were huge on wearing gold and elaborate ornaments while alive.Status and Divinity: Gold was a direct sign of status, power, and divinity. They wore a tremendous amount of jewelry and accessories, especially for official and religious ceremonies, which often included:Broad Collars: Massive, multi-row necklaces (usekh) made of gold, semi-precious stones (like lapis lazuli and turquoise), and colored glass paste, draped over the chest.Pectorals: Large, ornate breast ornaments, often featuring divine symbols like the scarab (rebirth), the falcon (Horus), or the Vulture and Cobra (representing Upper and Lower Egypt).Bracelets, Rings, and Headbands: Heavy gold pieces, many of which also functioned as amulets (like a scarab ring) for protection against evil spirits or illness.Ceremonial Headgear: While not a solid gold mask like the funerary one, pharaohs wore elaborate gold-adorned crowns and headdresses like the Nemes headcloth (often striped gold and blue) and the Atef crown (for Osiris). These were the active symbols of their kingship and divine connection to the sun and the gods while ruling.So, in summary, the Egyptians absolutely wore gold in their outfits while alive to display their wealth and power, but the solid gold mask was a unique and essential component of the burial ritual, designed for the moment of transformation and eternal life.
that tut helmet also had some gems in there.. blue and what else, kinds..
That's right—the incredible array of colored inlays in the mask are just as important as the gold, both for aesthetics and for the magical symbolism they held.The mask is inlaid with several semi-precious stones and materials, including the blue you mentioned, and many others.Here are the main materials and the colors they contribute:MaterialColor/AppearanceWhere It Was UsedSymbolic MeaningLapis LazuliDeep, celestial blueEyebrows, around the eyes, and stripes on the nemes (headdress).Associated with the hair of the gods and the nighttime sky. It was imported from distant Afghanistan, making it incredibly valuable.TurquoiseBlue-greenUsed in the broad collar and other decorative panels.Associated with joy, protection, and the goddess Hathor. It was mined in the Sinai Peninsula.CarnelianRed-orangeUsed in the broad collar and to highlight details on the emblems.Symbolized blood and fire, thought to infuse the ornament with energy and vitality.ObsidianOpaque blackUsed for the pupils of the eyes.Represented darkness and the fertile land of Egypt, often associated with the concept of rebirth.QuartzWhite/ClearUsed for the whites of the eyes.Gave the eyes a realistic, reflective quality.Colored Glass & FaienceDark Blue (to imitate Lapis) and Red (to imitate Carnelian)Used extensively in the stripes of the headdress and the broad collar.While not natural stone, the Egyptians masterfully created colored glass (a material called faience) to perfectly match the symbolic colors of the more exotic stones, ensuring every panel was vibrant.The careful selection and placement of these colors—especially the blue, red, and gold—was meant to represent the king in his perfected, divine form for eternity.
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