The Strange Story of Ahrinziman by Anita Silvani (1908) has been a subject of discussion around this circle before.
However, upon reading it, I keep on getting stuck on how this book was written. It seems to be affiliated with Spiritist circles; why is this? There seems to be nothing on the internet concerning how the author wrote this book or how she came about the tale of Sogdianus of Persia and converted it to such a detailed tale thay covers biographical data no one would know?
There seems to be no information concerning the auther herself.
Assuming the entirety of the tale is transferred perfectly from the records?
Comments
- type anita silvani
in google
& search...
But it isn't. The information they propagate is NOT correct, obviously, and there seem to be very odd things at work there. Odd, not wholly factual, and perhaps sinister.
You could say there's a bit of truth in everything, but that's what a master deceiver might say.
I don't know from whence this book emerged other than from the hand of Anita Silvani. Was she a Spiritist? I have no clue! Why does this book show up with connotations of it being popular with odd mystical movements?
At first glance, it's just a fantastical, poorly-written tale. Why its affiliation with the spiritual and mystical?
That's why I'm asking if anyone here (clears throat, looks around, looks directly at the person who brought the book up passive-aggressively, looks away casually), might be able to divulge a bit of information concerning the book's origins or why it's popular in these very odd circles.
Was it simply "inspired" by the Biblical tale of Esther? There's affiliations to the Wandering Jew suggested in the book.
The human brain can concoct all kinds of fantastical tales with enough suggestion and believe them to be true. Just saying that Spiritism and most movements affiliated to anything remotely New Age.
ahrinziman
in google... &, searching/scratching...
- 1st of all, ahrinziman is ahriman in which nzi was inserted...
...maybe nzi - from nzil-bhu = the maker of moon...which perverted the xi'an (spirit of china)
in google
gotta relax & try to sleep, going to work tomorrow...
- edgar cayce pretended he's been yoult, zoroaster's father & master...
... i'll check tha jelal-ud-din cv...
= did i get it?...
in google
2) "halevy's wandering jew" topic in this forum, page 3, "argumentum ad hominem" BRIAN's reply.
meena iyer
- i got it in "books.google.ro" by typing
zoroastrism mithraism
in google
...&, zoroastrism magi - in google
Yes, I know not everyone here has read the book and so it makes sense to mention it.
Ahrinziman mentions astral projection, seeing all kinds of beings around us, etc.
Personally seen a few entities myself as a child but... is it helpful to be able to detect these entities? I imagine so.
The problem comes to mental disorders and being potentially institutionalized if you tell the wrong person about these things, hehehe. Hehe.
Is being able to see these entities just a product of the opening of the "third eye" (or having a good chakra system that's well cared for in general?).
The whole third eye opening thing is kind of a sham, yada yada.
The problem isn't ambition. He certainly didn't seek these things out of ambition alone because ambition can have many forms.
A person may be quite ambitious when it comes to learning a new language and their ambition simply becomes drive that allows them to learn, say Tagalog, quite well and in a shorter period of time because of the dedication, work and concentration they put in. Along with discipline.
Discipline takes grit and ambition: the same ambition and grit that turned Ahrinziman from a random, orphaned little boy who grew up in the Caucasus mountains to a master sorcerer and later king is the same ambition that later turned that soul into someone who meditated their way into elightenment. I think.
It's grit. Not everyone has that. It's a distinct psychological trend, so koodos to Ahrinziman and his current incarnation.
But ambition isn't the problem here. It runs deeper than that.
It's what you desire that's the problem.
And then again, defining what you desire with complete discernment is yet another problem.
I can think I know what I want. But do I, really? I may want a life of restraint and discipline juxtaposed with a risqué career. Living in a tiny home with hardly enough room to sleep and eating and owning the bare minimum a person needs. While
helping others. And having no friends or family.
But is that what I REALLY want? Is it? WHY do I want these things?
People lie to themselves all the time.
2) as an "astral realm traveler", whether he existed, could be ahrinziman a previous re-inc' of... yram?