Is that you, Something Wicked This Way Comes? Is it me?
"Downe in the bottome of the deepe Abysse
Where Demogorgon in dull darknesse pent,
Farre from the view of Gods and heauens blis,
The hideous Chaos keepes, their dreadfull dwelling is."
-Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene
"Demogorgon: Greek name for the devil, it is said (this) should not be known to mortals."
-Anton Szandor LaVey, The Satanic Bible
HELLO AGAIN AND AGAIN
So
what follows is some very deep material that really shows how the
creators of this show truly did their own work to hide these
reference gems in the catacombs of the show for us to find...and wow,
you can't believe what I found. Hopefully my humble writing skills
are up to the task of explaining this shocking stuff so that you can
enjoy the show even more from an angle most people don't have.
Did you notice how this shot looks like a giant, demonic face?
AN
ALTERNATIVE WORLD
The Vale of Shadows in the show is a scary, dark place that seems to drain the life out of everything from our world that enters it. Strange motes of light, like spirits, drift everywhere.The invasion into our world from that place is similar to cancer, creating biological growths out of that fissure in reality made by Eleven represented by a crack with tentacles splaying everywhere.
The Vale of Shadows in the show is a scary, dark place that seems to drain the life out of everything from our world that enters it. Strange motes of light, like spirits, drift everywhere.The invasion into our world from that place is similar to cancer, creating biological growths out of that fissure in reality made by Eleven represented by a crack with tentacles splaying everywhere.
We
never saw a Demogorgon, but it and the Pollywogs (I should say
Demodogs, but I don't want to) produced by Will all drain blood,
which contains energy. People in the place too long seem sickened, as
if energy is being drained from them. Now we know that the Demogorgon
was draining blood, too. The whole plane is just a big, chthonic (most
people don't know what "chthonic" means, just like my spell
checker doesn't and H.P.Lovecraft did) vampire monstrosity, eating
our world.
Remote control.
MASS
CONSCIOUSNESS
Demogorgon
grabs people and drags them there. Tentacles are produced from
somewhere in the plane that go into the mouths of people. The
Pollywogs all operate as if they are robots controlled by the same
AI. When Will is possessed, the entity that is him, the Pollywogs and
the Demogorgon invading from the Vale of Shadows all operate
according to the same plan, sharing information learned by Will
throughout the network.
At
the same time, The Vale of Shadows seems like a mirror of our own
world. It's not the past or the future (people in that other place
interacting with electrical lights in our dimension cause them to
shine simultaneously) and doesn't seem to have any people living
there, despite the buildings, streets and other constructions similar
to our own.
Since there are no humans there, nobody built them. The
Demogorgon didn't come from there (it came from The Upside Down,
which is the extremely dark place in Eleven's mind), and aside from
tentacles and motes of light, we didn't see any other monsters,
including the Demogorgon. One story, two worlds.
One CPU and one million monsters versus you.
BIG
DAMN METAPHOR
What
are the kids doing throughout the show? Playing video games. What is
a video game? An electronic image displaying a conflict between you
(a singular, independent consciousness) and a vast collective of
baddies, from space invaders to mutants to gorillas to fireballs to
multicolored monsters to hordes of space ships, all working together,
sacrificing themselves to murder you, controlled by one
consciousness, the CPU. It's the same struggle they have against the
Thessalhydra and it's ability to conjure up and control many
different monsters to destroy them all. In the 80's fighting
communism was a big idea (the U.S.S.R. was still a thing) so this
concept is understandable.
PALACE OF THE SILVER PRINCESS
At
the end of the first season of Stranger
Things one
of the kids asks, "What about the Palace of the Silver
Princess?" A few YouTube researchers mentioned that line, and
after Stranger
Things 2 not
much was said about it. There's a lot to be said about that question,
and I'm going to give you the info to enlighten your mind and impress
your friends.
Palace
of the Silver Princess is
one of the first Advanced Dungeons & Dragons modules written by a
woman that was very controversial. Recalled as soon as it was
released, the claim was that the art inside the original, which had
an orange cover, was too erotic for children to stare at (this is odd
considering that the original AD&D Fiend
Folio was
nothing but bare boobs). So a new version was released that was
green, with different art.
V2.0
"The
Silver Princess" was actually the alter ego of Jean Wells that she
used in an organization called the Society of Creative Anachronisms.
The Silver Princess in the module is a poor woman who lives in a
castle that suffers from a curse that imprisons her inside a magic
ruby. The magic from the curse poisons the land around the castle,
while monsters roam the countryside, birthed from the evil arcane
energies released by the cursed magic ruby which is actually the
prison of a demon that is behind the arcane energies poisoning the
land with a grey mist. Sound familiar?
This was apparently the big fuckin' deal.
The
real controversy behind that destruction of the orange version by TSR
was that in the module there are three-headed giants called Ubues
which had artwork that resembled people who worked for the company,
including Gary Gygax. They were offended by the caricature so the art
was changed, as well as the writing. In one version, the princess is
good and has been imprisoned in the ruby. In another the princess is
an evil, undead monster that consumes life to maintain her existence.
MO'
PARALLELS
Another
feature of Palace of the Purple Princess are blood-drinking leaves. In the original orange module there exists
a monster called the Jupiter Blood Sucker. It is basically a big
plant with blood sucking leaves that grabs you, smothers you and
pretends the corpse is a slurpy. This explains why the Demogorgon, as
well as the Pollywogs, drink blood. Plus the fireball. What? Will's
wizard uses a fireball to destroy the Thessalhydra. The scientists
use fire to destroy the webwork of tunnels, writhing with biological
growths, where the monsters roam.
Palace of the Silver Princess
A
second reference is Purple Moss, which knocks out the victim with a
cloud spray and suffocates the poor sleeping character in order to
eat him or her. Good times! A third is a creature called the Decapus,
a giant tentacled monster that uses illusions (!) to fool its prey
into getting closer before eating them up. Even the concept of a
princess being locked up in a castle (Eleven inside the Hawkins
Facility) is a callback to the long forgotten module.
The Decapus, looking awful.
TWO
REALITIES
"What can I say? It's an unliving!"
"Thessal"
is a term that is used a lot in AD&D. Various monsters end up
with it in their name. It turns out that all of these monsters are
the creation of a Lich (an undead wizard) called Thessalar, who
apparently had nothing better to do but create monstrous creatures
that ate adventurers. Hmmm...a mad scientist creating
monsters...sounds like Eleven's former father to me (thank you, Four Sided Guy), especially since, according to Kali, Eleven's evil
scientist child molesting father is still around.
DRAGON'S
LAIR
MIND
FLAYERS
When
a Dungeon Master was finally tired of your candy ass, he would hit
you with many things, like Type V Demons, Gigantic Black Puddings,
Venerable Green Dragons (worse that Red Dragons because they breathed
carbon monoxide gas...who is immune to that?), a Demi-Lich (nothing
short of a nuclear blast kills 'em) and, finally, a Mind Flayer.
"Time to roll some new stats, PC!"
The
Mind Flayer had psionic powers, which nobody really understood,
including the Dungeon Master. A mind blast from those fucks usually
stunned enough of the party (especially the dumb fighters) enough for
the them to eat their brains (hit points didn't matter, their
tentacles just ate your brains). Magic didn't work on them, either,
because of a 90% magic resistance that made clerics and wizards look
stupid. When the fighter's player whined that it was unfair the Mind
Flayer ate his brain first, the DM could point out he had an
intelligence of 20 or more so it's not like the monster wouldn't have
a winning strategy.
"I heard Aragon was going to explore a dungeon. I wonder how he's doing?"
Mind
Flayers were ruled over by a mass consciousness of sorts that ate the
brains of Mind Flayers after they died (ironic, considering what they did to player characters), making the monsters a mass
consciousness, once again. This theme was very prevalent in the
latest season, which makes sense considering the looming Cold War and
the threat of communism, which was seen as a mass consciousness of
sorts, too, mind controlling unwilling participants similar to
communist China, today. Will is "The Mind Flayer", of course. He even
has a mind blast. Did you notice it?
To us it is horrifying, but to them it is Mind Flayer heaven.
BACKGROUND
BUZZWORDS
Only
bad directors ignore the background in their films. While the
foreground is noticed on a conscious level (you are paying attention
to the characters, their conversations and actions) the unconscious
notices this background, and processes it accordingly. For this
reason film directors are very, very conscious of this background,
and manipulate it to back up the story they are telling or at least
analyze it carefully so the back ground doesn't muck up the story if
it is not enhancing it.
"CUT! Who put that gold statue in my FUCKIN' SHOT?! Oh, I did."
Imagine
a love scene where a man tries to convince a woman to marry him,
except that there is a STOP sign in the background. Even if the
director didn't want you to see this as a bad omen (the bright red
STOP sign, even if it is a blur, is still noticeable on at least a
subconscious level) you would, and probably see the male character as
being untrustworthy.
It isn't going to be safe knowing Angel.
Check
out the shot from Buffy the Vampire Slayer, right after Buffy first meets Angel. Notice that big sign? It's there
for a reason. Throughout the scenes with Eleven, Kali and her crew,
there are words that stand out, and to be perfectly honest, should
not be there. Remember, the show takes place in the year 1984. We are
both going to break down some big clues that the warehouse was one
big mind-funk.
See the dinosaur?
WILL'S
DRAGON, I MEAN, DINOSAUR
Back
to Stranger Things 2. Notice the black, shadowy, dinosaur figure in the upper-right hand
corner? That's the Thessalhydra, of course. It makes you wonder if
the creature always looked like that, or, because it seems to be a
figment of Will's imagination (since nobody else can see it), maybe
the evil force possessing him chose that form because Will is
familiar with it. When he sees the entity, it appears as an image
that already exists in his mind.
Shadowy tentacles.
Dinosaur skeleton. I.E. Undead.
Dinosaur.
Dinosaur. Not a coincidence.
Will's dinosaur.
The Exorcist. Notice that the statue resembles Will's dinosaur. In the film the object is a calling card for the demon, Pazuzu, so the reference is intentional. I don't think many people have noticed that the Pollywog's shape was not random. The Duffer Brothers deserve more credit than they are given.
They caught a ghost, i.e. evil spirit, or demon. Get it?
EL
= 11 = ANGEL
In
the Hebrew language El means god. This term is used repeatedly in The
Bible, from the B'nai Elohim (a council of angels ruling the Earth)
to El Shaddai, which is one of the names of God. El can also mean
rather nasty deities (in The Bible other deities are fallen angels),
such as Moloch or Arioch. So Eleven isn't just numerology for angel,
her name (which other people occasionally refer to her as) can also
mean god.
In fact, to the ancient Jews there was God, the head
honcho, and the gods, which could be Zeus, Athena, Baal, etc., which
are also angels. Even Satan is an angel of light, according to the
New Testament (so basically Satan is our Sun). With this in mind we
can see that Eleven's name, and the nickname she gets from her
friends ("El") both point to her being, well, an
angel...and a god.
I
wonder who her real father was?
Disney's OG psychic kid movie.
In
Chinese mythology The Yellow Emperor, basically the greatest person
whoever lived in their ancient past, was born from a woman who was
hit by a ray of light from a star. Even the Native Americans believed
that Star People were supernatural, heroic individuals born from
women made pregnant by celestial bodies.
You already know the story
of John the Baptist, Jesus, and how the wise men found him by
following a star. Take away the religion, add a touch of UFO
conspiracy theory, and there's a very real chance all the epic heroes
of the past were just children born from stars. We haven't seen
Eleven's real father yet. Maybe he's from outer space.
See the flying saucer? Why is it on the object Eleven moves?
11 = E.T.?
"Beyond the Wall of Sleep"
THE
LOVECRAFT CONNECTION
"Beyond
the Wall of Sleep" is a weird tale about a man in a mental
institution that gets attached to a machine that somehow causes his
brain to transmit the mind of a star currently fighting another
entity called Algol. The star-possessed man explains that all human
beings are actually light trapped in human bodies that can visit
other strange, astral realms in their dreams while asleep. If the
Hawkins Facility created a device that got a woman pregnant from a
UFO that made Eleven, there is the story it could reference.
Algol, a.k.a. The Demon Star. Yeah, they called it that.
"The Demon Star" would be a great name for a heavy metal band.
WHERE
THERE IS A WAY THERE IS A WILL
After it possessed Will, the Thesselhydra still had to deal with adversity from it's alter ego and dark half, which was Will, trapped in his Thesselhydra-controlled body. The cloud is like a disease, infecting the boy, but unable to affect others in that current state.
Since it was from him it could possess Will.
When
Will is knocked out by sedatives, he is asleep at the same time
Eleven is asleep on the train. I really do believe that knocking out
Will while he was possessed was a bad idea because now the
Thessalhydra was free to exert it's control through Will on a level
it couldn't before...the realm of dreams, the imagination, the
psychosphere (check out the first season of True Detective to get
this reference), the astral plane.
Now it can start to control
and delude the minds of the characters opposing it, which is why Will
got possessed in the first place. Remember, the entity does not want
that door to close. If it does, the evil force can't keep invading.
Stopping Eleven and her friends is going to be a priority.
Mind control through mirrors, just like The Shining.
'Member Jack's restroom scene with the ghost?
BILLY
THE BULLY
It is a trope in many, many, Stephen King books, from It to Christine, that bullies are usually terrible, psychotic people which beat up weaker children no matter what the legal repercussions in a way that goes beyond the usual gaslighting and physical abuse. In It Pennywise the Clown mind controls a bully into attacking the protagonists.
Billy sure goes off at the right time on the right people for the Thessaldydra, so much so that I believe his parents were an illusion. We never saw them up until that point. Billy's parents show up, tell him to get his sister (which makes no sense...if it is that important, shouldn't her parents go looking for her, too?) and leaves. If that is not the case it is a Hell of a coincidence.
Billy sure goes off at the right time on the right people for the Thessaldydra, so much so that I believe his parents were an illusion. We never saw them up until that point. Billy's parents show up, tell him to get his sister (which makes no sense...if it is that important, shouldn't her parents go looking for her, too?) and leaves. If that is not the case it is a Hell of a coincidence.
An 80's horror film about a demon that
attacks people, but only in their sleep.
THE
MENTAL BLAST
When
Will is forced to go to sleep, Eleven is on the way home inside a
train, and falls asleep. This occurs in the episode, "The Lost
Sister," which featured Kali, one of the other patients from the
Hawkins facility. At this point, I have a theory. That whole part
where Eleven gets off the train, meets those wacky people and hangs
out with Kali? It didn't happen in real life. What?
THESSALHYDRA
VS. ELEVEN
Never
forget that the conflict from the very beginning has been between The
Vale of Shadows (since the whole plane of existence seems to be a
mass consciousness, which is what a Thessalhydra is) and her. She
opened the gate, it wants to stay open and invade. Fairly simple.
Before it possessed Will, the shadowy entity was stuck in the sky,
following him around after being created from the rot left over from
all of the dying plant life the Pollywogs corrupted.
D&D's The Thessalhydra. One mind, one monster, many faces.
BACK TO THE SHINING
To watch Kubrick's The Shining with an informed mind you must remember that in that movie, there are no ghosts. It is all just telepathy and hallucinations. 'Member the part where Nicholson walks into the weird purple and green room, sees a naked lady in a tub, and then she gets out and turns into a monster? OK, let me explain, and please understand that this is a spoiler alert and I am about to fuck your mind up with this information.
Now
that it is in Will's head, it can use psychic powers against the
group (by making Billy go nuts) and trying to trick Eleven into
getting off of the train in Chicago and staying there, so she won't
come back, close the portal and shut down the evil entity's
operation. Will is asleep. His conscious mind is shut down. His dreaming mind, however, is still dangerous. That's why he's called The Mind Flayer...because of his mental blast.
In the mirror.
The
Shining
is about a man who is molesting his kid, so the kid kills him. This
was very intentional on Kubrick's part and is the source of a lot of
the background imagery (remember what we talked about...) that is
leading the way to that harsh, evil truth. When Jack hugs Danny, they
are reflected in the mirror. As Jack molests his kid, he imagines a
tryst with a beautiful woman in a hotel room. Danny uses telepathy to
turn the fantasy into an ugly nightmare.
The nightmare world of Jack's imagination.
That
is why the color scheme in the room is so psychedelic and bizarre.
It's why Jack's character keeps talking to ghosts...he's really just
talking to The Hotel, which is shining at him. When characters shine
they place images inside the heads of others, which is why in that
film the scenery, location of objects, colors and even the damn bear
skin rug keep moving around or changing. Jack's character is
projecting his dream into the minds of others. Other times, the hotel
is doing it. Danny also does that. Notice how the color of the
strange room where Jack encounters the rotting woman parallels the
color scheme reflected in the mirror.
Because the mirror reflects the bed.
See the bear?
Danny is the bear.
See the bear? Understand the parallel?
Notice the color scheme when Danny is brushing his teeth.
Notice the man getting the bear BJ is in a tuxedo.
Dad is wearing a tux for a reason. Kubrick was a genius.
Kali gives Eleven psychotherapy. What evil did Dad do? Why does Kali call him her father, too?
When Kali's illusion of Eleven's father says "spread," it is is a reference to what Danny did to his dad in The Shining. He traumatized her to summon the Demogorgon. MKULTRA was about mind control and sex slaves. The Montauk Project was about summoning a demon. Put the two together and you have mind controlled demons. What government wouldn't want that?
INSIDE
MINDS
My
point is that with the whole Netflix series being a shout out to Stephen King, it would only naturally follow
that the psychic effects projected by the Thesselhydra-possessed Will
(in the Palace of the Silver Princess the evil force responsible is
called "Arik," not the Thesselhydra...another mistake by
the children so obvious we have to notice it) would be hard to
notice. First the evil force sets up Billy to go whup some character
ass. It directs the Pollywogs to attack the second problem, and now
it has to deal with the third problem, Eleven, the once character
that can close the portal...and she is on her way back. How to stop
her?
BACK
TO ELEVEN
Eleven
does fall asleep on the train, because when she wakes up her clothing
and hair is changed. This means that she had to get off the train in
Chicago, wander around, and then get back on the train and arrive
just in time to save her friends. This is where the Thessalhydra
makes its move, tempting Eleven off the train to hang out with her
evil alter-ego, her familiar spirit, her quareen (every human's
personal demon, in Islam), her fetch, her dark side...Kali.
Two faces, one person.
Never
forget that if Eleven had stayed with Kali, all Hell would have
consumed her friends back home. Eleven's return not only saves her
friends just in time from the Pollywogs, she also shuts down the
portal at the exact same time Will stops lying in bed possessed by
the Thessalhydra to get some exorcise. At the moment the exorcism
works the portal gets closed. Ain't that one Hades of a coincidence.
Eleven had to return, and anything that got in the way of that goal
is suspect.
ELEVEN'S
EVIL
At
the start of the series Eleven has problems. After defeating
Demogorgon she's basically acting like the thing. In Season 1 Eleven
opened a door into another place (the supermarket), opened another
door to get her waffles (the refrigerator) and then closed a door
behind her to escape. Now she's wandering the woods, using her powers
to beat animals to death to eat and people to unconsciousness to
escape. The parallel is there for a reason.
Once
she ends up with the Sheriff, her situation hasn't changed much.
Instead of being locked in the laboratory imprisoned by Papa, she's
locked in a cabin imprisoned by the Sheriff. As the episodes
continue, and nobody has bothered to give this child to a decent
psychologist to put her mind back together, she starts to unravel,
using her powers to abuse others and going on angry rampages. In Empire Strikes Back Luke
Skywalker confronted his dark side (in the cave on Degobah) to gain
knowledge. It is time for Eleven to do the same.
Over the rainbow, an MK-ULTRA reference.
Never forget the original sources of the conspiracies behind this show...The Montauk Project, a story about a psychic that summoned a monster from his mind, and The Philadelphia Experiment, a story about a government operation that opened a portal into another dimension, and MK-ULTRA, which is about mind control. If I'm wrong the Duffer Brothers won't make any references to any of those concepts and we can move on. They did, so here we are. Please be patient, it gets deeper than your subconscious and is important to Eleven's evolution.
80'S
STYLE ENLIGHTENMENT
There
is a movie from the 80's called Wisdom. Emilio Estevez is the main character. He doesn't know what he wants
to do with his life. He's a teenage man, angry at the system, and
proceeds to strike back by robbing banks, destroying files so that
people in debt end up with theirs erased, and eventually (spoiler
alert) gets killed by the cops. Surprise! It was all a daydream.
Estevez wakes up and decides to strike back at the system in a more
mature, adult, business-minded way. The point is that he becomes enlightened in a dream.
80's style feminist film.
Another
film is called The Legend of Billie Jean. A young woman ends up nearly raped by an evil man whose two sons
stole her brothers motor scooter. (The movie is pretty low stakes.)
What follows is a back and forth, good versus evil narrative weaving
occult symbols with public opinion, self image with spiritual
possession, and a female character that finds inner strength through
personal enlightenment and spiritual possession. In the end, the
young woman finally encounters her own higher self unleashed to the
point of mass manipulation, and makes a choice.
The rapist villain of the film. Notice the tie.
Much
like Eleven in Stranger Things 2, what gives Billie Jean the power to
take on her nemesis is that she embraces her dark side, making it a
part of herself. At first the young woman alters her appearance after
the film's antagonist uses a picture of her in a bathing suit to sell
merchandise. Eleven changed her appearance to look more like Kali, from the shading around the eyes, jacket type, hair style and such.
Billie Jean changes several times, at first like Joan of Arc (she's
fighting for a cause against corruption) until she looks somewhat
like the antagonist in the film's final act.
Billie Jean before.
Joan of Arc's image in the TV beams to Billie Jean, possessing her.
Billie Jean is embracing her dark side.
Notice the hair and makeup transformation.
Billie Jean confronts her nemesis (who is symbolically nude
by his clothing) for the final showdown. Notice the shirt and tie.
She has merged with her dark side. Hegelian dialectic complete.
A deep occult film with massive symbolism and huge parallels to the occult Tarot is...Pee Wee Herman's Big Adventure. What?! No, seriously, each scene in the film corresponds with a card from the Major Arcana of everyone's favorite occult past time, from The Fool when Pee Wee has his bike to The Hermit to The Devil.
Zero, The Fool. Just him and his bike, i.e. lion.
The Fool. That ain't a dog, it's a lion...
humanities bestial nature. The dark side.
Notice the lion.
You
see, Pee Wee is chained to his bike, which represents the temptations
of the world (wealth) and his own bestial nature (the bike has a lion
on the front, The Fool features a small lion, Strength features a man
grappling with a larger lion) until finally there is a fusion. In the
end, Pee Wee gets his bike back and fuses with his bestial nature, as
represented by the film where a man with a lion like appearance,
dressed like Pee Wee, becomes the unstoppable hero in the narrative.
Chained the your dark side.
Notice the chains. In Italian opera, clowns represented
the devil. Pee Wee is too chained to something. Time to
become enlightened.
Pee Wee is The Hermit.
Judgement. Notice the cross.
What will our hero do? Notice how the animals are in boxes like the people rising up out of the boxes in Judgement. What does that make Pee Wee?
The
joke is, though, Pee Wee didn't just get his bike back. He's above it
all, watching the film screen from a higher dimension, hanging out
with all the friends and people he's met that love him so much. Pee
Wee has become enlightened. He doesn't even need the bike, and just
like Jesus he's serving the people, feeding the masses, because
enlightenment = benevolence. Just like Eleven.
Pee Wee has merged with his bestial side.
Hegelian dialectic complete.
Pee Wee has evolved and is above it all. He even
gives up the bike because he's learned to let go.
THE
HEGELIAN DIALECTIC
Freemason imagery. The left and the right, the dark and the light.
This
encounter with the dark side doesn't always means a fusion. In Scott
Pilgrim Versus The World, Scott's
last adversary seems to be his dark half. In the end, an agreement is
reached between the two, and there is no conflict. This is what
Eleven needs to deal with before she can stop the Thessalhydra.
You have probably seen this concept at work in many other stories before. In Star Wars, Luke Skywalker only defeats Darth Vader when he is wearing all black with cybernetic parts (like Darth Vader). He even uses the dark side of the force to defeat Vader. When Luke lost his temper, he stopped fighting like a cool, calm Jedi...and won.
Eleven's journey to self enlightenment is a common trope in 80's films. Her makeup, hairdo and clothing all change (to look like Kali's style) because that's what happens to characters in 80's films...they can't win until they enter into darkness, get power from it, and then emerge to beat the bad guy. It's another 80's reference.
You have probably seen this concept at work in many other stories before. In Star Wars, Luke Skywalker only defeats Darth Vader when he is wearing all black with cybernetic parts (like Darth Vader). He even uses the dark side of the force to defeat Vader. When Luke lost his temper, he stopped fighting like a cool, calm Jedi...and won.
Eleven's journey to self enlightenment is a common trope in 80's films. Her makeup, hairdo and clothing all change (to look like Kali's style) because that's what happens to characters in 80's films...they can't win until they enter into darkness, get power from it, and then emerge to beat the bad guy. It's another 80's reference.
Have you noticed how Billy...looks like Kali? Same controller, different person.
"THE
LOST SISTER"
Many
viewers complained that this episode felt off, somehow. A vast
departure from the previous episode, which featured Will being
possessed and then rendered unconscious. Free to operate on the
psychosphere (before that all the entity could do was haunt Will) the
Thessalhydra does so, and Eleven is the target. Don't forget it all
started in Eleven's head. Later on Will's visions of the monster
clearly indicate the entity is now in his.
Strange
things happen to Eleven on the way to the warehouse as she searches
for Kali (straight out of psychology, her name is a reference to
Jungian theories regarding the dark side and feminine archetypes). A
homeless person screams out that she is dead. Archon-like cops stare
at her harshly.
Into the dream.
While
most believe at this point that Eleven ran into Kali, I'm going to
tell you that she just wandered around in an empty warehouse in a
daydream, changed her hair, clothes and makeup, experienced an
epiphany only to get back on the train and go home. It probably took
just a few hours. Everything else was an illusion. The Thessalhydra
played it's last card, fired off a mental blast, and Eleven survived.
The clues are there.
REMEMBER
THE TULPA
Eleven and her dark side.
Never
forget that according to science, reality is a hologram. Your
eyeballs photograph the real world, but the image is upside-down.
Your brain than flips that image over, fills in the blind spot
between your eyeballs and under your nose with background imagery,
and that's what you see. The world you see is never the real world
that actually exists. Kali's ability is a lot easier to pull off,
when you really think about how everything you see is really just an
illusion your brain gives you.
Kali summons an illusion from Eleven's head, like a tulpa.
Even another character tells Kali to "get out" of his head.
A
tulpa is really just a very, very powerful illusion created by many
minds all emotionally working together to create the hallucination,
according to Tibetan mystics and Hindu yogis who teach their acolytes
that all reality is just a hallucination, anyhow. Just like any other
living entity, the tulpa will eventually obtain free will and try to
survive independent of the creator. The writings of Blavatasky make
it very clear that her own tulpa, a man dressed like a friar,
eventually became out of her control and exhibited a very sinister
nature as time went on. What does Kali do? She makes tulpas. This reference is there for a reason.
Notice the symbolism.
BACK
TO BACKGROUND SYMBOLISM
Stranger
Things uses
a lot of background imagery. We've already seen that with Will's
dinosaur, the poster of The
Dark Crystal and The
Thing,
etc. A whole lot of symbols and slogans show up in this episode. It
all points the way to mind control, conspiracy theories and the
occult. Kali represents Eleven's dark side. I believe that Kali is
the spirit of the Demogorgon, a fragment left over from the
programmed alter ego Eleven was tortured into making so Papa the Lich
can make monsters.
See the butterfly in the background? Hopper's head ain't right.
THE
BUTTERFLY AND THE RAINBOW
Many
other journalists like myself have written articles about the
government mind control programs referenced in the first season of
the show. Kali is seen as a small child with Eleven in The Rainbow
Room by her mom. "Over the rainbow" is a term that can be
found in the conspiracy theory that subjects must first have their
minds warped and made malleable before they can be brainwashed and
have their personalities fragmented into splits that do what they are
told to do.
Rather odd that Kali is in that room. Was that the split
personality? Did you notice that Eleven's mom doesn't even look at Kali? At all? Eleven sees Kali in her mind's eye. Why doesn't mom?
Eyes Wide Shut, another Kubrick film about mind control.
Kali
entrances Eleven with a blue monarch butterfly. This symbol is a
reference to The Monarch Program, and supposed government
conspiracies related to the subject. You will see it over and over
again if you look up books and films regarding the conspiracy theory.
The butterfly is a reference to a person's awareness feeling as if
they are floating away when the psychologists are tightening the
screws to induce a split. Ugly stuff.
HIDE
AND SEEK
This
movie is about a psychologist (played by Robert DeNiro) and a
mentally abused young girl (played by a young girl who is good at
staring at everybody with giant eyeballs) who has a split
personality. DeNiro treats her as a patient until (spoiler alert) he
realizes he has a split personality of his own that is responsible
for the abuse, although a clever viewer will notice the whole town
seems to be some sort of MKULTRA experiment.This
movie features a lot of the MKULTRA and Project Monarch imagery. The
rainbow, two heads on the little girl to show the split, a monarch
butterfly, etc.
In Hide and Seek the little girl has two personalities.
The monarch butterfly. The doctor has two, too.
KALI
Millions
of people around the world, especially India, practice Hinduism. Kali
is a goddess in the religion and a wikipedia search will show you she
is not a very nice deity, luxuriating in severed heads and baths of
blood. Her followers, an outlaw cult called the Thuggee, practiced
murder and robbery, just like Kali's followers in Stranger Things 2.
Kali and Kali.
It's
worth noting that the goddess Kali is actually a dark aspect of
another goddess, Parvati. The Duffer Brothers could have picked a lot
of names, they could have picked a lot of goddesses. And, hey, did
you notice that El and Kali both have the names of goddesses? I really, really want to know who Eleven's father is.
YOU'RE
AS JUNG AS YOU FEEL
ALTER
ID
Sure
sounds like what happened between Eleven and Kali. We were shown in
the previous season that Eleven's mind is a landscape full of people
and things. Her job was to track down the Russian spy and kill him.
But Eleven doesn't like to kill...so she was programmed with a
splinter personality (known as an alter) to do the job. That's the
Demogorgon. When Eleven ended up in the Vale of Shadows after
Demogorgon blew up in a blast of energy, that energy wasn't
destroyed. It's still in her head, her mind and her dreams.
Kali in the TV?
Plus...why is the title called, "The Lost Sister?" Kali and Eleven are not related. At all. They just went to a screwed up place together. Unless Kali is related to Eleven...because she got out of her head.
"EIGHT"
The
numerology of Kali's number, 8, is consistent with the symbolism of
Eleven's name. In the occult 8 represents a lot of things, but mostly
destruction. It's a good destruction...the old being swept away for
the new, which is why 8 is also the number of power, authority and
karma. In Hinduism Parvati's essences merged with Shiva, The
Destroyer, in order for her to become Kali, so having the number 8
makes perfect sense.
See the 8? See what it means, now?
Eight
also balances the spiritual and material. The character Eleven has a
lot of psychological trauma. This PTSD has to be dealt with so it
doesn't keep affecting her actions in the real world. On the
flipside, a person who has big dreams of pursuing a career they are
incapable of needs to have those dreams destroyed so they can pursue
a vocation that will bring them even more success and happiness, and
in numerology 8 destroys false illusion, inducing enlightenment.
In The Poltergeist, they were here because
they were in the TV. That's what ghosts do.
By
the way, did you notice that Channel 8 appears on the television in
front of Eleven's mom right after Eleven leaves, right before the
opening credits? Maybe it wasn't her mom that wanted Eleven to find
Kali. Maybe it was her. Eleven can send her mind into the TV
airwaves. Poltergeist taught us those airwaves are haunted, people
can get stuck in there, and it is where demons dwell (cue Bach's
Toccata and fugue in D minor).
Eleven was in a room with a rainbow.
Where they make split personalities.
I
am already done with the next part. It shall be up within a week. It just needs to be edited and exorcised.The
next post will give you even more evidence, including photos from
"The Lost Sister," to prove that Kali and that episode was
more than meets the mind's eye. By the time you are done reading it
everybody you know that talks to you about Stranger Things 2 will
think you are smarter than a Mind Flayer.