• Category Archives General Weirdness
  • Sirius Mysteries

    “Outside of a dog, a book is a man’s best friend. Inside of a dog it’s too dark to read.”—Groucho Marx

     

    Canis MajorYou might not know it, but today is the first day of the Dog Days of summer. While just about everyone has heard the expression, most people just assume that this is all it is and that it refers to the hottest time of the year. However, July 23 is actually the first day of the ancient Egyptian calendar and the day on which they began a series of rites and celebrations dedicated to the star Sirius, which they called Sothis, and is the brightest star in the constellation of the dog. Therefore, another name for Sirius is the Dog Star, hence the Dog Days of summer.

    Pretty much all of this is agreed upon and accepted by scholars of various disciplines. Other than some small differences concerning a few minor details here and there, nothing that I’ve said so far is at all controversial. That won’t last. Starting…NOW!

    On July 22, 1973, the occultist and philosopher Robert Anton Wilson performed the Invocation of the Holy Guardian Angel, a ritual devised by Aleister Crowley to put you in touch with your higher self. He wasn’t terribly impressed with the results that he got that night, but he woke up the next morning, July 23, with the thought “Sirius is very important” stuck in his head. This being way back in primitive times, there was no internet, so he had to find out what was so important about Sirius from books at his local library. So he hopped on his dinosaur and headed down there.

    Imagine his surprise when he found out that Sirius was the focal point of the Egyptian Dog Days celebrations and that they had started on that very date of July 23 and lasted until September 8. This was the time that the Egyptians believed that their connection to Sirius, which they associated with both Osiris and Isis, was the strongest. Wilson continued his occult experiments during this time and began to receive telepathic messages from an intelligence that he sometimes thought might be an extraterrestrial from Sirius. Other times he thought it might be his Holy Guardian Angel. Sometimes he thought that it was his own unconscious mind. Most of the time, he wasn’t sure where this was coming from.

    He soon learned that he wasn’t the only one with a connection to Sirius. The afore mentioned Aleister Crowley had formed an occult order called the Argentum Astrum, or Silver Star, in 1907. In his book Aleister Crowley and the Hidden God, Kenneth Grant identifies this silver star as the Eye of Set, the sun behind the sun, Sothis, or Sirius. This was no colossal surprise to Wilson since he had originally “contacted” Sirius through one of Crowley’s rituals, though that wasn’t its intended purpose.

    What did surprise him was when J.G. Bennett, a student of the famous Russian occultist Georges Gurdjieff, wrote that while Gurdjieff was composing his book Beelzebub’s Tales to His Grandson, he would have key passages read back to him aloud to determine if their meaning was too obvious. If they were, he would rewrite them to “bury the dog deeper.” When people pointed out that what he meant to say was “bury the bone deeper,” he would reply that he was not burying bones but a dog. The dog was Sirius, and the subject of the book was extraterrestrial intelligence repeatedly intervening in human affairs to speed up our evolution, a concept unheard of at the time but one that is seriously considered by some UFO researchers today.

    After publishing an article about all of this, Wilson received a letter from a man in Detroit stating that in a lecture he had attended, a Dr. Douglas Baker of the Theosophical Society (founded by Helena Blavatsky) claimed that Sirius is the Ajna (third eye) chakra of a galactic being and that our sun is the Heart chakra. Our evolution, Dr. Baker said, depends on our raising the energy level of the Heart center to the Ajna. This connected Blavatsky as well as Gurdjieff and Crowley to Sirius, and they are the undeniable Big Three of 20th century occultism. Even if you think occultism is all lizard droppings, you have to admit that this is quite a coincidence.

    But it gets better. In 1976, an astronomer named Robert Temple, a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, had a book published entitled The Sirius Mystery. It deals in part with the similarities between the civilizations and languages of ancient northern African and Mesopotamian peoples and the possibility that they may share a common origin. Its main focus, however, is the Dogon, a primitive tribe that lives on the plains of Mali in northwestern Africa.

     

    Sirius
    That little dot on the lower left side is Sirius B

    Temple starts off by reprinting an anthropological study of the Dogon by French anthropologists Marcel Griaule and Germaine Dieterlen published in 1950. He seemingly stumbled upon this report which details the Dogon’s extensive knowledge of Sirius – knowledge that he realized no primitive tribe should possess but which was nevertheless accurate. The Dogon not only knew that Sirius was actually a double star system, even though this can only be seen with powerful telescopes, but also that the second star, the dwarf star Sirius B, is one of the smallest and densest in the galaxy. They also knew that the orbital period of Sirius B is 50 years.

    This “invisible” dwarf star was the hidden god alluded to in the title of Grant’s book about Crowley. He associated it with Osiris, while Sirius A was connected to Isis. If Crowley was right and this was why the Egyptians linked Sirius to both of these gods, it would seem to indicate that the Egyptians were also aware that Sirius was a double star system.

    So how did the Dogon know all of this? They say that they know all of this because visitors from Sirius that they called the Nommo came here thousands of years ago and told them so. Temple estimates that this occurred around 4500 BCE, a date that he arrived at primarily by looking at the times when the first civilizations formed in this area. (Why the Egyptians and Sumerians got a kick-start on establishing their civilizations from the Nommo while the Dogon remained primitive for more than 6000 years following their alleged contact isn’t specified.) The Dogon describe the Nommo as being fish-people, and the ancient Assyrian god Oannes is also depicted as being half man, half fish. Coincidence? Maybe.

    Temple himself does not insist that this connection to Sirius had to involve actual beings coming here in spaceships, although he definitely leans that way. He also points out that information about Sirius and the sudden birth of civilization in the area could have come from an unknown, more advanced group of people (Atlantis?). He only broadly hints that contact may have been established in some more subtle way, i.e. Wilson’s “tuning in” on the Sirius connection via an occult ritual at just the right time of year.

    Needless to say, criticism of Temple from the academic community was swift in coming. Some accused him of outright fraud, but most were a little kinder in their condemnation. Most simply claimed that the Dogon learned about Sirius from the two French anthropologists, which makes sense. We all know that there’s nothing anthropologists like to talk about more than astronomy. That’s why they became anthropologists: so that they could teach astronomy to primitive people. But seriously, none of the critics ever make a statement like “It stands to reason that Griaule and Dieterlen would have told the Dogon about Sirius because…” Because there is no reason that they would have discussed such things with primitive people, other than for them to commit fraud, which some claim is exactly what they did. Why they would do this is left to our imaginations. Their paper was only published in an anthropological journal, not the London Times or Newsweek. If they were perpetrating a hoax in the hope of becoming famous, they had a rotten plan and it failed miserably. It took an astronomer discovering their work by accident 26 years later for anyone to even notice them. We don’t even know if these two knew anything about Sirius. Did you before now? Neither did I until I read Wilson’s Cosmic Trigger. It’s not exactly common knowledge.

    Many of their arguments are based on the same sort of speculation that they accuse Temple of, although most of theirs is worse. They’ve come up with lots of mundane ways in which the Dogon could have learned about Sirius, but none of them have a shred of proof to back up their assertions. At least some of them are honest enough to admit as much.

    The one argument that some have used to explain how this knowledge got into the hands of the Dogon is that there was a total solar eclipse that was visible in Mali in 1893. The area would have been full of amateur and professional astronomers there to observe it. No doubt some of these astronomy enthusiasts told the local population all about the latest news on Sirius. The problems with this idea make the mind reel.

    NommoFirst, much of what the Dogon allegedly knew about Sirius wasn’t known to anyone at that time, or was only suspected. Next, there is the assumption that people who were there to witness a celestial event were eager to discuss a completely unrelated astronomical subject with the stone age locals. Finally, the one that borders on idiocy (and I’m being kind here), is the assumption that these two groups of people even could have discussed anything. Does anyone seriously believe that any of the Dogon people would speak the language of any of their foreign visitors? Does anyone seriously believe that any of these visiting astronomers spoke Dogon? Sure, I suppose that somebody could have found an interpreter if they looked hard enough, but why bother? Eclipses only last a few minutes. Most people were probably only there for a day. If anyone had wanted to talk, it probably would have been the Dogon, and probably the only question on their minds would be to find out why the sun had gone away in the middle of the afternoon.

    For the record, I don’t really think that Sirians have visited Earth, although I could be wrong. Wilson himself points out that Sirius is the brightest star in the sky. If occultists and tribesmen are going to formulate complex mythologies around one of them, Sirius would be the most likely candidate. It’s also not the only star, or group of stars, or constellation to have these types of stories attached to it. (Orion and the Pleiades spring to mind.) So how do I explain all of this? I don’t. It’s a mystery. I’ve learned to live with them.

    Anyway, happy Dog Days. Try to stay cool. And if you get any telepathic messages from Sirius, or anywhere else for that matter, please feel free to let me know…unless it involves celebrities. Then keep it to yourself.

     

    and all the devils are here

     

     


  • The Dybbuk Box

    “Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.”—Alexander Pope

     

    It is unknown where the story of the Dybbuk Box really began. All that we know was that it was acquired by a Polish woman while she was living in Spain after escaping from a Nazi concentration camp. She later immigrated to the United States and brought the box with her. Officially, it was a wine box

    First eBay auctionAfter her death in 2001, it was purchased at an estate sale in Portland, Oregon by a man named Kevin Mannis, who later sold it on eBay. The listing included the rather lengthy story of the box and what had happened to him and those close to him after he bought it

    At the sale, the Polish woman’s granddaughter remarked to Mannis that he had bought the Dybbuk Box. That was what her grandmother had always called it. When the granddaughter had asked what was in it, her grandmother told her “a dybbuk and keselim.” The granddaughter didn’t know what either of those were, and her grandmother had kept the box out of reach and insisted that it was never to be opened. She had wanted it buried with her, but since that was against Orthodox Jewish burial customs, her wish had not been honored.

    When Mannis found out that it was a “family heirloom,” he offered to give it back, at which the granddaughter replied that it was now his. When he offered to open it so that they could see what was inside together, the woman declined. When Mannis insisted that her family should keep it, she became upset and yelled at him that she didn’t want it, all of which could be taken as a bit of a hint that this thing was bad news.

    A dybbuk is a spirit in Hebrew folklore that cannot move on because it has unfinished business on Earth. They frequently try to take possession of someone in order to help them complete their unresolved issues. Keselim doesn’t seem to mean anything in any language. I thought that since it was probably a Hebrew word, the correct spelling might be “cheselim” and that the granddaughter had misunderstood since English speakers have a hard time with the Hebrew pronunciation of “ch,” but that spelling doesn’t seem to mean anything either. I have some further thoughts on the matter that I’ll get to later.

    Collage of Dybbuk BoxThe box itself was made of mahogany and built with no handles on the double doors that open in front. They both swing open simultaneously when the small drawer at the bottom is pulled out so that light fills the entire interior uniformly, indicating that its builder intended it to be a vessel dedicated to God. There was also a common Jewish prayer inscribed on the back that translates as “Hear O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is one. Blessed is the name of his honored kingdom forever.”

    Mannis took the box to his furniture refinishing store and stuck it in the basement workshop. He planned on refinishing it and giving it to his mother. Then he opened the store and left to run errands, leaving the young woman who worked for him in charge. Half an hour later, the woman called Mannis on his cellphone, hysterical and screaming that someone was in the basement cursing and breaking glass. She couldn’t get out because the iron security gates and emergency exit were locked. Mannis told her to call 911 just as the battery in his phone went dead. He raced back to the shop and when he got there, the woman was on the floor in a corner of his office sobbing hysterically. When he went down into the basement, he was struck by the overwhelming stench of cat urine and found that the lights didn’t work. A quick investigation revealed that the sound of breaking glass had been from every bulb in the basement being shattered. When Mannis went back upstairs, his young employee was gone and she never returned. At that point, he didn’t connect any of this with the presence of the box.

    Mannis opened the box soon afterward and found some unusual items inside. There was a granite prayer stone inscribed with the word “shalom” in Hebrew, a cast iron candle holder with four octopus legs, two locks of hair, one blond and one brown, each bound together with string, a small golden wine cup, a dried rose, a 1925 wheat penny, and a 1928 wheat penny, possibly indicating that the box was made no earlier than that. He offered to return these things to the family, but they didn’t want them.

    So anyway, the box was in such good condition that he decided not to refinish it before giving it to his mother, sans the weird contents. Too bad. It would be interesting to know what would have happened if he had taken a sander to it…or tried to.

    Since she was out of town on her birthday, Mannis had to wait until three days later to give it to her, on October 31, 2001. He presented it to her at his store, then went to his office to make a phone call before taking her to lunch. Less than five minutes later, one of his employees rushed in to tell him that there was something wrong with his mother. Mannis went out to find her sitting in a chair next to the box in a catatonic state with a blank expression and tears streaming down her face. She had suffered a stroke. She was partially paralyzed and unable to speak, though she later regained her speech. The next day at the hospital, she was communicating by pointing to letters. To her son, she spelled the words “no gift.” When he reminded her that he had given her a gift, she spelled out “hate gift.” Mannis told her that it was okay; he would get her something else. He still wasn’t seeing a connection.

    After this, he tried giving it to his sister, who returned it after a week, saying that the doors wouldn’t stay closed. Then he gave it to his brother, who gave it back after three days. He said that it smelled like jasmine, but his wife insisted that it reeked of cat urine.

    At this point in the story, two things became obvious to me. First, this guy was determined to give this thing to somebody, and also that these people know a lot more than I do about the smell of cat urine. I guess I’m more of a dog person.

    Next, he gave it to his girlfriend, but she only kept it for two days for reasons unknown. Then she gave it back and asked Mannis to sell it for her, which is pretty darned funny when you think about it. When’s the last time you gave someone a present and had them say “I love it! Can you sell it for me? I’d rather have the money.” He then sold it to an elderly couple (no word on who got the cash), but found it sitting in front of the door to his shop three days later with a note that read “This thing has a darkness,” so he took it home. Good idea.

    Demonic hagAs soon as he brought it home, he started having a recurring nightmare. He would be walking with a friend when he would realize that the “friend” was really something evil. The person would then transform into a demonic hag and attack him. He claims that he would sometimes wake up with marks and bruises where the hag had hit him. He still saw no connection to the box.

    He finally got it when his sister, brother and sister-in-law all spent the night at his house and they all had the same dream. A little discussion revealed that they had all had this same dream before and always when the box was in their home. His girlfriend confirmed by phone that she’d had the same dream while she had it, so naturally he decided to sell it to some poor sap on eBay. In all fairness, almost everything I’ve recounted so far was included in the exhaustively long listing, as well as some stuff that I left out because I’m not trying to sell anything, so it’s not like he didn’t warn people.

    What happened next was that he got tons of questions and offers for large amounts of money from people who wanted to circumvent the auction. Mannis was suspicious of these people for undisclosed reasons, but it appears that he was right to doubt their sincerity. The box didn’t sell for any huge amount, although if anyone knows exactly what it did sell for they aren’t saying. If these people had really been willing to cough up some serious cash, they certainly could have done so honestly. Others contacted him about studying the box or performing an exorcism on it. He turned them all down. It sold in June of 2003, which surprised me when I saw the date. He had kept this thing for nearly two years.

    The dumbass who bought it…I mean the fine, intelligent young lad who purchased it received a call from Mannis shortly after the auction ended. Mannis had said that he would do this in the listing to make sure that the buyer really understood what they were getting. The young man was less than impressed by the warning and told Mannis to stop wasting his time and just ship it already (see opening quote).

    This young man, who prefers to remain anonymous, was a college student at Truman State in Kirksville, Missouri. He decided to sell the box just a few months after purchasing it, once again on eBay. Though he maintained in his listing that he still did not believe in the paranormal, he included all of the information from the original auction as well as some of his own reasons for wanting to be rid of it.

    He lived in a house with six roommates, and each of them took turns sleeping with the box in their room (again, see opening quote). Several of them began to suffer from mysterious afflictions including burning eyes, bronchitis, general listlessness, insomnia and an undisclosed illness that the seller attributed to allergies. The house was also occasionally permeated with strange odors and there were a number of automotive and electrical mishaps. He also said that about half of his hair had fallen out.

    The most intriguing part of this listing was that he stated that he would not talk about what had happened between September of ’03 and January ’04, which of course probably means that this is when things got really interesting. Why else would you bring it up? Although he didn’t mention it in the listing, those who knew him also said that he went from being a solid student to being placed on academic probation during this time. I kind of doubt that this is what he wouldn’t talk about, though I’m sure it’s related.

    Second eBay auctionJason Haxton, the next and current owner of the box, was the Director of the A.T. Still University Museum of Osteopathic Medicine in Kirksville where he learned about the box from one of the owner’s roommates. When Haxton offered to buy the box outright, the owner told him that if he wanted it, then he could bid on it like everyone else. (Does this guy strike anyone else as being a complete jackhole?) So that’s what he did. He got it for $280. He intended to give it to an illusionist friend of his to use in his act, but when he heard about its past, the man didn’t want it. This is unusual in itself considering how disdainful – and sometimes openly hostile – most stage magicians are toward anything paranormal, going all the way back to Harry Houdini, who spent more time exposing fraudulent mediums than escaping from straightjackets.

    So being a man totally rooted in science, Haxton didn’t put much stock in the idea that there was anything supernatural about the box. However, when he first opened the package that it came in, he felt a sharp pain in his abdomen as if he had just been stabbed. When he woke up the next morning after a restless night, he found that blood had pooled in his eyes, as if something had clawed at them in his sleep. Haxton’s son Ross said that his father seemed to suddenly look and feel an if he had become ill and that this lasted for weeks, possibly months, afterward. Haxton had the box tested for any substances that might account for its adverse effects on his health, but there was no indication of any toxins or heavy metals that would cause this sort of reaction. Ross Haxton reported an incident of seeing a “black flame” move across the room and disappear into a wall. He said that this sighting lasted about thirty seconds. The previous owner and Kevin Mannis also claimed that they and others had seen shadowy figures in their homes while they were in possession of the box.

    Jason Haxton then took the box to the house next door which they had recently purchased and was vacant. He didn’t want this thing in the same house with his family. He kept it in the basement there and forgot about it for nearly five months before he went back to check on it one day. He found that the area around the cubby hole that he had stuck it in was surrounded by hundreds of venomous centipedes, even though it was the middle of winter. They scattered as soon as he came in and were gone in a matter of seconds. He also found that all of the spiders in the basement were dead in their webs – encased in some sort of white coating that also covered the walls. He claims that as soon as he removed the box, this substance just went away. He took pictures to back this up, but I can’t show them to you due to copyright restrictions.

    So what to do with the box? Haxton didn’t want to get rid of it because doing so would take control of the thing that had so impacted his life out of his hands. What he did instead was research it to try to determine his best course of action. Rabbis told him that to reseal the box he would have to construct an ark made of acacia wood from a single tree and line it with 24 carat gold to contain it. They told him that this would have a calming effect on the box. Scientists agreed that gold would be dense enough to contain any electromagnetic forces that the box might contain. So that’s what he did. The box and the ark are now locked inside of a military-grade, shockproof container and kept in a secret location. Many people who want access to the box for various reasons have contacted him in an attempt to persuade him to let them see it, but so far he has turned them all down, with one exception which I’ll get to in the final paragraph.

    It would seem obvious that the dybbuk, or spirit, contained in the box (if that’s what it really is) is that of a malevolent old woman. Perhaps “keselim” is an obscure term in some regional dialect or language for what is usually referred to in English as a black entity* – a shadowy creature that has no distinct form and seems to feed off of negative emotions, especially fear, which sounds more like what Ross Haxton saw. There are several languages spoken in Spain by relatively small segments of the population, most notably Basque and Catalan. These are not the sorts of languages that you’re likely to find fluent translators for outside of their particular cultural areas, so this idea is far from being a mere shot in the dark. If this is the case and there are two entities involved, then they would seem to truly be a match made somewhere a little south of Heaven. The more likely explanation is a little more mundane. “Kessem” is a little-known Hebrew word for items used in a magical operation. This word probably got mispronounced or misheard somewhere along the line as “keselim.” It was probably just a reference to the various, more tangible items in the box.

    The one group of people Haxton has worked with and given limited access to the box were thePossession Poster people who made the movie that was very loosely based on the actual events. Since the producers of The Possessed billed it as being “based on a true story” and then went on to present us with a movie that was a complete work of fiction, it was nice of them to include a short documentary about the real story of the Dybbuk Box as a bonus feature on the DVD as told by three of the people actually involved. That’s where you can see the actual Dybbuk Box, or at least the front of it since Haxton wouldn’t remove it from its ark or open it. In case you’re suggestible,I should tell you that this piece ends with a cryptic warning from Kevin Mannis that just becoming interested in the box could somehow involve you with it.I guess if I were nicer, I would have told you that at the beginning.

     __________________________________________________

    *Fortunately, black entities are a very rarely reported phenomenon. If you’ve ever read anything about them, let alone encountered one, then you know what I mean. They are nasty little buggers. Unfortunately, they have recently come to be summarily grouped in with the much more trendy category of shadow people, entities whose existence I have my doubts about. I’m not saying that they don’t exist, but I’m always wary of the validity of trendy ideas and the credibility, motives and objectivity of those who latch onto them. If any shadow people take offense to this, I would be happy to discuss it with you over lunch at one of those restaurants where you have to eat in total darkness. My treat.

    Maybe I’m the one who’s suggestible, or maybe Kevin Mannis was right and I should take another look at the opening quote myself.

    The night after I posted this article, I absent-mindedly rubbed my right eye and felt a sharp, burning sensation on my face. My first thought was that I had spent too much time in the sun and my face had burned. A quick check in the mirror proved that this was not the case. There was no visible sign of anything at all.

    The next morning, this area was still sensitive to the touch and there were little bumps that were difficult to see but that I could definitely feel. I shrugged it off and went on about my day, although I was rubbing my face constantly to feel if the bumps were still there.facial scars

    The following morning, July 19 (my mother’s birthday, coincidentally, although I never tried to give her a haunted wine box), I looked in the mirror and saw what you now see in the picture on the right. These scratches were right underneath the tender area below my right eye. I don’t have any pets, so this wasn’t the work of a disgruntled feline. They are definitely scratches and not just red marks, but they don’t hurt at all. I was understandably a bit startled when I saw them.

    The most obvious answer is that I scratched myself in my sleep, and that’s almost certainly what happened. Why I would do this is still a mystery. As I said, the bumpy area on my face didn’t hurt unless I touched it, and it never itched. Scratching it wouldn’t have done anything but cause pain. It would be cool and creepy if I could tell you that I had a dream about being attacked by a demonic old woman, but if I did I don’t remember it.

    Weird.

     

     

     

     

     

    and all the devils are here