π¦βπ HOST-BODIES WANTED [II] Bio-Hacking, Uploads & the Programmable Afterlife β οΈβΎοΈ
On the Occult Blueprint Behind AI and Immortality Research
Leaving the realm of myth and magic, one might assume modern science dismisses all this as superstition.
However, intriguingly, several scientific endeavors parallel the goal of consciousness transfer, albeit framed in materialist terms.
The very fact that serious people pursue these ideas suggests that the hunger for immortality is real β and maybe, just maybe, achievable in some form:
Mind Uploading & Digital Immortality
Tech visionaries (from futurists like Ray Kurzweil to neuroscientists) have proposed that we will eventually be able to copy or transfer the contents of the brain to a computer, achieving a kind of digital consciousness.
Efforts like the Blue Brain Project, and thought experiments such as the Ship of Theseus applied to brain replacement, all tackle whether oneβs identity could be preserved outside the biological substrate.
The holy grail is to upload your mind into a new, perhaps artificial body or virtual reality, thus sidestepping biological death.
As one academic noted, without some way to transfer the essence of mind, true longevity is impossible β mere cloning would just make a copy, not you.
This has led to philosophical debates identical to those in occult soul-transfer: is an uploaded mind really you, or just a duplicate with your memories? Would βyouβ experience the virtual life, or would your original consciousness still die with the brain?
These are essentially questions of the soul in scientific garb.
Regardless, billions of dollars are flowing into neurotechnology and AI in hopes of preserving consciousness.
Elon Muskβs Neuralink aims to interface brains with machines (today for medical reasons, tomorrow perhaps for mind-transfer).
Russian billionaire Dmitry Itskovβs 2045 Initiative explicitly sets a goal of transferring human minds into robot bodies by mid-century.
Itβs as if the age-old dream of beating death has found a new temple in Silicon Valley.
Head/Brain Transplants
In medicine, the idea of whole-body transplants (which is effectively putting one personβs head/brain on anotherβs body) has been considered.
The controversial surgeon Dr. Sergio Canavero made headlines in 2015 by announcing plans for the first human head transplant. He drew both intrigue and ethical outrage.
Canaveroβs plan was to graft the head of a paralyzed patient onto a healthy donor body, using advanced nerve-fusing techniques.
While this is physically swapping bodies in a sense, it still keeps the same brain with the consciousness.
But imagine if one day we could do brain transplants (moving a brain into a new skull) β that would be analogous to what happens in Get Out.
So far, only limited animal experiments have happened (e.g. Dr. Robert Whiteβs 1970s transplant of a monkey head onto a different monkeyβs body; the monkey survived 9 days, unable to move its body due to spinal disconnection).
Though these experiments are fraught with ethical issues, they indicate that scientists are probing the boundaries of identity.
If a brain in a new body wakes up and says βIβm still me,β weβve essentially done a mechanical soul transfer.
It also raises the specter of body-snatching by force, which, while not currently feasible, could be a horrific crime in the future: kidnapping someone to use their youthful body for a rich clientβs brain. (
Near-Death Experiences & Consciousness Beyond the Brain
On the flip side, research into NDEs (near-death experiences) and consciousness suggests that perhaps the mind is more than the brain.
Cases of people reporting floating out of their bodies during clinical death, accurately describing details from an OBE, etc., have made some scientists consider that mind can exist separate from body β even if briefly.
The Monroe Institute in the U.S. developed techniques for inducing OBEs via sound (the Gateway process), and a declassified CIA analysis in 1983 concluded that consciousness might be able to detach and travel, possibly even beyond spacetime.
If any of that is true, then in principle, if one could master holding the consciousness outside the body, the next step would be re-entry β maybe into a different body.
Thatβs essentially what occultists claimed to do.
Itβs fascinating (and a bit eerie) that government documents and academic research are even tiptoeing around these ideas.
The Princeton PEAR lab and others have studied whether consciousness can affect things remotely.
Itβs all fringe science, but as Arthur C. Clarke quipped, βAny sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.β
Perhaps what ancient sorcerers called soul transference, future scientists will call quantum consciousness state transfer.
Gene Editing and Cloning
While cloning just makes a genetic duplicate (without transferring memory or consciousness), itβs worth noting that some elites have reportedly banked their DNA or even tried to clone themselves.
A clone would be an infant βtwin,β not them β unless paired with mind uploading.
But the coupling of biotech and infotech might one day allow a person to clone a younger body of themselves and then upload or transplant into it.
This is literally what some sci-fi portrays (e.g., in Altered Carbon rich folks clone themselves and keep updated mind backups).
If that becomes possible, itβs a very clinical form of Urushdaur β no need to snatch someone elseβs child if you can grow your own replacement body.
However, ethical and technical hurdles are enormous.
Still, the trajectory of research indicates some are dead serious about conquering death by any means.
Cryonics
Dozens of real people (including heads of tech companies) have had their bodies or at least heads frozen upon death in hopes that future tech can revive them or place their brain in a new body.
Cryonics is a bet on time-delayed transfer β you die now, but maybe later your consciousness can be restarted, possibly even in a different form.
It shows again that the line between science and sorcery blurs at the extremes; both are seeking that key to unlock immortality.
Taken together, these efforts underscore a key point: the consciousness-body problem is not just metaphysical musing β itβs becoming an engineering problem.
If consciousness truly can be treated like software (to be copied, stored, reloaded), then the dystopian scenarios of body theft could eventually have a technological route.
Imagine a hacker not stealing data but hijacking your very mind, or wealthy moguls leasing young βrent-a-bodiesβ into which they upload for a weekend.
These raise huge ethical questions, which philosophers and ethicists are already trying to parse (often by referencing science fiction scenarios to illustrate the dilemmas).
One fascinating experiment at UC Santa Barbara found that peopleβs intuitions about identity vary: some think swapping brains swaps the person, others think something intangible remains.
This mirrors ancient debates about the soul.
The more our science edges toward these capabilities, the more society will be forced to address what consciousness fundamentally is.
Is it an emergent property of the brain (so moving the brain = moving βyouβ), or is the brain more like a radio receiver for a nonlocal mind (so βyouβ could, in theory, disconnect and reconnect elsewhere)?
If the latter, then perhaps the esoteric teachings of old were onto something real.
Traditions like Theosophy spoke of subtle bodies and etheric doubles that can detach.
The concept of astral travel is ancient and global.
Modern science might call it an βout-of-body hallucination,β yet it grapples with verified accounts of blind people seeing during NDEs, etc.
The jury is out, but one cannot entirely dismiss that one day, technology might formally validate a process that occult ritual has claimed to do: extract the conscious essence and reintegrate it.
Occult Symbolism and Gematria Connections
Before concluding, letβs delve into some of the symbolic and gematric threads that run through this topic β those little clues in numbers and words that synchromystic researchers love to point out.
If indeed there is a hidden βcodeβ to these soul-transfers, it might show up in recurring numbers or names across different accounts:
Sacred Numbers β 3, 7, 9, 13, 21, 44, 60, 1000: These numbers appear often in our narrative.
The Sumerian donor age limits were 21 for women, 14 for men. Both 14 and 21 are multiples of 7, a number of completion and mysticism (7 days, 7 planets, etc.). 21 is 3Γ7, and 3 and 7 are extremely significant in esoteric numerology (3 representing divinity or the triad, 7 representing spiritual perfection). Why would a soul-swap not work after those ages? Perhaps the Sumerians numerologically saw beyond 3Γ7 years as a threshold of full embodiment.
The victimsβ target ages 8 to 14 span 7 years (another 7). And note, 8 is the number of infinity (turned sideways) and new beginnings, whereas 14 as noted is twice 7 (also, interestingly, in Egyptian myth the god Osirisβs body was cut into 14 pieces β a complete dismemberment).
The torture duration of one to four months is intriguingly 1-4, which concatenated is β14β again β or if you add 1+2+3+4 you get 10, the number of a full cycle. Possibly just coincidence, but conspicuous.
The Illuminati child soul-transfer allegedly at age 3 (per Collier).
Three is a primal sacred number (trinity, birth-life-death, etc.), and in many occult and esoteric traditions, the number 3 represents the synthesis or union of two opposing forcesβthe resolution of duality into a new whole.
Perhaps age 3 is when the childβs own identity is still forming (toddler) and can be overwritten before ego solidifies β and occultly, it could be a twisted inversion of the Christian idea of baptism or βage of reason.β
Also recall the Chateau des Amerois is nicknamed βCastle of Kingsβ and rumor says itβs connected to sacrificing a child at age 3 to summon demons (some conspiracists tie this to George H.W. Bushβs βThousand Points of Lightβ speech, but thatβs another rabbit hole).
Midnight of the 44th birthday in Being John Malkovich is a strangely arbitrary rule on the surface. But 44 is a master number in some numerology (and in gematria, the word βkillβ is 44, which is ironically apt since the host effectively βdiesβ when taken over).
4+4=8 (again the infinity symbol), possibly implying the immortality loop.
Also, 44 years is roughly half of 88, and some have noted Malkovichβs portal is on floor 7Β½.l
In some occult lore, the number 45 (the next number, 44+1) symbolizes rebirth, so perhaps entering at 44 means you become 45 (reborn as new self) immediately after.
2197 Grande Dames at the Mother of Darkness ceremonyβ as mentioned, 2+1+9+7 = 19 (the initiation age), and 2197 = 13Β³, a powerful occult signature.
Thirteen, associated with the lunar cycles and often considered βunlucky,β is revered in esoteric circles as the number of transformation (death and rebirth β the 13th Tarot card is Death).
Having 13 cubed participants could symbolize death (the sacrifice) taken to the third power β a potent ritual force to catapult something into a new dimension (the new Motherβs empowerment).
1000 points of light / 1000 girls / 1000 lights in the dome β 1000 is 10Β³, and 10 is a number of completion (return to unity at a higher order, since after 9 you go to 10).
A thousand also evokes the βThousand-year reignβ or the 1000-petaled lotus of the crown chakra in yogic symbolism.
Indeed, the castleβs dome with 1,000 lights sounds like an architectural metaphor for a crown chakra radiating.
If so, the ritual might be seen as an attempt at a dark βenlightenment,β forcing open a crown chakra connection to the demonic realm.
The phrase β1,000 points of light,β famously used in a political context, here is given a macabre twist β points of light could be souls or life-essences being lit or snuffed.
60 in the Sumerian stats β clearly a nod to the sexagesimal (base-60) system, but also 60 was the number of Anu (chief god) in Sumerian numerology.
The success rates β40 of 60,β β30 of 60,β etc. could be encoded percentages, but itβs interesting that failure was β20 of 60 dieβ β 20 being one-third of 60 (33.3%), a notable fraction.
Also, in Babylonian math 1/3 was often represented as 20/60. So these could be a hidden signature that the account itself is coded in Sumerian math, lending it an air of authenticity.
9 β The word βUrushdaurβ has 9 letters (if transliterated in our alphabet). Nine is the number of completion in many traditions (the last single digit, associated with initiation rites because the tenth brings you to a new level). We also saw that in Being John Malkovich, the secret society had (apparently) 7 members plus Lester and his wife β making 9 individuals who planned to enter Malkovich together (a nice ennead). In Lord of the Rings fashion, nine mortal ones seeking to defy the natural order.
Urushdaur Etymology:
Itβs said Urushdaur means βshed/throw soul through bloodβ.
This implies a blood ritual was key β blood as the medium of life force.
Indeed, blood is central in these practices: from the bloodletting torture in Sumer to the blood-drinking and anointing in modern satanic rites.
The term itself carries the violence of βthrowingβ the soul out.
Notably, the Urushdaur tablets allegedly were found in Eridu (the oldest city, home of the god Enki).
Enki was a trickster god of water and wisdom, sometimes associated with creation of humans β would it not be poetic if a dark use of his knowledge allowed re-creating oneself in a new body?
Gematria of NamesβWhile we wonβt dive too deep into calculating numbers for every name, a few curiosities:
βRockefellerβ in simple English gematria (A=1, B=2, etc.) sums to 110 β 110 floors in the Twin Towers, interestingly. βRothschildβ comes to 116. These might be coincidental, but gematria enthusiasts often note elite names relating to powerful numbers.
βUrushdaurβ as we calculated: U(21)+R(18)+U(21)+S(19)+H(8)+D(4)+A(1)+U(21)+R(18) = 131.
131 is a prime number; notably, the 131st Psalm is about humility (perhaps ironically, since Urushdaur is about the pride of cheating death).
In some gematria systems, 131 could be seen as 1-3-1, a palindrome, hinting at a return (the soul returns in another body?).
If one uses Sumerian gematria (where A=6, B=12, etc., multiplying by 6 as some occultists do to honor the base-60), Urushdaur would sum even higher (probably 786, which in Arabic is a holy number, but that might be overreaching).
Words as Spells
The film name βGet Outβ is a blunt command β what the victimβs suppressed soul might scream. Peele even has a scene of the main characterβs consciousness falling into the βsunken placeβ β a dark void behind his eyes β which looks visually like a soul falling through space.
In The Skeleton Key, the key quote is βI believeβ (the magic only works if the victim believes).
That hints at the role of consent or at least belief in these things β an occult concept that you must open your will to allow the transfer.
Interestingly, belief itself is a kind of spiritual key; like a vampire who canβt enter unless invited, perhaps a soul canβt be displaced unless the victimβs will is eroded (by fear, deception, etc.).
Kate Hudsonβs character only becomes vulnerable once sheβs psychologically primed. This aligns with how Illuminati trauma-conditioning works: break the will, then insert new programming (or in extreme case, a new entity).
We see that if one has the lens for it, numbers and symbols around these stories start to form patterns.
At times this can be subjective (one can find patterns anywhere), but some are hard to ignore β especially the ritualistic use of certain ages and the recurrence of 13, 7, 3, etc.
It suggests a possible universal framework behind disparate methods of soul-transference.
Perhaps these numbers are more than superstition; maybe they reflect the natural laws of soul and body (for instance, maybe past a 7-year cycle the aura fully binds to the body, etc., making transfer hard β an idea consistent with childhood development stages). Occultists often say βas above, so below; as within, so withoutβ β implying that metaphysical processes might obey mathematical ratios or cosmic timing.
Conclusion: The Veil Lifts
In this exploration, weβve circled through mythology, occult lore, pop culture, science, and symbolism, and found each echoing the others.
What are we to make of it? Is consciousness transfer at death into a new body actually real in some fashion, or is it humanityβs grandest delusion born of a terror of death?
Some possibilities emerge:
Perhaps ancient cultures like Sumer uncovered esoteric truths about the soul that modern science is only approaching now.
They may have mythologized it with gods and rituals, but encoded real principles (like the soulβs attachment being weaker in youth, or the need for extreme measures to pry it loose).
Across the world, the consistent thread of possession and transmigration hints that, at the very least, human consciousness is not a simple, closed system.
Something is going on at the edges of life and death that gave our ancestors these ideas.
If consciousness can exist independently (even momentarily) of the body, then in theory a sufficiently skilled or technologically advanced person could move it elsewhere.
That βelsewhereβ could be a new body, a clone, a computer, or even a different plane of reality.
The Demiurge of Gnostic teaching β the false god who keeps souls trapped in the material world β might be just an allegory for the forces that recycle us.
Gnostics warned that after death, souls might be tricked by false light and sent back (reincarnated), essentially wiping their memory and reusing them.
That is a kind of involuntary consciousness transfer on a mass scale.
Itβs striking how that concept synchs with what conspiracies say the elite want for themselves: to incarnate at will without the memory wipe, to keep all their power and knowledge in each life.
In a sense, βthe elitesβ might be trying to steal the Demiurgeβs technology for personal benefit β breaking the rules of the cosmic cycle to become self-determined gods on Earth.
On the other hand, one must consider the skeptical view: All these rituals and stories could be reflections of our psyche, not actual soul transfer.
The rich and powerful might believe in these things and enact gruesome ceremonies (which is bad enough), but that doesnβt mean they actually succeed in cheating death.
It could all be a cruel charade: an old billionaire might kill a child believing heβll get their life force, but in the end he dies like anyone else β the real horror being the atrocities committed for a lie.
Again:
βItβs all true and yet itβs all fake.β
This could imply that yes, these conspiracies happen (the acts are true), but the promise is fake (maybe these people are deluding themselves).
Thereβs also a metaphorical truth: consciousness does transfer at death in a way β through legacy, memory, genes, influence. A person might not literally jump bodies, but powerful figures reinvent themselves through their descendants or followers. The quote about βwe live on in our childrenβs mindsβ is ap.
Perhaps the obsession with bloodlines is because elite families see their lineage as a single continuous entity β not individual lives but one long-lived dynastic consciousness stretching through time.'
Rituals might serve to reinforce that identity (the child is told at 3: you are not you, you are us; thus psychologically the child is possessed by the groupβs ego).
This sociological view doesnβt require literal soul magic, just extreme indoctrination β though interestingly it achieves a similar effect: the individual βdiesβ in favor of a collective persona that endures.
Yet, in the dark corners of whistleblower testimony and forbidden texts, there are hints that something literal may be occurring.
When multiple independent sources β from ancient tablets to modern TV shows to Illuminati defectors β all describe soul-extraction, containers, walk-ins, etc., the line between coincidence and conspiracy blurs.
If such a thing as consciousness transfer is real, it has profound implications:
Moral: It is the ultimate violation of personhood β worse than murder, as it imprisons the victim in a living hell (either displaced or sharing their body). It raises the question of whether souls have rights.
Religious: It would challenge notions of afterlife and karma. Would a soul-transfer avoid divine judgment by not βmoving onβ? Or perhaps those who do this face even worse consequences spiritually (becoming earth-bound spirits, etc.).
Existential: It forces the question, what are we? If I can be βputβ into another body, am I a soul that merely drives a vehicle? Or is the continuity of my consciousness an illusion?
Practical: It could become the most coveted or feared technology. Imagine a world where the wealthy literally harvest bodies.
Itβs the stuff of dystopian fiction, but as weβve shown, fiction is inching towards reality.