I brought some orgonite down to central Florida with me. I was shocked to see that in my eight months absence that they had built a new tower right in my neighborhood next to the local convenience store and sub shop. I promptly gifted it on a dog walk one night – so as not to look suspicious. It had a sign on it saying: “Harmful rf frequency radiation” that I’ve never seen before, and also a sign indicating that it was a bird sanctuary too. I’ve noticed it’s never been turned on – it didn’t have a blinking light at the top that some of the others do. Do you know anything about why some towers seem to be on and others aren’t? It’d just be interesting to know. I’ve wondered about it for some time.
I also gifted around a tower in what I can only describe as a “bog” next to a radio tower. If anybody was watching me, it certainly would have been funny to see me tromp through an acre of porous, half-solid ground. The last and most recent tower I gifted was a few blocks away from where I’m staying on top of Presbyterian apartment housing (I’ve noticed in Pensacola that the towers were located near military buildings or housing, while here they tend to be closer to religious buildings – Lakeland does have a few fanatical faith healers and evangelical media figures). I didn’t notice the tower at first because it’s not visible in the day time – you can only notice it a night from the red light at the top, but it appeared to be a massive array when I got up close to it. After gifting the apartment tower at around 4:30 am, I was walking around the lake adjacent to it, when up in the sky above the array I saw three sylph-like cloud formations. I am a bit near-sighted, and I didn’t have my glasses on, but they looked like the pictures I’ve seen of slyphs on the web. So this was my first slyph sighting, and it was quite an amazing one. I was awestruck for hours afterwards.
The native Americans considered several areas around here to be sacred and this area served as a major battleground in the Seminole Indian Wars. Polk County has the most moderate to large size lakes in Florida – over a hundred – and more than most other counties in the US. Just a few blocks away on the banks of Lake Hollingsworth they uncovered an ancient Indian canoe from the muck when dredging the lake five years back. I’m sure the Indians liked this area for a reason, and with all these lakes and springs the county has potential to put out a lot of orgone energy. This county is right in the middle of the state where the sea breezes from both the east coast and gulf coast meet, and often where the most violent thunderstorms happen. I really wish I had the resources to put an eighteen in the middle of each of the lakes in this county – I could only imagine the effect it would have energy-wise. After all, the weather here in Polk Country has a tremendous effect on the weather in Tampa Bay and south FL due to the crossing of sea breezes.
When I arrived here in Lakeland with my orgonite, an amazing thing started happening. I heard from my mom that before I had arrived it was generally either muggy for days at a time without raining or it would rain for hours at a time. Then, a few weeks after I arrived here, it started raining for maybe fifteen to thirty minutes every day while the sun was out shining – there would be a huge hole in the cloud cover over my grandmother’s house or there wouldn’t be any clouds at all – just sprinkles from the blue sky. It did this every day for at least a month – until the season started changing to autumn and the rainy season ended. My grandmother said she hadn’t seen weather like that here since she was in her 20s – she’s 75 now. The experience reminded me a bit of a song I heard recently for the first time – Kate Bush’s “Cloudbusting” off of her Hounds of Love album, really moving and prophetic and a song every gifter can appreciate. Recorded in 1985, it seems to predict the growth of the orgonite movement.
I suspect it was from the unique architecture of my grandmother’s house in tandem with the orgonite. My grandmother has one of the oldest houses in Lakeland with a very large pyramid-shaped steeple roof – I think with the orgonite it must have been focusing the orgone energy like a giant cloudbuster of sorts. Nonetheless, the effect was incredible. I have some interesting ideas about combining principles of orgone energy with architecture that I’d like to experiment with one day. My grandfather was a great architect himself, inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright’s buildings just a few blocks from where I’m staying, at Florida Southern College.
Also, some positive environmental news: tree frogs here have made a stunning comeback. They’ve been everywhere lately in central Florida. For many a years they were almost non-existant within the city limits – probably due to the massive chemtrail campaign here in the early 2000s (which made everyone in the county direly sick and was aided by the Feds burning down large portions of central FL’s swamps and forests, filling our air with smoke for months at a time – living in this county in 2001 was a nightmare, you had to have been here – the county was even ranked 2nd most depressing place to live in the US by Self magazine). It’s a similar phenomenon with lightning bugs in Pensacola – which haven’t been seen regularly in city limits in over 25 years. Orgonite and cloudbusters are really paying off in Florida for repairing the World Odor environmental damage.