The relationship of the research on Tecthulhu with the world of the writer Lovecraft can be an alert for us.

The relationship of the research on Tecthulhu with the world of the writer Lovecraft can be an alert for us.
I'm not the first person to write about this theory but its Myths, those researchers, blindly explore the perspective that under the everyday and known world lies a prodigious and frightening reality that stalks humanity from the darkness and sum in the Panic or Madness to those who dare to peer into the abysses of that unappreciable Dimension.
Note the similarities with the Ingress Investigations with the Tales of Cthulhu. Should we fear for our lives?

Lovecraft is the father of "literature of cosmic fear", he could have been a prophet or a visionary of what we can suffer ...
Welcome to the madness of #Tecthulhu  , welcome to #Ingress  
#investigateingress  
http://www.popmatters.com/review/the-age-of-lovecraft-wonderfully-elucidates-the-central-dilemma-posed-by-lo/
http://www.popmatters.com/review/the-age-of-lovecraft-wonderfully-elucidates-the-central-dilemma-posed-by-lo

Comments

  1. I think you come to some reason, have been documented in scrolls where you see arcane ingress glyphs mixed with this creepy figure, there are companions who thinks that Tecthulhu is a species of this being that lives under Buenos Aires. I will inquire more on the subject, because I think that the shaper and these arcane glyphs could lead to something not very good.
    http://thumbs.subefotos.com/1578e0741f06154741b5f86a1990060bo.jpg
    And also right now my Cardiff confidante confirms a certain relationship between Lovecarft and Aleister Crowley, I can only advance this information:
    In his 1972 book, The Magical Revival, Grant theorizes about a disturbing possibility: that the American writer H.P. Lovecraft and the English occultist Aleister Crowley actually wrote about the same monstrous entities; The first in his celebrated Myths of Cthulhu, and the second in various esoteric works.
    Edgar Allan Wright  H. Richard Loeb

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  2. Lovecraft was more xenophobic than racist... theyre kinda the same thing, but xenophobia is less specific than outright racism. To his credit he did become a little more open minded after he married a Jewish woman and traveled outside his "sphere or reality" that he hid in.

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