Last night I had determined that for me next post I was going to skip ahead a bit to what I call the ‘smoking’ (or dimming) of the Anor Stone. I’ve vaguely referred to this, I think, including a mention of a prophecy relating to it, but haven’t really addressed it directly.
Rather than go through a couple more weeks of 2019 words before I
get there, I thought I would just go ahead and cover it off. It is what is most on my mind right now. It will also tie into some Sirius symbolism,
I believe.
However, this will be a pre-amble post to the post – sort of
an introduction, I guess, just based on a little tune that popped into my head. And I will see
if I get to the other post later today.
This morning, as I was thinking a bit more about some of
these Anor Stone details, a song from The Little Shop of Horrors came unexpectedly
into my mind. The song’s name is “Suddenly,
Seymour”. It was just pretty much that first
line of the chorus that came bouncing in:
Suddenly, Seymour is standing beside you
Interestingly, when I had Rick Moranis in my head singing this line, I
understood the name Seymour to both be a name, but also a play on words: See More.
Well, you know I couldn’t help but look into this.
First, the name Seymour has a few potential meanings. Apparently it also ties in France, with
Seymour being Latin for a town in Northern France: Saint-Maur.
In terms of meanings, you have potentially “Marshy land near
the sea”. That is interesting given
Peter-Marsh, who sort of dropped off on this blog as of late. It also can mean Tailor, which also stands
out give my recent tie in to Taylor Swift, or rather the Swift Tailor.
But the meaning I will focus on today has to do with “Dark”. Maur means “Dark” in Greek, it looks like,
and is listed as one of the possible origin words for Seymour.
Now this is interesting because we have just covered an individual – Doug – whose name means Dark. Are we perhaps referring to this person? No, thankfully.
Just as there is Bald and bald, there is Dark and dark, and for our purposes here we are after the latter - just dark. Something that has been made temporarily dark and without their former light or glory, but is not Dark. If that makes any sense.
Think of the symbolism, for example, that I covered earlier with the Oreo Cookie and the image of the Black Sun. Although its exterior is black or dark, on the inside it is still White (or Shiny/ Light). It is not Dark at its core. At some point, the black exterior is made to match what is on the inside. White, meaning Light.
In any case, you have something that is darkened (but still saintly), and also something that was specifically used, as clearly as I can tell, to signify this other meaning of "See More". You may see where I am going
with this, in speaking of a Seer who will See, doing so by the power
of Stones, as I have guessed at in previous posts.
Consequently, what I think "Suddenly, Seymour" from this morning specifically pointed to was, quite specifically, the Anor Stone. Kind of a fun little nickname or alternative name for it. Seymour/ See More.
As I will write about in my next post, this Stone will be 'smoked' or dimmed back in November of 2019 in preparation to rescue Joseph here in our world, and that this dimming may have fulfilled a well known (but apparently significantly misunderstood!) prophecy of a Sun being darkened prior to the End.
Also something I just noted with Rick Moranis' name. Mor in Elvish means dark, night, or dim. Anar is another name for Sun, and is close, but not really the same as Anis, unfortunately. But an(a) is closer and just drops the "s" at the end, and it literally means "at side of, alongside, besides". This song has Moranis, as Seymour, singing that he is now "standing beside you".
And of course we have another Rick/ Dick reference.
Why stop there, though, because the female actress in the movie is Ellen Green. We just covered Ellen/ Elen as another name for Star in Elvish, but also specifically a reference to El-Anor, the Anor Stone (Ellen being short for Eleanor).
OK, so hopefully a post later today/ tonight, if I have time, will cover the Anor Stone, what might have happened to it, and its current and darkened state.
I’ve never seen that movie and know nothing about it, but I watched the clip you posted. Seeing a Nice Jewish Boy called Seymour made me think of the J. D. Salinger character Seymour Glass. If Seymour is “see more,” then that name suggests Joseph Smith’s reputation as a “glass-looker.”
ReplyDeleteIn an interview, Whitley Strieber once made the cryptic remark that the one thing that would most help people understand the Other People and the close-encounter phenomenon would be to read “Seymour: An Introduction.”
Well, Little Shop of Horrors does have something to do with aliens.
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