Onbael_
Well-known member
Wodanaz while on a quest for wisdom came to the Tree of Worlds, and in exchange for the water that would give him wisdom, he had to pluck out his own eye. He was then known as the one-eyed one or the one with the flaming eye.
From my understanding, the silence by which we become wise is the silencing of ourselves and acting and speaking according to the Serpent or the Kundalini.
In Wodanaz's case, he ripped out his world view so that he could only see and act through the Truth, becoming the wiser (precisely through the 3rd eye which governs wisdom).
On the level of allegory, perhaps the water drunk is a reference to the Soma produced by the pineal gland that ends up in the Chalice (Manipura). Or since the water was under the Tree of Worlds (Soul), he will have drunk the essence of the soul, Satya, Shakti or perhaps it is a reference to the Hamsa (the hand of God) meditation where you open the 3rd eye with the 5 elements.
This thing of the flaming eye also seems to be an obvious reference to purification.
It could also be a combination of all of the above. What do you think?
Also in the Virtue of the Goddess Astarte of Completion, the disciple reaches the final goal and remains silent, because he himself has become the hymn and the psalm.
So in order to live in wisdom, we must sacrifice our perception of existence, and we must elevate the divine aspects of our soul until we become Satya ourselves.
Right?
From my understanding, the silence by which we become wise is the silencing of ourselves and acting and speaking according to the Serpent or the Kundalini.
In Wodanaz's case, he ripped out his world view so that he could only see and act through the Truth, becoming the wiser (precisely through the 3rd eye which governs wisdom).
On the level of allegory, perhaps the water drunk is a reference to the Soma produced by the pineal gland that ends up in the Chalice (Manipura). Or since the water was under the Tree of Worlds (Soul), he will have drunk the essence of the soul, Satya, Shakti or perhaps it is a reference to the Hamsa (the hand of God) meditation where you open the 3rd eye with the 5 elements.
This thing of the flaming eye also seems to be an obvious reference to purification.
It could also be a combination of all of the above. What do you think?
Also in the Virtue of the Goddess Astarte of Completion, the disciple reaches the final goal and remains silent, because he himself has become the hymn and the psalm.
So in order to live in wisdom, we must sacrifice our perception of existence, and we must elevate the divine aspects of our soul until we become Satya ourselves.
Right?