The mentioning of the “Horn of Narwhal” could be related the horn being used to detect hormones, amongst other uses, and that would primarily be to find female mates. This could potentially be related to adrenochrome and how humans have a dormant sensory organ which is suppose to do exactly the same thing. I can attest by experience that the organ is still functional, or maybe it's just me and my ancient bloodline and maybe that is precisely what people like Podesta are really looking for, people with this organ active.
It would appear that the kangaroo also exhibits this behaviour.
Oddly enough, a quick glance at the book in question which mentions the horn, it seems to be talking about dreams, memories and delving into the past. So what it's basically talking about is genetic memory. The sexual hormones, and hence what the horn is actually for, are very important when it comes to adrenaline, other hormones and thus the storage of genetic memory.
Therefore, all of this is about the harvesting of memories. Literally.
The reason could be explained by religion, that it's literally "one's going to heaven" or "passing one's spirit unto a new body", in other words the first step of reincarnation. Or it's just a mass release of hormones in a last-ditch attempt by the nervous system to transmit signals around the body so that it can survive (which admittedly at the time of death, is unlikely).
So-called "schizophrenics" are simply more able to hook into their genetic memory and remember things. Since genetic memory is exactly that, the system remembers how to be able to remember things. If it couldn't remember things then we wouldn't reproduce, we wouldn't fight off pathogens, maybe we wouldn't even breathe. So the body has to learn to remember things. Schizophrenics remember too much for them to be able to handle, insomuch that they become confused and even more so when considering psychiatric intervention which does nothing to help a patient and instead suppresses them and screws them up even more, because they don't want people knowing about how powerful genetic memory actually is and nor do they want people to be able to look back on time to remember our true past (since they seemingly enjoy fabricating history). So really, I look at the issue of schizophrenia as being similar to Ian Curtis of Joy Division: he was depressed, so they gave him pills - the pills caused him epilepsy, so they gave him more pills - those pills made him more depressed and his epilepsy got worse - eventually he hanged himself. Was he schizophrenic? No, he was a drug addict and alcoholic and had problems because of it, what really killed him was Big Pharma.
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Vigilia_Procuratio ago
The mentioning of the “Horn of Narwhal” could be related the horn being used to detect hormones, amongst other uses, and that would primarily be to find female mates. This could potentially be related to adrenochrome and how humans have a dormant sensory organ which is suppose to do exactly the same thing. I can attest by experience that the organ is still functional, or maybe it's just me and my ancient bloodline and maybe that is precisely what people like Podesta are really looking for, people with this organ active.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vomeronasal_organ
Also see this... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flehmen_response
It would appear that the kangaroo also exhibits this behaviour.
Oddly enough, a quick glance at the book in question which mentions the horn, it seems to be talking about dreams, memories and delving into the past. So what it's basically talking about is genetic memory. The sexual hormones, and hence what the horn is actually for, are very important when it comes to adrenaline, other hormones and thus the storage of genetic memory.
Therefore, all of this is about the harvesting of memories. Literally.
CissusAntartica ago
You mean DMT and DNA.
Vigilia_Procuratio ago
I'm wondering if DMT triggers hormones which causes the user to perceive memories stored deep in the DNA.
KykeBot ago
It's the same reason we produce so much at the time of death.
Vigilia_Procuratio ago
The reason could be explained by religion, that it's literally "one's going to heaven" or "passing one's spirit unto a new body", in other words the first step of reincarnation. Or it's just a mass release of hormones in a last-ditch attempt by the nervous system to transmit signals around the body so that it can survive (which admittedly at the time of death, is unlikely).
JacobMRothschild ago
Schizophrenia passes from generation to generation due to it's purpose in nature, the way it might inspire a mate.
Why would the body presume the dream world as a mechanism of survival? LOL
Vigilia_Procuratio ago
So-called "schizophrenics" are simply more able to hook into their genetic memory and remember things. Since genetic memory is exactly that, the system remembers how to be able to remember things. If it couldn't remember things then we wouldn't reproduce, we wouldn't fight off pathogens, maybe we wouldn't even breathe. So the body has to learn to remember things. Schizophrenics remember too much for them to be able to handle, insomuch that they become confused and even more so when considering psychiatric intervention which does nothing to help a patient and instead suppresses them and screws them up even more, because they don't want people knowing about how powerful genetic memory actually is and nor do they want people to be able to look back on time to remember our true past (since they seemingly enjoy fabricating history). So really, I look at the issue of schizophrenia as being similar to Ian Curtis of Joy Division: he was depressed, so they gave him pills - the pills caused him epilepsy, so they gave him more pills - those pills made him more depressed and his epilepsy got worse - eventually he hanged himself. Was he schizophrenic? No, he was a drug addict and alcoholic and had problems because of it, what really killed him was Big Pharma.