Tuesday, October 25, 2016
1970 Buick GSX Stage 1
"1970 Buick GSX Stage 1"
Usually appearing a canary-like yellow, the 1970 Buick GSX Stage 1 sings with unearthly power and privileged potency. Not to get too metaphysical about this bird, but the Canary Totem fuels the ability to feel and express emotions--and boy, does this big block sing on the blacktop. Here are some specs and performance levels from this Classic vehicle--here we go:
455 Cubic Inches--total 8-Cylinder.
Horsepower: Listed at 360; however, more in the range between 415 to 425.
510 pounds-foot of torque--imagine all that power going to the wheels!!!
Hurst 4-Speed Manual.
0-60: 5.5 Seconds.
Quarter Mile: 13.38 Seconds.
Top Speed: Never can tell, but I bet she could hold 144 for a protracted period.
Crystalline Cool (4)
"Crystalline Cool (4)"
Duncan's Dad surprised him at their humble habitat by driving his son's gift onto the gravel driveway--it was a rusty, old El Camino, which means: Royal Road, or the King's Highway; moreover, in the back of the counterpoised automobile, it being pure balance due to being a truck and a car simultaneously, was a Golden Retriever armed with nothing but gregarious glee and fortune's fidelity, though a dog needs a frisbee toss here and there--gotta play sometimes, but never too hard, for devotion trumps regalement.
Duncan was soooo happy that he immediately embraced his father after the old man exited the cool vehicle, touch being so grand, offering healing and the best positive energy, as Christ touches us by way of the Eucharist.
Next, Duncan ran to the back of the El Camino, and the large Golden Retriever jumped into his arms, as if axiomatically knowing his new best friend; furthermore, there were licks of love and slobbers of sublimity. The twosome danced and played in the pastoral parts of where they did reside, and Old Dad lit up a cigar, blowing his prayers and thanks to God, the Lord always hovering above, watching our every move and innermost actions.
Saint Guinefort; plus, what Pope Francis says about animals
"Saint Guinefort; plus, what Pope Francis says about animals"
Yes, yes--I get it. Fantasy. Myth. Yet all of that is rooted in truth. Remember: "Man lives not on bread alone, but on every word breathed from the mouth of God." Indeed, God is not limited to the Bible.
The heretical tale, as some see, of Saint Guinefort is not unique, but in 13th century France, a nobleman left his child alone with a Greyhound. When he returned, he found the child missing; moreover, blood on the dog's incisors; hence, he jumped to conclusions and killed the dog. Next, he turned over the infant's cot, finding the child alive, and a venomous viper slain by the holy hound's bite. Therefore, we get Saint Guinefort.
Pope Pius the 9th declared animals soulless. Pope Francis wrote otherwise, declaring they too can share the Kingdom of Heaven with man.
My step-father was saved by his dog Pete. He stepped, barefoot mind you, on a copperhead; then, he jumped away, but before the adder could strike, his dog Pete got a hold of the snake and killed it; plus, my friend's Dad, a Green Beret during Vietnam, having returned to Arkansas after his tour of duty, was out digging in his backyard when some toxic serpents came upon him--his dog pushed him back; then, it stood between him and the snakes with an intense growl--not even the cruel strike of reptiles wanted any part of that canine's teeth.
So, we can either call these things fairy tales and pagan like, or accept that people like Saint Francis actually did have relationships with canines, as did Saint Roch, and many normal, neuro-typical people. All dogs are not just dogs, humping, biting, fighting; indeed, like people, some dogs can be loving, sweet, magnanimous, and even enter into states of sublimity. Why argue with a modern Pope dubbed Francis, being so popular--it even frustrates Christ's own Church at times.
Monday, October 24, 2016
Crystalline Cool (3)
"Crystalline Cool (3)"
Duncan's father told him: "Son, you've chastised yourself more than anyone since the Middle-Ages; moreover, wailed and given great lament unto the Lord. Mortification of the senses, chastity when it came time, scorning many, great states of poverty, which allowed you to see the beauty of nature, and yet you admit not your own courage."
Duncan would not cease. He would never admit himself, only those things within him that gave him affection for the Divine. Yes, a target on his back, that only the highest level of spooks in the government knew about--and would they assist?
He told his father: "I have sinned, and I know I'm being monitored."
His Dad back with: "So are your adversaries. The trick is on them. You never follow a coyote I've heard. They don't know why, but you do."
Duncan calmly asked: "Dad--could we get a dog?"
His Dad's face lit up in a sparkly grin, and out of his cool countenance, the old man's lips worked the words: "Every man needs a best friend. And no man should mess with God's gift of the canine, which has always resided side-by-side with man--since the conception of human consciousness canines and man have strode with smooth synergy. And I don't know if this is blasphemy son, but Anubis is an ancient god with the head of a jackal, and when you die he weighs your heart, as some of the myth goes; specifically, if your heart is heavy--he throws it away and you don't pass, but if it is light; next, you go on to the afterlife. Heck, the Knights Templar know more about the Egyptians than us regular Christian folk. So much secrecy, but truly--the Creator, God, that Master of Intelligent Design--He knows. Thus, let the Lord always be your refuge, and I think we should name the dog Roadkill."
Duncan: "That's horrible Dad."
His Dad with: "Where's your sense of laughing at yourself? Just because Percy Shelley couldn't do it, doesn't mean a wild, American dog can't."
Sunday, October 23, 2016
1969 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1
"1969 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1"
I like the first production models, hued in a lively Dusk-Blue and armed with a super-cool intake manifold--this car seems to be alive in every soul's sea of muscle car dreams; therefore, here are some specs; moreover, levels of awesome performance--like this:
427 Cubic Inches with 8-Cylinders--this block known as the ZL1.
850-CFM Double-Pumper Holley Carburetor.
430 Horsepower.
450 lb-ft Torque.
0-60: 5.3 Seconds.
Quarter Mile Run: 13.6 Seconds at 110 Miles-Per-Hour.
Crystalline Cool (2)
"Crystalline Cool (2)"
Duncan was way out in the bucolic beauty, underneath shimmering beams of sunshine, working the pastoral glory of Terra's terrain, using a war-torn shovel to dig his ditches in solitude. An ex-admirer of his, a lovely-looking lady in her early twenties, along with some of her friends--they hotly drove by him in a fancy car. Anyway, as Duncan had rejected the lovely lady's carnal passes a while back, she had become scorned and full of anger--even questioning her own beauty; as a result, she found his laboring humility, which he himself adored, and flung curses and profane vulgarities upon his presence, her friends vociferously gelling with the cruel cackling as the fancy car swiftly passed.
* * * *
Duncan knew it was all real. But mostly, he knew the Lord was his refuge, and remembered the best bard's Kingly son having said: "Whoso mocketh the poor reproacheth his Maker, and he that is glad at calamities shall not go unpunished."
Duncan prayed for the lovely lady and her friends to be blessed. To be forgiven and loved. Yet those girls were far from discovering "the Book" in all their passions so rich with filth; nevertheless, Duncan continued to pray for them to be loving; next, he returned to shoveling, digging deeper into the mysteries of the Earth. The daystar came alive, even brighter than before, and his body and spirit unearthed the Holy Grail within, touching Christ, so gently, so ever gently.
Yes, Duncan was a sinner. Not just once either. He had flirted with disaster. He had been a victim of passion himself. But when his true Father arrived in his life, all that heat of the South drove him home to the glory of the allegorical North.
Crystalline Cool (1)
"Crystalline Cool (1)"
Duncan was a bit weary concerning getting involved with other people, would always tell his adoring Dad: "I'm not much into socializing."
His Dad would respond: "Don't blame ya kid. People are mostly scumbags. Their father is the father of lies and murder--he was a murderer from the beginning."
Of course Duncan knew these Words to be the Divine Words of God Himself, speaking of the venomous viper, but the youth-restoring eagle of Saint John, protector of the Holy Mother--he shall rise from death like a Phoenix.
Duncan lived deep down in the blazing passion of the American South, where the passion was not so much Christ-Like, but scorched with devils deep into the chronic art of competition, though not on the field, as they are pathetic poltroons, but in the homes and workplaces of many who were innocent enough, driving them downwards, not being benevolent or wise enough to realize that everything is negotiable; therefore, when you communicate with a child, don't engage in a power-struggle, but understand rather than wanting to be understood; next, offer them as much free rope as possible.
Duncan dug ditches--simple Voltaire-like metaphors in-play, knowing his Third Eye, that mystical Pineal Gland was always being activated, offering premonitions, angelic sight, quasi-telepathy, and the brain's scent of those demonically influenced by things such as hubris and needing victory by defeating or humiliating, as competition brings men into the state of bastards, again: their father being the father of lies and murder.
The Founding Fathers, the Catholic Church, Descartes--they all knew and know the power of a sublime Pineal Gland. Duncan knew it was imperative too, especially to not calcify the pea-sized, pine cone-like house of mysticism. And as crystals were known by the ancients to offer communication with the super-mundane, it has been axiomatically proven with the construction of scanners and other communicative devices. But hell, Duncan dug ditches for a living, reading about the mystics, straying from politics and deviant art, admiring the holy things, and loving a Bio-Dad always there for him with words of wisdom, reminding to fear only God--nothing else!!! And as for excitement in his modest life: Duncan was known to be a wild man at times, getting a chili dog here and there.
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