Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Robin Williams RIIP: Capricious Cap Part 2

There is a reason for the "Capricious Cap" in the title, so I'll begin with that.

Investigations for my previous post led to Robin Williams 1988 film, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, and one of the things that struck me at the time was the capricious surname in the title. Since the inner twin world tend to imbed communication in surnames that can be broken down into cryptic phrases, I couldn't help butt think that Munchausen could be one of these.  Note how it breaks down into two words "mun chausen" which looks a lot like "man chosen"... or in other words "chosen man".  And in fact I recollect that the old word "mund" is related to "man", for instance, note the etymology of the name "Edmund":
Edmund Look up Edmund at Dictionary.com...literally "prosperity-protector, ... The second element is mund "hand, protection, guardian," from PIE *man- (2) "hand" ...
I had forgotten about the "hand" connection, important now when considering this excerpt from yesterdays post re :
My Tou Sense is that the surname "Manahan" is a cryptic way for the inner twin world to communicate "man lend the inner twin world a hand"... with "man" being a reference to our outer twin "patriarchal" world.
This "hand" and "man" pattern-cluster was purposely designed by the inner twin world, they are definitely reiterating our need to lend a helping hand to their cause, and so the question you might be asking by now, especially those who are new to this blog, is "what cause".  The main cause that the inner twin hope to achieve in their coming out and communicating to us, has also been referenced by the inner twin world in their usual cryptic fashion, some of these are "66", "^^" and the "TUSSH"(theTwo United Structure System Home), any one of which when keyed into the search box associated with this blog, will provide you with enough information.  Essentially these each represent as part of their particular communication, a specialized system home that the inner twin world want us to design and build, one that's meant to save our conjoined lives/future.  You may already be aware that the number 6 on my computer key board shares the same key as the "cap"^ symbol, and so keep this in mind -- a connection to the "capricious cap" in the title.

As part of my investigation, I had typed in "mun" into the etymology dictionary's search box in order to find its original meaning and this is what the search engine brought up:


mun (v.) Look up mun at Dictionary.com...must," c.1200, from Old Norse monu, a future tense auxiliary verb ultimately meaning "to intend" and from the PIE root *men- "to think" (see mind (n.)).
munch (v.) Look up munch at Dictionary.comlate 14c., mocchen, imitative (compare crunch), or perhaps from Old French mangier "to eat, bite," from Latin manducare "to chew." Related: Munchedmunching.Munchausen Look up Munchausen at Dictionary.comin reference to unbelievable stories (1850) is in reference to Baron Karl Friedrich Hieronymus von Münchhausen (1720-1797), German adventurer who served in the Russian army against the Turks; wildly exaggerated exploits attributed to him are told in the 1785 English book "Baron Munchausen, Narrative of his Marvellous Travels," written by Rudolph Erich Raspe (1734-1794). As a syndrome involving feigned dramatic illness, it is attested from 1951.munchies (n.) Look up munchies at Dictionary.com"food or snack," 1959, plural of munchie (1917), from munch (v.); sense of "craving for food after smoking marijuana" is first attested 1971.Munchkin (n.) Look up Munchkin at Dictionary.com1900, coined by U.S. author L. Frank Baum (1856-1919) in "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz." He never explained how he got the word. The word most like it is perhaps mutchkin, an old Scottish measure of capacity for liquids, which was used by Scott. (It comes from Middle Dutch mutseken, originally "a little cap," from mutse "cap," earlier almutse "amice, hood, headdress," from Latin amictus "mantle, cloak," noun use of past participle of amicire "to wrap, throw around," a compound from ambi- (seeambi-) + iacere (see jet (v.).)

What I want to draw your attention to is the last one above re Munchkin, and the part of the definition stating : It comes from Middle Dutch mutseken, originally "a little cap," from mutse "cap," 

Now you know the story behind the "capricious cap" in the title.  In this cryptic way, the inner twin world are continuing their conversation... expanding on it in much the same way we expand words into sentences....  And so the inner twin is expressing that they want us to "lend a hand with the cap... with building the TUSSH.  

To be continued...

No comments:

Post a Comment