Background
California's Mount Shasta has long inspired mystery seekers, storytellers, and adventurous wanderers, its towering summit cloaked in layers of snow and myth. Rising out of the Cascade Range, its stories are as rich and varied. For some of the indigenous Klamath people, Mount Shasta is cosidered a sacred battleground where cosmic forces once clashed. According legends, the mountain is the home of Skell, the "spirit of the sky" who descended from heaven upon its summit. Skell engaged in a fiery battle with Llao, the Spirit of the underworld. Their celestial warfare, punctuated by the hurling of hot rocks and rivers of molten lava, echoes the volcanic activity that shaped the peaks. These tales, immortalized by writer Joaquin Miller in the 19th century, paint the image of a theater of divine conflict where the earthly and supernatural collide.
For those of a still more speculative nature, Mount Shasta offers another tantalizing legend: the secret city of Telos, said to lie hidden within its depths. This myth began to crystallize in the late 19th century when the concept of Lemuria first surfaced in esoteric literature. By 1905, Frederick Spencer Oliver’s book A Dweller on Two Planets expanded the tale, describing a subterranean world of Lemurian survivors who had taken refuge beneath Mount Shasta. In Oliver's vision, these advanced beings lived in opulent tunnels adorned with jeweled walls and fur-lined floors. Occasionally, they ventured to the surface, clad in flowing white robes and as if a glimpse of an ancient world.
The enigmatic figure of Helena Blavatsky, co-founder of the Theosophical Society, also contributed to the mythos surrounding Mount Shasta. In the 1800s Blavatsky popularized the idea of ancient, advanced civilizations such as Atlantis and Lemuria and described them as the holders of a profound spiritual wisdom. While not directly speaking about Mount Shasta, her writings spoke of hidden masters and subterranean refuges, ideas that resonated with and inspired the subsequent tales of its Lemurians.
Blavatsky’s sources were a mix of ancient religious texts, personal mystical experiences, and writings by earlier occultists. Her influence extended to the esoteric movements that later embraced ideas around "Telos" and the "Ascended Masters", enshrining Mount Shasta within a larger tapestry of spiritual mythology.
The legend gained momentum in the 20th century, thanks in part to Harvey Spencer Lewis’s writings (under the pseudonym Wishar S. Cerve. His works, published by the Rosicrucian order called AMORC, popularized the idea of Lemurian inhabitants and ensconced them into the cultural imagination. Over time, the story of Telos has been embraced by a variety of spiritual movements, from the "I AM" Activity to the Church Universal and Triumphant. Adding to this mystery, lenticular clouds often seen hovering over Mount Shasta are said by some to be disguised Lemurian UFOs, their motherships shrouded in vapor as they make secret visits to the hidden city.
Mount Shasta’s reputation of the mysterious does not end with Lemuria. The area is rife with tales of UFO sightings, Bigfoot encounters, and interdimensional beings. The legends of Mount Shasta have even crept into modern pop culture with the likes of the popular video game Undertale. Here we delve into the subject matter using blind remote viewing.
The Target
The tasker/project manager for this was Dave Knise, at The Underground.
Target: Describe the real and true phenomena associated with Mount Shasta. Describe this activity and any associated structures or phenomena as they exist in reality. Exclude any fictional, imaginative or symbolic elements.
Here is my own session:
All the viewing sessions:
Session Debrief video with the viewers:
00:00Â Introduction to Mount Shasta Phenomena 00:45Â Project Overview 04:11Â Extraterrestrial Presence 05:37Â UAP Sightings 07:30Â Lenticular Clouds 10:58Â Lemuria 16:59Â The Lost City of Telos 21:21Â Cages 22:47Â The Machine 24:06Â Holographic Projections and Alternate Realities 28:30Â The Eye 33:21Â Holographic Space 36:07Â The Dome 40:35Â Underground 42:52Â Explosive 44:29Â Is it true? 50:07Â CHAO5 Session 54:41Â Kyle Tole Sessions 1:04:38Â John Adams Session 1:19:39Â David Powell Sessions 1:43:41Â Gabriel Boboc Session 1:48:22Â Nina Sessions 1:54:40Â dragoninstall Session 1:55:30Â Arman Session 1:57:19Â Lori Williams 2017 Session Review 2:01:56Â Final Thoughts on the Mount Shasta Project
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