01/04/2020 2:32 pm

Disclaimer: This will seem a bit silly to some of you. As an antidote to this silliness, consider how creepy it could be.

This will seem a bit creepy to some of you. As an antidote to this creepiness, consider how silly it could be.

"It shall be his child & that strangely"

Here I present a "solution" to the mysteries of page 60: the Line and Circle, the "chance shape of the letters", and the "Child", all "solved" in one go. No numerological nonsense, just "Art" alone (only one number involved, "4").

In a previous post, I wrote how "Paste the sheets from right to left and from top to bottom: then behold!" can be interpreted in a visual way and this "pasting" is very easily done with modern image software. A page can be flipped horizontally and combined with the original, then flipped vertically and combined again. After a while I wondered what would happen if you repeat the process. One "quadrant" of the flipped page now contains all the information of the original but "squashed" into a quarter of its size. I thought the obvious choice for this experiment would be the infamous "Grid page", the 60th page of the manuscript.

If you squint a bit you can see a face that looks a bit like the stereotypical "Grey Alien". It can also look like the figure is wearing a pointy hat with a pair of horns.

The effect due to the lines of the grid makes him look a bit like Hellraiser's Pinhead (told you this might get a bit creepy):

I have "colourized" it to show how I see it:

For me, the pointy hat reminded me a bit of those worn by Tibetan Lamas:

I have not seem one of these hats with horns though.

This Tibetan connection is appropriate as "Lam" has been translated as "the Way" from Tibetan. I gave Lam's robes the colours of those of Lamas (I literally picked the colours from photos the Dalai Lama and others with the color-picker tool).

With a bit of "artistic licence" I etched Lam out as I see him (only erasing in white and not adding in black):

He looks a bit different now than he did in Crowley's drawing.

Maybe the original was of a juvenile of Lam's race and this one is an adult. I decided to work with the peculiarities of the image and interpreted some of it as a sort of "woolly" collar that wasn't in the original. In A.C's original, Lam's eyes are very narrow, here I worked with the image and left them more like the black "bug eyes" you hear about aliens having, though narrowed them a bit as a compromise.

"Change not as much as the style of a letter; for

behold! thou, o prophet, shalt not behold all these mysteries

hidden therein.

The child of thy bowels, he shall behold them."

We've all heard the creepy stories of how these aliens are obsessed with examining people's "bowels" (some new-agey UFO types say this has to do with the "Root Chakra", and that these entities are vampirically "harvesting" energy from their victims).

I have read the description of A.C's rather disturbing dream related to "the child of his bowels" which I don't particularly want to repeat now.

If there is some connection here then Lam himself could be the "child of [his] bowels". From Liber AL it isn't clear if the child mentioned in "child of thy bowels" and "it shall be his child & that strangely" is the same, but for now we can assume so.

The pointy hat version:

Notice how a number 4 now appears in the circle, and this circle has now been "exploded" into four. The irrational statement "this circle squared in its failure is a key also" now resonates with what is seen here. "Then this line drawn is a key" - what seemed like a meaningless line now becomes the main outline of the image. The "chance shape of the letters and their position to one another" make up the details of the pic.

When flipping these images, it suggests the effect of flipping and folding dimensions. An "extradimensional" entity such as Lam would appear in and disappear from our reality by "flipping" through dimensions and folding them in on themselves.

"Expect him not from the East, nor from the West;

for from no expected house cometh that child."

So here I am suggesting that the "Child" isn't some smart-ass who solves all the riddles of AL but could actually be Lam. The "and that strangely" suggests this seemingly completely baffling ability an extradimensional entity would have to appear in our reality. This extra dimension ("from no expected house") in addition to our usual "three plus time" is almost impossible for humans to imagine (under normal circumstances).

This isn't all about Lam as some kind of external entity of course. To me this suggests the possibility of gaining "Extradimensional Perception", and Lam could be the focus point of this.

The hat plus horns version:

And the final colourized version:

2nd disclaimer: Its important to note that I made this pic with the pdf version not the "raw" version. The pdf version has extra white space at the bottom of the page. This causes the layers to be aligned differently when you flip them. Here's a comparison of the 2:

This is the result of flipping the "raw" page:

Lam is barely to be seen, though the outline is there. He hasn't quite emerged into our reality.

With a bit of aligning, Lam comes into focus:

I think this pic is just as good if not better than the pdf one.

I don't know how important you may consider this "misalignment". It could be that Lam (or his buddy, Aiwass) planned this all along and waited until this pdf image was made before revealing himself. 🙂

From what I have read on this forum, AC literally pasted the sheets to some backing material at some point and then re-cut them later on. It may be that some of this page was cut off the bottom in the process. It was just a happy accident that the pdf image turned out that way with the alignments just right for Lam to appear.

If you would like a version of Lam in some particular combination of colours/hat/horns/no horns, or have any other ideas, let me know and I can put something together.

Best regards,

Duck

(before forming any opinions on this you might want to check the date of this post)