The fifth and (mostly) final part of dreamers down from the mountains, which would now be super-awkward if I don’t get out the door Sunday, makes Golden Silkworms in Pandora’s Boxlook like a picture-book crayoned by a learning-disabled toddler as his meth-head mother kicks him down the stairs.
But getting all the way there’s a bit of a journey, so I’m opening up its introduction - the first four parts of dreamers down from the mountains - up to everyone with an account at all. And if any of the free accounts make a useful contribution - ask a solid question, point out a mistake, suggest a decent edit even if it’s not used - you’ll get an instant upgrade to a full membership, and same goes for any of the short-term paid members.
(If your screenname on here isn’t directly related to your email, let me know at least the start of your email address before the @-sign, so I can search my users - Substack shows me the emails but not the usernames.)
So don’t worry there definitely aren’t any important holidays coming up this weekend that you should be worried about, take a moment to consider that the world outside you very much seems to be coming apart at the seams - and make the most important decision any of us ever gets faced with.
After all…
Have you ever had a dream that you seemed so sure it was real? But if were unable to wake up from that dream, how would you tell the difference between the dream world and the real world?
dreamers down from the mountains - part iv - חולמים יורדים מההרים: Listen to the ancient whispers of the gods as they try and warn all of us against what happens when humanity forgets where we came from, and we attempt to break away from the stories that forged us.
No big read for me. I have spring garden chores to perform after I'm going bluegill fishing!
I do sympathize with the down from the mountain part, humans are really out of touch with the biology of the planet and are now pounding those useless plowshares (because the soil is shot) into swords to take their neighbors stuff (again).
I don't have time to just look at the name and Google it, if you have something specific in mind let me know otherwise I don't know what you mean and I'm not gonna start googling your name and just scrolling around that doesn't make any sense.
If there is something specific you think it adds then I'm not sure what you're getting at. 
Weird I'm not sure what's going on, I don't know why anyone would do that but I explain where the virus fame from in part two of golden silkworms so I'm not too worried about it. 
The 1918 strain is what happens when humans get too tightly packed together and are endogenous virus tries to go highly pathogenic, part two explains in detail. 
No big read for me. I have spring garden chores to perform after I'm going bluegill fishing!
I do sympathize with the down from the mountain part, humans are really out of touch with the biology of the planet and are now pounding those useless plowshares (because the soil is shot) into swords to take their neighbors stuff (again).
/Sets aside Sunday evening…
I don't have time to just look at the name and Google it, if you have something specific in mind let me know otherwise I don't know what you mean and I'm not gonna start googling your name and just scrolling around that doesn't make any sense.
If there is something specific you think it adds then I'm not sure what you're getting at. 
Nope subscribers will get part V behind the subscription paywall regardless!
Weird I'm not sure what's going on, I don't know why anyone would do that but I explain where the virus fame from in part two of golden silkworms so I'm not too worried about it. 
The 1918 strain is what happens when humans get too tightly packed together and are endogenous virus tries to go highly pathogenic, part two explains in detail.