specific traits. Then, in these myths, you might read about one “son” killing another. But this, too, wasn’t literal – it was about shifting states of reality. For example, one son might represent a specific mindset, a simulation created by Zeus, by the Spirit, by God, on a continent. Let’s say, for instance, that love was cultivated in one place. But suddenly, that was overthrown – because another “son” came along, representing a different simulation. And in that place, a different way of thinking took root, different qualities, different desires. That’s how it all worked. And that’s how it still works today. It always has. That’s what I saw.
And so, there was one of the demigods, one of the sons – Heracles – who went through all these labors. Naturally, none of this was literal – there were no physical dragons, no lions, no three-headed dogs – it was all sacred language. And he overcame it all, but something else caught my attention. He was still killed in the end. I started recalling how this happened so often with others as well. The myth describes how he rejoiced and was then taken to Olympus. Olympus is precisely that dwelling place of the gods. It seems that even those who die and go to heaven or hell – these are one set of places – but there is yet another place, the one from which God rules. That’s where he was taken. I took note of this.
I also realized that in all these mythologies, there were multiple such arrivals – just like Christ, the Messiah – there were several throughout history, in ancient Egypt, in ancient Greece. First, there was one, then another in a different era. But then, everything would collapse again. Then something new would emerge, only to collapse once more. Everything is mixed, intertwined – we cannot know what was truly the last. But I suspect that the last one was Alexander the Great. Again, it depends on how people named things and how the story reached us. Look at Alexander the Great – there are so many legends about how he died. Some say it was from alcohol, from his liver. Others believe he was poisoned. Some think he suffered some fatal injury. But again, all of them died around the age of 33. Yet, as you see, Big Alexander said it’s not that important. The Mystic-Old-Man also says it’s not that important – but it always seems to happen around that same time period. I believe Alexander the Great was the last demigod who then became a god. And it seems like an inevitable process. Why were they all killed?