Alien Cuticle: Microbes from Space

Peter Fotis Kapnistos

 

Alien Cuticle : Salmonella-like microbes from space

There is a Germanic belief in sympathetic magic that a man can change himself into a werewolf by donning a girdle belt.

The beast is the girdle





This trophy from the Python won, This robe, in which the deed was done,

A serpent girdled round he wore, The tail within the mouth, before;

His vest, for day and night, was py'd; A bending sickle arm'd his side;

An Allegory of Man

by Samuel Johnson

The Serpent Girdle of Abraxas



  • Brax = girdle (vr_ko lykos = vampire)


  • Torso of Athene, with Gorgoned aegis fastened round the waist


  • Athena with serpent girdle over diploidion - early period.


  • Ares, god of war, wears a serpent girdle. This girdle, a kind of snake made of fabric, leather or metal, is a symbol for sexual power.


  • If you look at the little Minoan snake-goddess you will see how two of the three snakes she wears actually form the girdle that goes round her hips.


  • L.W. Wilde

    "Girdles were used for religious purposes in the Greek and Roman liturgy, and Anastasius mentions in the 9th cent. muranula, or jeweled girdles in the shape of lampreys or eels."

    The girdle of Finnen or St. John by an Irish monk may be a Celtic version of the Abraxas serpent girdle:

    The girdle of the serpent is my girdle, the serpent is about me that men may not wound me, that women may not destroy me.'

    Encyclopedia of Religion, Part 11 By James Hastings

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Seaweed, mustard, and burnt almond



    Salmonella-like microbes from space. Alien cuticle. The beast is the girdle, set into the wireframe shape of a human torso. Worn by Cartaphilus and worshiped by your children, with embraces and kisses, to bond their hearts to the religion of clinical vampire sex magic. The alien abduction.

     





     






     



     






     



    Coming soon...





     



    Burnt almond is also the scent of cyanide. A flatworm species secretes a mixture of benzaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide when it is disturbed. NOT to be handled by children.

     

    Print Email
    Bookmark and Share

    Peter Fotis Kapnistos

    Peter Fotis Kapnistos is an American journalist, editor, and publisher now residing in the Eastern Mediterranean islands. After a career in fashion and advertising photography, Peter turned to photojournalism. He was editor for the "Athens News," Greece's oldest English-language daily newspaper. In cooperation with the Associated Press and Apple computers, he later oversaw the production of "Greece Today," one of the first direct online English-language desktop-published tabloids in the Near East.

    Peter helped to introduce public access to the Internet in the eastern Aegean islands by establishing a number of Internet Cafes there. He currently writes code for various websites and lives in the Patmos group of islands.

    Got Debt?  Get Debt Wise.