
Immortalized … you and your perfect girl. We can pose for a photograph, all three of us.
#BEDAZZLED WALKING CANES SKIN#
If it’s what you truly want … I can wear her skin over mine. Broken by the programming, she is ready to be built up … in the elite’s image. Take that Beyoncé’s hometown!Īfter that public meltdown, Beyoncé pleads with the elite. Then, Beyoncé gets inside a monster truck and crushes a bunch of people’s cars. I grew thickened skin on my feet, I bathed in bleach, and plugged my menses with pages from the holy book, but still inside me, coiled deep, was the need to know … Are you cheating on me?ĭespite knowing that the images from this CCTV camera will go directly to the New Orleans Police department (and most likely the media as did her well-publicized real-life CCTV experience), Beyoncé attacks it. I crossed myself and thought I saw the devil. I sat alone and begged and bent at the waist for God. I whipped my own back and asked for dominion at your feet. From purification, it becomes about black magick.

Midway through that poem, things get increasingly darker and Beyoncé gets increasingly agitated, jerking around as if possessed. I got on my knees and said ‘amen’ and said ‘I mean.’ Went to the basement, confessed my sins, and was baptized in a river. In that time, my hair, I grew past my ankles. Fasted for 60 days, wore white, abstained from mirrors, abstained from sex, slowly did not speak another word. Closed my mouth more, tried to be softer, prettier, less awake. The poem recited by Beyoncé alludes to the periods of purification required by occult initiates before they experience initiation. While underwater, Beyoncé is in a formative and transitional period until she is ready for rebirth. The video then proceeds to retell, in symbolic terms, Beyoncé’s first contact with the “dark side”.īeyoncé ends up in a room underwater. The occult elite, bent on ritual and black magick reminds her of her father, a “magician”.

#BEDAZZLED WALKING CANES FULL#
The industry is full of “trap doors” and “stairways that lead to nothing” for artists who will forever remain pawns. The past and the future merge to meet us here. In the tradition of men in my blood, you come home at 3 a.m. You remind me of my father, a magician … able to exist in two places at once. Unknown women wander the hallways at night. I tried to make a home out of you, but doors lead to trap doors, a stairway leads to nothing. The first poem of the video sets the table: It simultaneously calls out an unfaithful husband and an unfaithful father, in words that can also be applied to the music industry – the “home” where she has spent most of her life – and the real “cheating husband” to whom she is married. Akerlund alone has been mentioned several times on Vigilant Citizen due to the fact that he created highly symbolic videos such as Britney Spear’s Hold it Against Me, Lady Gaga’s Telephone, an MK-ultra themed commercial for Versace, and many more.Īkerlund has a clear grasp of the occult elite’s imagery and seems to specialize in depicting pop stars as mind-controlled puppets. A quick look at the album’s liner notes reveal that the album was written by a team of 72 writers … the song Hold Up alone was written by 15 people! The video part of the “visual album” was put together by seven directors, including some of the occult elite’s favorites: Jonas Akerlund and Mark Romanek. Music critics claim that Lemonade is Beyoncé’s most personal album, making it seem like she sat there crying with a pen and paper, writing her heart out. Through symbolic imagery, Lemonade explains what was required from Beyoncé to become, in her words, the “baddest b*tch in the game”, how it left a permanent mark on her, and how she will now be used to be a “leader”. But the industry is not faithful to her and treats her badly. While throughout the video, Beyoncé appears to be speaking to an unfaithful husband, various clues indicate this unfaithful husband is not Jay-Z or her father instead, it is Beyoncé’s true father and husband, the occult elite’s music industry. After giving her life and soul to be part of this industry, Beyoncé is now married to it – for better or for worse.

However, the occult imagery of the video tells a story that is far more complex … and far less “empowering”. The album is described on Tidal as “every woman’s journey of self-knowledge and healing” and the overall the theme is said to be “the empowerment of black women referencing both marital relationships and the historical trauma from slavery”. Indeed, most observers kept their analysis in very shallow waters, reaching pandering conclusions such as “it’s about strong Black women and non-Black women should not even attempt to understand it”, without even addressing the 50% of the video that goes way beyond that simplistic premise.
