Symbols - What does heaven look like
Island
Seen from outside the egg, the cones are fitted together but each is separated by a ‘sea’ of chaos – unprogrammed energy. Thus an island is a soul cone seen as it were either from ‘below’ or from above, but where the higher levels of vibrational energy are largely invisible.
This is why the old maps of the world appear so strange. They are not old physical maps, they are mappings of the egg, showing the islands of spirituality in the egg.
Right: An Eighteenth Century Chinese 'wheelmap' of the world. Source: J. Brooman, Imperial China
Old spiritual maps – one Chinese one European showing the islands of function known by the spiritual traveller then in the area of common consciousness.
Georgia O’Keeffe – ‘Islands’
Paradise Islands
Some islands are not specific to the living soul, but are places of final resting for the disembodied spirit – but only certain spirits. Thus they are perceived as the place where these very specific spirits go when the body dies. And in some cases, more than one spirit may congregate there.
There are any number of such Paradise islands mentioned in myth and legend. Avalon is one, but the Islands of the Blessed, the Fortunate Isles, Utopia and so on are other examples. Paradise islands appear in a number of cultures.
The location of all these paradise islands is not in the world soul area, but in the area of the Created. The following diagram of the Egg may not be helpful in the explanation, but it attempts to show an area of the Egg in which our little soul cones lie and then another area in which all the Intelligences are. These mythical islands are found in this part of the spiritual world.
All the islands, whatever culture refers to them, are the places where souls that have led a good life and contributed to the creation process in positive ways are 'rewarded', or if you like, given a final resting place. Descriptions of these islands describe places of sheer bliss and great beauty.
Islands as systems
Islands are symbolic of growth and dissolution – system building and system decay, the addition of function and the decay of function – soul function, personal function, and also the systems of larger things too, nations and other soul groupings.
Some systems which appear to be substantial, even stable, even monster size, can collapse under us without us realising they aren’t solid at all. The Island as a symbol is perfect for representing these facets of system and personal change. There are waves of dissolution and the shore as the symbolic dividing line between the chaos of Ocean and sea and the order of land.
In some mythical tales the islands are so unstable they are represented as great sea monsters that submerge under the waves. Here a story is being used to demonstrate that any 'island' that has not been built steadily and slowly and painstakingly using experience and a solid foundation, can suddenly appear, untried untested, causing waves of disruption but just as quickly disappear into the sea again. Politicians have a habit of inventing systems like this – quick fix ill thought through inventions that have taken no time to think up, but may well cause years of misery. This is why evolution tends to be a better bet than revolution.
Examples of mythical spirit islands
There are a huge number of myths and legends based on the symbolism of the island. Because there are so many, I have placed some as observations and a small sample here in the text. The reason for including so many is to show how very similar the legends are across the world, how the symbolism of an island Paradise for heros is almost universal. What is also interesting is that whilst Paradise islands hold the good and the worthy souls after death, there are also islands in the spirit world that hold demons and ogres or are symbolically representative of unpleasant souls. Interestingly enough, these are often found below sea level indicating they are islands of the underworld or even of hell. The water has to be kept out of them using sea walls and gates thus adding the symbolic references to the flood.
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Buyan - In Russian folklore, Buyan (Буян) is described as a ‘mysterious island’ in the western ocean with an ability to appear and disappear. Three brothers – Northern, Western, and Eastern Winds – live there. Koschei the Deathless keeps his soul hidden here inside a needle placed inside an egg in the mystical oak-tree.Buyan (Буян)
- Tol Eressëa - is a mythical island invented by J. R. R. Tolkien. The island provided the basis for the story of the Anglo-Saxon traveller Ælfwine, that later became The Silmarillion. The name is the Elvish for "Lonely Island". Tol Eressëa was designed as a kind of Isle of the Blessed inhabited by Elves. Its main city, Kortirion, was located at the very centre of the island. The island was situated ‘far to the west, within sight of Valinor’.
- Mag Mell - In Irish mythology, Mag Mell ("plain of joy") was yet another mythical island far to the west of Ireland or a kingdom beneath the ocean where the souls of the dead went to if they had achieved a hero's end and died in glory (so similar to Tír na nÓg and Ablach). In Myles Dillon’s book Early Irish Literature, Mag Mell is described as being visited by various Irish heroes and monks forming the basis of the Adventure Myth or "echtrae". Mag Mell was “a pleasurable paradise, a place where sickness and death do not exist and a place of eternal youth and beauty. Here, music, strength, life and all pleasurable pursuits come together in a single place. Here happiness lasts forever, no one wants for food or drink”. Mag Mell's allure extended from the pagan era to Christian times and it is possible that Mag Mell and St. Brendan island are one and the same thing.
Observations
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- A A Popov - The initiation of an Avam-Samoyed shaman
- Arnold, Matthew - To Margeurite
- Avalon - Geoffrey of Monmouth - Vita Merlini
- Ball, Dr Martin - The golden pyramid
- Blake, William - Around Golgonooza lies the land of death eternal
- Blithe spirit - Sees a sea serpent
- Blodeuwedd
- Böcklin, Arnold - Die Lebensinsel (Isle of Life) 1888
- Böcklin, Arnold - Isle of the Dead (1880-1886)
- Borobudur
- Braveheart - Bridge to the tunnel
- Braveheart - Columns and colours
- Braveheart - Follow the yellow brick road
- Braveheart - Islands, bridges and pencil cases
- Braveheart - Landscapes, stones and islands
- Brittany - Isle de Sein and the Realm of the Dead
- Brittia
- C P Cavafy - Ithaca
- Carroll, Lewis - The Hunting of the Snark
- Charles Fort - 0 Concepts - White coral islands in a dark blue sea
- Chelan - Native American Indians - Creation myth
- Chesterton, G K - The ballad of the White Horse
- Christian islands
- Christmas cocktail
- Cirlot on islands
- Cocteau, Jean - Opium the Diary of his cure - The Island
- Corbin, Henry - Qazvini
- Dali - Dream caused by the flight of a bee
- Dante - Purgatorio - Canto 03 & 04
- Dante - Purgatorio - Canto 28
- Delville, Jean - Orpheus
- Father Bernabe Cobo - Inca Religion and Custom - 'The Flood'
- Frost, Robert - The people along the sand
- Genesis 10 - The Tribes
- Green, Celia - The Recurrent nightmare
- Hammond, Bill - Eagle and bone
- Hammond, Bill - Whistler’s mothers sticks and stones
- Harunobu - Shunga
- Hennell, Thomas - Of finer, thinner stuff than iridescent bubbles
- Hiroshige - A shrine among trees on a moor
- Hiroshige - Awa Naruto no fuukei
- Hiroshige - One hundred Famous Views in the Provinces
- Holderlin, Johann - Patmos
- Homer - The Odyssey - The city of the Laestrygonians
- Homer - The Odyssey - The Elysian fields
- How sweet the heavens are
- Hufaidh
- Huxley, Aldous - Pala
- Huxley, Thomas - Intellectually we stand on an islet
- Hypnerotomachia Poliphili - Islands
- Island of the Blessed
- Isole Madre
- James, William - The Confidences of a Psychical Researcher - Ego and Personality
- Japanese islands
- Joyce, James - Ulysses - Nirvana
- Kahuna - Hawaiki
- Keightley, Thomas - Djins
- Kepler, Johannes - Harmonices Mundi Libri V – The Matrix
- Kepler, Johannes - The Daemon from Levania from Somnium
- Khnopff, Fernand - Abandonned City
- LaBerge, Stephen - Lucid dreaming and obstacles
- Lambeth Palace or Reading world map
- Lowell, James Russell - For mankind are one in spirit, and an instinct bears along
- Lowell, James Russell - I know a falcon swift and peerless
- Lowell, James Russell - Now fold thy wings a little while
- Lowell, James Russell - The sea is lonely, the sea is dreary
- Lowry, L S - Self portrait as a pillar in the sea
- Magritte, Rene - L’entrée en scene
- Masters and Houston - On islands
- Mayan - Sacbeob or White ways
- Mayo, Jeff - On the ego
- Michaux, Henri - Miserable Miracle Mescaline - Blubber lips
- Mircea Eliade - A initiation ceremony
- Mircea Eliade - Belet
- Mircea Eliade - On the Gardens of the Hesperides
- Mircea Eliade - Shamanic bridges
- Moreau - Venice 1885
- Morrells, Luce and the Amazing airy house
- Morrells, Luce and the horseshoe shaped island
- Morrells, Luce and the house boat
- Morrells, Luce and the large house surrounded by water
- Mythology and Rites of the British druids - The gardens of the Tylwyth Teg
- Onigashima
- O’Keeffe, Georgia - Sky above clouds
- Paul Devereux - Sacred Places - Symbols
- Paul Devereux - The realm of the dead
- Peake, Mervyn - I, while the gods laugh, the world's vortex am
- Plato - Critias - Atlantis and Athens
- Plato - Phaedo - The Expanding universe
- Plensa, Jaume - Talking Continents
- Po Chu-I - The island of pines
- Rachmaninoff - Isle of the Dead, Op. 29
- Ray Davies and the Kinks - 1965 I'm on an island
- Rimbaud, Arthur - There; the little dead girl, behind the rosebushes
- Saint Brendan - 01 The Voyage of Saint Brendan
- Saint Brendan - 03 The Voyage of Saint Brendan
- Saint Brendan - 06 The Voyage of Saint Brendan
- Saint Brendan - 07 The Voyage of Saint Brendan
- Saint Brendan - 10 The Voyage of Saint Brendan
- Saint Brendan - 14 The Voyage of Saint Brendan
- Saint Brendan - 16 The Voyage of Saint Brendan
- Saint Brendan - A summary of his 'voyage'
- Shakespeare, William - When I have seen by Time's fell hand defaced
- Sir Thomas More - Utopia
- Spencer, Stanley - Symbolism 01 - Mending Cowls Cookham 1915
- Spilliaert, Leon - Femme au bord de l'eau
- Spilliaert, Leon - Red isthmus
- Sterry, Peter - Imagine this Life as an Island, surrounded by a Sea of Darkness
- Sting - Island of Souls
- Sting - Soul Cages
- Sumeru
- Tennyson, Alfred Lord - Lady of Shallott
- Tennyson, Alfred Lord - Morte d’Arthur - Lyonesse
- The Book of Taliesin - The Battle Of the Trees - 08
- The Case of January Schofield
- The gardens of Iran
- Thoreau, Henry D - Walden - The landscape of soul
- Thoreau, Henry D - Walden - The reptile in us
- Tír na nÓg
- Unusual cards - 16 The Tower
- Vision of Timarchus
- Warner Allen, Herbert - The Timeless moment
- Watson, Lyall - Wind and heaven's breath
- Wy Brasil - Paul Devereux - Earth Mysteries
- Yaqui Myths and Legends – collected by Ruth Warner Giddings - The first fire
- Yeats, W B - Collected poems - The island dreams under the dawn
- Yeats, W B - Collected poems - The Lake Isle of Innisfree
- Yeats, W B - Selected poems - The White Birds