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UNTIL I MAKE THE UNCONSCIOUS CONSCIOUS, IT WILL DIRECT MY LIFE AND I MIGHT CALL IT FATE, CG JUNG. Video clips and images are for educational purposes and analysis or possible relevance to the history being revealed. See US Civil Code Title 17. All Rights Reserved
…it was the aluminum canteen but this also seems familiar to me especially the carrier…
Equipment - K.u.K Infantry Regiment No.63 Freiherr von Pitreich
…be mindful of verbal behavior on this site – trying to keep the camera rolling?
KeepShooting Blog - Products - Keepshooting®
…including Switzerland, who introduced the Swiss M18 helmet in 1918. The M18 was very unique, however, sporting a lower, rounder crown with a skirt that was designed to protect the troops from the harsh elements associated with the Swiss region.
1909 Austro-Hungarian 1/2-Liter Aluminum Flask
M086: This is a M1909 1/2-liter aluminum flask made in 1909 (first year of production) by Scholtz of Budapest. On the neck of the flask is stamped: Scholtz 1909 M.D.2 1/2L. It was marked with the point of a knife by the soldier who carried it: TM 193. The flask was purchased in Kolobrzeg, Poland in 2004. It was dug up in a battlefield by Marcin Bertman. The bottle is in very good to excellent condition. For reenactor's use, a new cork and string was added and the flask was lined with beeswax so it can safely and sanitarily hold water again. $50.00 SOLD
Collectables - Poor Richards' British Gun Shop - Historical Reproductions
Juniper berries, including Juniperus phoenicea and Juniperus oxycedrus have been found in ancient Egyptian tombs at multiple sites. J. oxycedrus is not known to grow in Egypt, and neither is Juniperus excelsa, which was found along with J. oxycedrus in the tomb of Tutankhamun.[14] The berries imported into Egypt may have come from Greece; the Greeks record using juniper berries as a medicine long before mentioning their use in food.[15] The Greeks used the berries in many of their Olympics events because of their belief that the berries increased physical stamina in athletes.[16] The Romans used juniper berries as a cheap domestically produced substitute for the expensive black pepper and long pepper imported from India.[4] It was also used as an adulterant, as reported in Pliny the Elder's Natural History: "Pepper is adulterated with juniper berries, which have the property, to a marvellous degree, of assuming the pungency of pepper."[17] Pliny also incorrectly asserted that black pepper grew on trees that were "very similar in appearance to our junipers".
…the lepers – untouchables…Poor Richard’s mess kit and K.u.K Infantry Regiment No.63 Freiherr von Pitreich
Jean’s snake belt…French
fakakta
Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary
English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From Yiddish
Adjective[edit]
fakakta (comparative more fakakta, superlative most fakakta)
verkakte (comparative more verkakte, superlative most verkakte)
There is no god but God, Muhammad is the messenger of God.[7]
Muslim - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
…Dances with Wolves…
Ramses’ family, of nonroyal origin
Ramses II | biography - king of Egypt | Encyclopedia Britannica
…Kafka, Metamorphosis ~ ID – Freud’s id, ego, superego [split off by Jung] ~ Captain John Gibbs ~ Captain John Blake ~ William Blake (Red Dragon art) ~ E Sibyl ~ Ovid…
Queen Victoria may be an E Sibyl – QV ~ English /ˈmÊŒzlɨm…
Sibyl queen of Jerusalem French Sibylle 1160 autumn 1190 queen of the crusader state of Jerusalem (1186–90). The daughter of Amalric I, Sibyl succeeded to the throne upon the death of her brother, Encyclopedia Britannica…
Three people in 1888 became partners as well: James Murray Kay, Thurlow Weed Barnes, and Henry Oscar Houghton, Jr.
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This passage had a big impact on my thinking, as did the following one from Joan Riviere's classic Kleinian essay 'On the Genesis of Psychical Conflict in Early Infancy' (1952):
I wish especially to point out... that from the very beginning of life, on Freud's own hypothesis, the psyche responds to the reality of its experiences by interpreting them — or rather, misinterpreting them — in a subjective manner that increases its pleasure and preserves it from pain. This act of subjective interpretation of experience, which it carries out by means of the processes of introjection and projection, is called by Freud hallucination; and it forms the foundation of what we mean by phantasy-life. The phantasy-life of the individual is thus the form in which his real internal and external sensations and perceptions are interpreted and represented to himself in his mind under the influence of the pleasure-pain principle. (It seems to me that one has only to consider for a moment to see that, in spite of all the advances man has made in adaptation of a kind to external reality, this primitive and elementary function of his psyche — to misinterpret his perceptions for his own satisfaction — still retains the upper hands in the minds of the great majority of even civilized adults.) (Riviere, 1952, p. 41).
'The Functions of the Brain: Gall to Ferrier (1808-1886)'
'Psychoanalysis and Racism: A Loud Silence'
'Psychotic Anxieties Are Normal'
'The Vicissitudes of Transference and Countertransference: The Work of Harold Searles'
'The Ubiquity of Psychotic Anxieties'
'Psychotic Anxieties Are Normal'
'Racism: Projective Identification and Cultural Processes'
'The Analytic Frame, Abstinence and Acting Out'
'Love: From Libido Theory to Object Relations'
'The Unconscious in the Therapeutic Process'