Our Forgotten Past

Realities of Life
Nov 3 · 4 min read

D1: Who was Hanokh

D2 What was his influence?

D3: What wisdom did he outwork in his time?

A1: The wisdom sought out by a man, can save his family. When his family speaks forth this wisdom, and the Ethos catches it — the Ethos saves itself.

Pre1: The Philosophical imprinting of Hanokh’s thought

Hanokh, a man who lived in first Mesopotamian era, was considered an inspired philosopher in his day. He philosophised, many-a-thought and he also taught in the streets, schools and palaces of the time. Hanokh accurately predicted many wars, that we currently learn about in our history classes, even up to WWI, WWII and the Holocaust (Shoah). Hanokh also predicted the repeating of history in the generations that would forget past events. [He also predicted the global catastrophe, but that is a discussion for another time].

Hanokh was of a mixed decent, however was considered to be Ethiopian and was many-a-great grandfathers to Avraham and the Hebrew people. He would philosophise of a moral and ethical code, and was inspired to build a philosophy that carried a civilisation for over 400 years. Hanokh also wrote down his philosophies, predictions and history in the seclusion of a cave, then he would leave to teach this paradigm; often he stayed in the cave for months as he philosophised.

Hanokh taught much about consciousness, what it meant to be alive, and how life as a physical and spiritual being played out as the human experience.
In the Hebraic understanding, there is no differentiating the physical and spiritual aspects of life, as it is all one experience.
Hanokh taught this, and how to live life as a dignified person who considered the wellbeing of his fellow, as much as they themselves wanted dignity. There was many scientific discoveries, astrological discoveries and educational advancements that was present in this era. This was an ethos that became exceedingly healthy due to the widespread acceptance of Hanokh’s philosophy, where this ethos didn’t die out until they forgot Hanokh and his teachings, which wasn’t until 400 years later, that then ended the first Mesopotamian era.

But, what did he do that left a fingerprint on our history — and why have we forgotten it in our current era?

He taught his philosophies in the form of parables and poetry — as became common in these eras. Many people flocked around him, as his teaching style was profound.
Hanokh predicted that any ethos that forgot about their fellows and began to oppress the poor and needy, any ethos that forgot their own history or the history of their neighbouring ethea, and any ethos that began to change the teachings of the human experience by saying it was something it isn’t or forgetting the facts about the fundamental basics of human experiences, would ultimately die-out due to the lack of a stable foundation within the ethos itself. However, he spoke of a surviving remnant that would ultimately come out of the ruined ethos — predicting that it would happen constantly throughout history, if the factors above became a social norm.
Hanokh also philosophised that it would be the duty of the remnant to rebuild their ruined ethos, by re-instating the paradigms that sustained it throughout their centuries — by remembrance, their ethos will rebuild and become fortified again.

Hanokh also said concerning his philosophies, “What are good deeds without Shaddai?” and also “Without Shaddai, consciousness is meaningless”. As, a common teaching in many Eras, up until the Dark Ages (where the Agnostic and Gnostic teaching became more widespread), said that consciousness proves the existence of a Creator and a spiritual habitation. In those days, they had also experienced many phenomena, that confirmed constantly this philosophy to be true. He, and many others with him and after him, all said that when this philosophy was forgotten, we would see many disturbing things arise before the collapse of an ethos. However, before the collapse of the first Mesopotamian era, we see about 120 years before the total collapse of the society.

So, why have we forgotten this history?

I would state again, as I have stated before, “…we overlook many answers, because they simply “make no sense in our thoughts”, so we discard the unknown. We even scoff at it, as we deem it “childish” or “foolish”, declaring it the folly of times gone by…” [So, The Journey Begins]. So, we discard this history, because it makes no sense by current experiments in today’s era. But I would say to this, if only in this era it doesn’t make sense, but in every era before us it made sense, then we should simply shift our paradigm and rewrite our formula — as this would cause an even flow with our history, and then stabilise our future.
In answering the question, it is unfortunate that we forget, because we choose to overlook it. But, as Hanokh philosophised, if we continue to forget our history and even our neighbouring ethea’s history, then we will ultimately collapse in a future to come. But, if we are to remember, and reshape our national paradigms, then we will see a re-stabilisation of our ethos’ foundation — as a people who remember, are a people who will last through the ages.

Realities of Life

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Musing on the Adorations of Wisdom

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