NIGHT LIGHT NEWS
DAILY POSTINGS
Thursday, May 22, 2025- 7am
From Dark to Light. Thoughts on Light.
Sun Mercury (4) today in Gemini (2).
Ok, so last night, the lights went on. Yay!!!
Shock surprise relief happiness joy!
Prometheus Rising!
After three days & nights of no electricity.
I thought – from dark to light – Prometheus!
Thoughts on Lights illuminating the darkness.
So grateful!
And about dark to light – the light appearing, being given.
1….it was the first day of creation when the Lord said “let there be light” – from the darkness the light appeared.
It was magic. A miracle!
2. Prometheus – Then another one brought light to the earth, to the minds of men. I had thoughts of Prometheus – Hercules saved him. Prometheus brought light down to the minds of men & he was being punished & Hercules saved him.
3. And the Christ who said “I am the Light of the World, & you (we) are to be, too!”
4. And I thought about Plato’s allegory of the Cave – living in the darkness of the cave, no sunshine.
The dark is SO dark without the sun.
And so, the tornado was headed in our direction & it stopped a mile away & we are grateful for our lives – & today all the food in the freezer & refrigerator needs to be emptied out & I will give all the food to the wild creatures – they will love it all & think they have come to a feast.
And so….thoughts of light & dark – the Cave by Plato.
Of coming out of the dark into the light of the Sun.
A developmental stage for humanity – long ago & even now, too, for some.
Today Thursday, May 22, 2025. Gemini Sun.
Ray 2, the Light of Love & Wisdom.
Analogy of the Sun –
From Dark to Light.
From the Cave of darkness into the Light of Day.
Education – & the lack of education.
Right & true education.
The Cave – an Allegory
Allegory – artistic form, a narrative w/ moral purpose, illustrating complex ideas & concepts.
Allegory (story) of the Cave – – by Plato (Greek Philosopher)
From his Republic (book), 380 BC
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
There are those within humanity who only see the shadows.
They are the captive ones.
There are those who CREATE the shadows the captured ones believe in. They are the “rulers” (globalists, dark forces from Atlantean times).
There are those questioning the captors & their false information.
Those are the ones the illusioned ones don’t believe.
There is the NGWS, these also can be illusioned.
There is the NGWS standing as Tylers at the door of the Conclave. They seek to be the enlighted ones, the educators,
the White Magicians.
From Dark to Light.
And there is (always) the story –
From dark to light.
Reminding me of Plato’s Republic (book).
The Story of the Cave.
Plato’s famous allegory of the cave, from his book The Republic, tells the story of prisoners chained in a cave since birth, only able to see shadows on the wall cast by a fire. They mistake these shadows for reality. One prisoner escapes and, after adjusting to the blinding sunlight, sees the true world outside, including the real objects and the fire that cast the shadows. This journey out of the cave symbolizes the journey of enlightenment and the pursuit of true knowledge.
Plato’s allegory of the cave, a profound philosophical theory written more than two millennia ago, tells a story of captives chained in a cave since birth, their realities confined to the shadows cast on the cave wall by the fire behind them.
• The Cave:
The cave represents the world of appearances, where we perceive things through our senses and are influenced by our limited understanding.
• The Prisoners:
The prisoners represent people who are unaware of the true nature of reality and accept what they are told or what they see as the truth.
• The Shadows:
The shadows are the illusions, false perceptions, and opinions that people hold.
• The Fire:
• The fire represents the source of the illusions in the cave, and can also represent the opinions and beliefs that people hold.
• The Escape and the Sunlight:
The escape represents the awakening of reason and the pursuit of knowledge, while the sunlight represents the true world of Forms, the ultimate reality that philosophers strive to understand.
Plato’s famous allegory of the cave, written around 380 bce, is one of the most important and influential passages of The Republic. It vividly illustrates the concept of Idealism as it was taught in the Platonic Academy, and provides a metaphor which philosophers have used for millennia to help us overcome superficiality and materialism. In this dialogue, Socrates (the main speaker) explains to Plato’s brother, Glaukon, that we all resemble captives who are chained deep within a cavern, who do not yet realize that there is more to reality than the shadows they see against the wall.
A dialogue – with Socrates & Plato’s brother (Glaucon) about Plato’s Republic.
https://scholar.harvard.edu/
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