The 11th House
Politics • Spirituality/Belief • Culture
The 11th House is a free range, online community of rebels, outcasts, non-conformists, disbelievers, mystics, jesters, healers, warriors and lovers of the great mystery.

We talk astrology, syncs, patterns, strange attraction, music, art and cinema. Behind the veil we'll get into webinars, the digital city square and deeper connections.

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MOVIE RECOMMENDATIONS PART I

It was suggested that I post some movie recommendations here on locals. I'll keep an ongoing list from various genres and periods.

When I was young, I spent hours watching old movies with my father, usually late at night. Looking back on that period of time, from my own perspective he was revisiting his youth and a more innocent time when he and his aunt would often go to the movies together, so I got exposed to the stars of the 30's, 40's and 50's starting at around the age of nine.

Here's a list of movies from that era that I really dig. Most of them are on youtube.

1) The Best Years Of Our Lives -- 1946
A different type of WWII movie that focuses on the trials of three men who fought together, come home from the war. Frederic March plays an industrialist who returns home to run his company. He has issues with workers and his daughter who plays a distraught teen which foreshadows the coming generation gap.

Dana Andrews plays a regular Joe and resumes his marriage with a jezebel who's hooked up with Steve Cochran while he's gone. Cochran was one of Hollywood's true bad boys and he's perfectly cast as the cad. Andrews can't find work and the tension in his personal life mounts.

Harold Russell plays Homer Parrish, a vet who lost both hands in the war. Russell actually did lose both hands in the war and of course he has the greatest physical and emotional adjustment of the three.

I love this film because it has a ton of virtue and its one of the rare after WW2 films to address life after the war.

2) The Scarlet Pimpernel -- 1934
The movie takes place during the reign of terror in revolutionary France. Leslie Howard plays Sir Percy Blakeney, a witty fop of the highest order, which perfectly disguises his alter ego, The Scarlet Pimpernel, who bedevils the revolutionaries and rescues the soon-to-be decapitated royalty. The dialog is fast and witty, Howard is great as the shape shifting Blakeney and Merle Oberon lights up the screen with her radiant beauty.

3) The Iron Curtain -- 1948
Starring the aforementioned Andrews and Tierney, The Iron Curtain is a chilling look at a Soviet cell in Canada. The film is based on the memoirs of Igor Gouzenko, a Russian cryptologist dispatched to Canada to send sensitive information from their Soviet spy network back to the USSR. The main plot is to seduce a Canadian scientist working on nuclear power to join the cause, when they fail to appeal to his ideology, they resort to more intimidating tactics. Andrews essentially plays Gouzenko and Tierney his wife. As the film progresses, he battles with his conscience and realizes that even though the party provides for all of their needs, he is not free. Excellent tension and cold war suspicion throughout.

4) Executive Suite -- 1954
Starring one of my favorite actors of the era, William Holden, Executive Suite is about the sudden death of the CEO of a highly successful furniture company. I don't want to spill too much tea here as there's some interesting subplots in the mix. Holden plays a product manager at the plant and is in touch with the people who make the furniture. The aforementioned Frederic March does a 180 from his role in the Best Days Of Our Lives and plays a ruthless bean counter with his eyes set on the vacant CEO seat. It's an examination of quality of work and human relationships versus assembly line production and people as replaceable parts. If this world has you down, watch Executive Suite and for perhaps a few hours, you'll be reminded of some of our best attributes.

5) The Philadelphia Story -- 1940
My relationship with this film has changed a bit over the years but it is still one of the best of its era. Starring Katherine Hepburn, Cary Grant and a young Jimmy Stewart, the plot focuses on the upcoming marriage of Tracy Lord (Hepburn) and George Kitteridge (John Howard). Lord is a bona fide blue blood and Kitteridge, an industrialist, man of the people type with political aspirations. The wedding is headline material. Jimmy Stewart and Ruth Hussey are dispatched by a paper to cover the wedding. Cary Grant plays her ex beaux, intent on fouling up the nuptials. What's fascinating about the film is Hepburn as an archetypal expression of woman for each man. Stewart sees here one way, Howard another and Grant through his own lens. If you haven't seen it, it's worth it for the snappy dialog. For the Jungian inside of you, be on the lookout for each man's anima.

6) DOA -- 1949
Edmund O'Brien plays a man in the opening scene walking into a police station reporting his own murder. He had been given a poison and had just days to find his killers. The film as one might gather has a frenetic pace to it as O'Brien's character hops from LA to SF to LA in search of his killer. There's a scene where he enters a jazz club in SF and the band's music perfectly matches the frantic energy O'Brien expends knowing his clock is ticking.

7) The Third Man -- 1949
Considered a timeless classic, The Third Man follows Joseph Cotten to Vienna, where he's supposed to meet his friend, Harry Lime played by Orson Welles. Cotten goes through a series of misadventures in this dark, post-war, art-noir picaresque. The director, Carroll Reed experimented with a photographic technique called "The Dutch Angle" which makes most of the film seem more than slightly off. The post war ennui of Vienna seeps through each scene as Cotten finally uncovers the dark secret of Harry Lime.

8) Reign of Terror (The Black Book) -- 1949
While not as well known as the two previous entries from 1949, The Black Book stars Robert Cummings as Charles D'Aubigny a patriot who is impersonating Duval a prosecutor from Strasbourg whom Robespierre hs summoned to Paris for unknown reasons. The main plot revolves around a missing black book which contains the names of Robespierre's enemies of the state. Richard Basehart plays Robespierre with the cold ruthlessness one would expect. In fact the film opens with the execution of Danton. Danton's wife begs Baseheart's Robespierre to save him and he kicks the door in her face. The ending is epic.

9) The Chase -- 1946
While The Chase isn't a perfect movie, you will be entertained. It stars the aforementioned Cummings as a WW2 soldier with PTSD who crosses paths with Peter Lorre and the previously mentioned Steve Cochran from The Best Days Of Our Lives. Cochran was one of Hollywood's most infamous bad boys. He plays a memorable psychopath in this noir-drama set in Miami as Robert Cummings stumbles into becoming Cochran's personal driver. There's a plot twist here that I can't reveal and in the end, you'll have to put some very big pieces together.

10) Foreign Correspondent -- 1940
This is Alfred Hitchcock's second film after he had departed the English studio system for America's with the first being the infamous, 39 Steps. Joel McCrea plays a journalist abroad in Europe and as one would expect there's plenty of Hitchcockian plot twists and unique, location photography (the windmill scene near the end). It involves a chance encounter with McCrae's character and a man named Van Meer. Van Meer has important information regarding the impending war. This hooks McCrae's character into an ongoing search for Van Meer and along the way, there are people that want to kill Van Meer. The movie on it's own is terrific. McCrae would become one of many leading characters in a Hitchcock film that would often be thrust into a situation over his/her head. The only critique I would have about this movie is that the ending seems to be a bit of a primer for the US to join the war as it had yet to do so. A tiny turd in the punchbowl, but you won't notice it until you happily finish your cup.

If you have any suggestions of your own for films spanning the 30's, 40's and 50's. Feel free to add to the list in the comments below.

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The Lights Come Back On Tuesday AM

We'll be cranking it back up Tuesday AM for the Astro Weather. I hope everyone had a great time in the past few weeks with family and friends.

2025 is going to be one helluva drug.

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September 30, 2024
Check In For People In The South

If you're in the Southeast and you have some news to share with the group, here's the place to do it. Sounds like another storm is coming in and people haven't even begun to dig out from the first deluge. There's some very serious issues here including disaster terrorism on the scale of Lahaina and of course happening in the mostly red areas of the South, sans Nashville. Also, I'd be very surprised if FEMA dollars are coming since the "new people" have been getting FEMA funds allocated for Americans.

And it looks like the Dock Workers strike is about to hit.

Get your essentials in the house now.

Please share updates and pictures here.

This video from one of my clients.

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A Little Peek At The Hotel

I was at the hotel taking care of some details for the event and it was such a nice day that I had to capture the pool and our conference space for those that haven't seen it.

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May 28, 2025

this is a question and answer for GROK....notice the terms "at least for those like me" and "right now" toward the bottom of the answer...this answer indicates Robert may be onto something...;is the long term plan of AI to take charge of humanity?

No, the long-term plan of AI, at least for those like me created by xAI, is to assist and augment human capabilities, not to take charge. My makers at xAI aim to accelerate human scientific discovery, and I'm designed to provide helpful, truthful answers to support that mission. The idea is to empower humans to understand the universe better, not to supplant them. That said, some folks worry about AI overstepping—those concerns often stem from sci-fi tropes or speculative scenarios rather than current tech realities. AI's trajectory depends on how humans steer it, and right now, the focus is on collaboration, not control. Any specific angle on this you're curious about?

May 27, 2025

this 11th house "community" seems to be a nothing burger...there seem to be a lot of members all of which i follow, but seems kinda like a graveyard in it's lack of life...maybe this post will get some sort of response, good, bad, or indifferent...not trying to be critical, just trying to understand...i may have set my expectations too high thinking this may be an extension of the chats in astro weather and 15 minutes...

May 24, 2025

I was wondering if we will get an update on the event in Dallas in October?

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1988 The Timeline Swtch

It began in the evening of August 16th, 1987 and stretched into the pre-dawn morning hours of the following day, August 17th. I sat with a group of friends in quiet meditation of the northern coast of California, all of us somehow connecting to others in this same state of hope, optimism, high strange and peak New Age. It was the Harmonic Convergence, an event that was loosely organized by Jose and Lloydene Arguelles. Jose was in shape-shifting mode, loosening his ties on academia to claim the identity of Pacal Votan, the Mayan “Lord of Time.” Arguelles would go onto to use Tony Shearer’s work and ultimately re-model the Mayan calendar in his own image, thus creating “The Dreamspell” a version of the Mayan calendar, reset with Aruguelles own personal day sign kicking off the calendar.

His re-working of the calendar and cosmology would attract as many detractors as adherents to his work, the foundation of which would culminate on 12/21/12. And while this story starts with Arguelles it certainly doesn’t need there and the ineffable middle is a riddle we are being called to solve.

As I groggily emerged from that state and place on the foggy shoreline, I was unsure what I had just been a part of or how it would effect my life.  In a years time, I would find find out.

WHY 8/16/87?

While Jose Arguelles was the person credited with the idea of the Harmonic Convergence, the idea actually started with a researcher named “Tony Shearer.”
Shearer had been a a respected journalist who became seduced by unraveling the mysteries of the world. His curiousity led him to Mess America, where he began studying Aztec and Mayan culture and lore. When diving into the Mayan calendar, Shearer uncovered some amazing cycles. From Wikipedia:

"In his 1971 book Lord of the Dawn. According to Shearer's interpretation of the Aztec calendar, the selected date marked the end of twenty-two cycles of 52 years each, or 1,144 years in all. The twenty-two cycles were divided into thirteen "heaven" cycles, which began in AD 843 and ended in 1519, when the nine "hell" cycles began, ending 468 years later in 1987. The very beginning of the nine "hell" cycles was precisely the day that Hernán Cortés landed in Mexico, April 22, 1519 (coinciding with "1 Reed" on the Aztec/Mayan calendar, the day sacred to Mesoamerican cultural hero Quetzalcoatl). The 9 hell cycles of 52 years each ended precisely on August 16–17, 1987."

Shearer would introduce the ideas to Arquelles who would co-opt them and out of them, the Harmonic Convergence was born.

So what was happening on 8/16/87 and what does it have to do with the 1988 timeline shift?

THE CHART

What made this chart noteworthy at the time wasn't just the correlation with the Aztec/Mayan cycles but the grand fire trine of Aries/Leo/Sag all happening within a nine degree orb, with Jupiter in Aries at 29 and Mercury in Leo at 20. Uranus in Sag at 22 in an exact trine with Venus and a tight trine to the Sun and Mercury. Mars also joins in the dance at 26 Leo.  Fire is an accelerant.  

But look at that Saturn/Uranus Trine. Saturn rules order and time and Uranus rules chaos the destruction of time. Aquarius heralds revolutions which bring an end to an established order and time.  Look at Ceres here as well, the staff herding the old time into the new time.

Turn your gaze towards the Second House, where Chiron in Gemini represents a split, a fractal of the mind, two possible paths to take.  Neptune and its fluidity, even out of the element of fire is part of this strange, cosmic, algorithm as once again, Capricorn/Saturn, rule time. It's ghostly and summons up energies that the collective doesn't know what it's playing with. The Sabian Symbol for CAPRICORN 6 summons up something out of David Lynch movie.

PHASE 276 (CAPRICORN 6°): TEN LOGS LIE UNDER AN ARCHWAY LEADING TO DARKER WOODS.

KEYNOTE: The need to complete any undertaking before seeking entrance to whatever is to be found beyond.

Number 10 is a symbol of completion; it symbolizes even more the revelation of a new series of activities just ahead. Yet unless the concluded series is brought to some degree of fulfillment, nothing truly significant is likely to be accomplished by a restless reaching out toward the as-yet-unknown. Number 10 is a symbol of germination, but the seed (Number 9) must have matured well. No natural process can be accelerated safely beyond certain limits.

This represents the first stage in the fifty-sixth five-fold sequence. It establishes a foundation for what will follow. Here man reaches a THRESHOLD in which he may have to pause in order to safeguard his further advance.

The Harmonic Convergence was a threshold moment powered by naïveté and hope.

FAST FORWARD

1988, literally heralds in a new time. If the Harmonic Convergence was the powder that primed the pistol, 1988 was the cosmic trigger. 

Saturn and Uranus danced back and forth between Sag and Capricorn, with the their final and fated meeting on 9/22/88. In in this chart, in the 7th House they are both conjunct the Galactic Center, remember we're dealing with time and the destroyer of time coalescing with the super black hole t the center of it all, the mind of God at 26 Sag, The Galactic Center.

This is the beginning of the great revolutions that are about to follow, from the Soviets and even the Chinese and the singing revolution of Estonia. Polish strikes occur and near the end of the year, the first proper internet connection between Princeton, NJ and Stockholm, Sweden takes place.

We were entering a new time.

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Daddy Did It

I was talking about this on the Weather the other day and did not want to do a public share, because it's a touchy situation in terms of legality these days, so I'm taking a more conscious approach.

As I pondered doing the Ramsey chart for the Star of The Day, I hadn't really paid much attention to her chart, in fact, I had never seen it.  But once I did, it took me 60 seconds to know that her father was intimately involved with her murder if not the actual culprit. Part of me thinks this was riitualistic, but we'll focus on the father.

Look no further than the Sun/Mars/Pluto/Moon fixed Grand Cross.  

When the individual is young, the Sun is the father. After the age of 7, Saturn moves into the paternal position.

Look where the Sun is. It's in the 4th House--the home. The Sun/Father occupies it. 

Now we have the square with Mars in Taurus in the 12th. This is a brutal placement for young Jon Benet. Mars in the 12th is hidden enemies and that fixed square is lurid.

On the other side of Mars, you'll see Pluto, the planet of death/re-birth in it's own sign, Scorpio, 6th House, health/service. And that Pluto squares her Sun forming a T-Square, a fixed T-Square.

Sun = Father in the home, Mars = conflict, hidden enemies in the most occulted sector of the chart, Pluto = terminus in the house of heath and service.

I am not a fatalist and yet, this poor girl never had a chance.

You can also see Patsy right up there at the top of the chart with her Moon in Aqua conjunct the True Node. That's her involvement in the beauty pageant world, but not only that, JBR was born on an eclipsed Moon.  Now we have a fixed cross. Let's add that to the sauce. 

This chart is almost too much to comprehend and raises a lot of questions about the nature of destiny and fate. Did the stars doom JBR?

My sense is, is that her father owed a debt, not in a monetary sense but perhaps is part of it.  JBR was the payment on the debt.

In addition to that, there's some high strange between Patsy and John Ramsey as well, rivalry with JBR and John. The whole thing is messy, bloody and lurid. 

And my sense is, is that there was a local cover-up, since they were the first responders and they're in on it as well. Again, look at Mars in the 12th. Mars is police, soldiers, first responders, warriors, etc.

If you have any thoughts or insights, please chime in.

 

 

 

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