You’re walking down a path and come to a fork in the road.

You’re walking down a path and come to a fork in the road. After careful consideration, you take the left path. Further down this path is another fork. You think about the information you have and take the right path and, happy in your decision, believe you know the way, but then...the road splits again.
This happens again and again. The more you walk, the more you make a left or right turn, the more you realize that you are sure you have been here before.

Janus, the god of water, archways, the beginning and the end, is the father of Tiberinus
Janus is also believed to be before the gods, quite possibly the father of the gods
Tiberinus, the god of the river Tiber, is the father of Agrippa and the grandfather of Remus and Romulus.
Tiberinus is said to be the 9th king of Alba and a descendant of the Trojan Prince, and Roman hero, Aeneas.
Remus and Romulus as said to be the founders of Rome which sits on the river Tiber.
Romulus founded a cult based around Tiberinus.

Cybele is called magna mater, or great mother, the mother of all gods
she is the mediator between the known and unknown, the living and the dead.
She is considered the only goddess of Phryngia.
Cybele was also declared a descendant of the Trojan Prince Aeneas
Aeneas was the son of Anchises.
Anchises fell in love with the goddess Aphrodite who told him that she was not a god but a Phrygian princess, making Aphrodite not only the ancestor of all Roman emperors, but also of Janus and Cybele.

Phryngia was in Anatoila which is now Turkey.
Anatoila is also the same region where Alexander the great’s adoptive mother, Queen Ada of Caria, lived.

Where does all this lead with regards to the current story? Right back to Cybella.
Cybella is an Oracle. Oracles of that time were called Sibyls.
The Pphrygian Sibyl is most well know for being conflated with Cassandra
Cassandra was King Priam of Troy’s daughter who was the cousin of Aeneas
who was the ancestor of Janus and Cybele…

Take the left fork
Jennifer Brozek

Comments

  1. turns - reminds me of the labyrinth - perhaps that is why Theseus took the red string from Ariadne. interesting you end with the left fork - many believe always staying to the outside/right wall is the way through a maze like situation... : )

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  2. The left path seems just as right as the right path. and they all lead back to the beginning.
    So I'm wondering if you are ever truly lost?

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  3. hmm, but following that possibility - is one path "better" than another?

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  4. Probably not.
    The information is in different formats but it is still the same.
    I guess I'm just trying to the red string

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  5. I took the path less traveled but I brought a yellow helmet and cape.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Why bother with walls when you can break them down?

    ReplyDelete

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