Talk:Fireheart/@comment-33276464-20181031194458

You are welcome :-).

Jim Morrison participated in other Pagan-type, blood-drawing, bonding rituals with at least two other women (there may even more than that) and neither he or the other women took these "ceremonies" very seriously, or at least not to the point where they heard Jim Morrison making imaginary marriage proposals to them or the women involved hearing Jim's voice calling them his "wife" (these women were actually honest about their time with Morrison).

"An Unholy Alliance - Jim Morrison and Nico"

"Nico stated in 1985, 'I like my relations to be physical and of the psyche. We hit each other because we were drunk and we enjoyed the sensation. We made love in a gentle way, do you know? I thought of Jim Morrison as my brother, so we would grow together. We still do, because he is my soul brother. We exchanged blood. I carry his blood inside me. When he died, and I told people that he wasn't dead, this was my meaning. We had spiritual journeys together.'

Nico wanted Jim Morrison to join her brotherhood, and he obliged. They cut their thumbs in the desert with a knife and let their blood mingle. Such a ritual form of devotion appealed to their shared sense of theatre, but Nico wanted even more. She wanted Jim Morrison to share not just her blood, but her son. One night Nico decided they should be married, to test if he was stringing her along, or serious. As the drunken boor in front of her had offered little more than literary discourse and downright lust, she suggested to him that he might like to propose marriage to her. He laughed himself off his chair. She hit him, they fought, and when they got tired, they made up. That was the routine nature of their alliance, day after day - affection, argument, rancor, resolution. 'I was in love with him, and that is how love goes, isn't it? He was the first man I was in love with, because he was affectionate to my looks and my mind. But we took too much drink and too many drugs to make it, that was our difficulty. Everything was open to us, there were no rules. We had a too big appetite.'

'He had a fetish for red-haired shanties, you know, Irish shanties. I was so much in love with him that I made my hair red after awhile. I wanted to please his taste. It was silly, wasn't it? Like a teenager.' She kept her hair tinted red until he died."

Link: https://archives.waiting-forthe-sun.net/Pages/Players/Women/nico.html

From Jim Morrison: Friends Gathered Together, by Frank Lisciandro, one of Jim Morrison's closest friends:

page 323 - 324

Lisciandro: Talk about that episode between you and Jim where you were doing a lot of cocaine and then cutting yourselves....

Eva: It was like we wanted to do like a brother/sister sort of stupidness, okay? And we were coked out and we were, you know...He said to me - because he was a coward - to cut him and to cut myself and we'll put our hands together and we'll mix the blood or whatever.

I cut so much on myself because the blood just didn't want to come. The blood didn't want to come. Because, you see, what happened was we had...the circulation was wrong or something in our hand. We had so much coke and then it started coming; it was coming...[Eva shows the bottom of her thumb where faint lines cross the pink flesh]

Lisciandro: So you had cut him several times on the hand also?

Eva: Yeah. Then we put it together and it started dripping and then we would smear it on our naked bodies and then we would start dancing and then f**king and next morning the house was covered with blood.

Lisciandro: That story was in the book, No One Here Gets Out Alive and it was blown up into some big, crazy thing and the woman's name was given as "Ingrid" from "Scandinavia". Who did you tell that story to, Jerry Hopkins?

Eva: Uh, huh.

Lisciandro: Did he interview you?

Eva: Uh, huh. So it was a strange thing, but it all came out of not being totally crazy or wanting to drink blood or anything. It was just doing, you know, a friendly little....

Lisciandro: Blood sharing?

Eva: Blood sharing, yeah.

Lisciandro: When Jim stayed a month or so at your house, what were his writing habits like?

Eva: That particular night he wrote a poem with blood, I don't know, my memory just doesn't serve me right. I don't know if he tore it up or not. It was about some obscenities and thanking god.....

"As he took no other"? "Ancient ceremony"? Nah. Don't think so. It just turns that Nico and Eva have more self-respect than Kennealy.

The blood-letting thing with Eva took place In 1969, the year I believe Morrison was interviewed by Kennealy.

(In 2013 Kennealy let something very interesting slip. She told Mongrel Patriot Review that she knew she meet Jim Morrison, "the minute" she "laid eyes on him" and "even before" she started working for Jazz and Pop. So this was, by no means, a chance, or "destined", meeting. Link: https://newtopiamagazine.wordpress.com/2013/12/15/mongrel-patriot-review-patricia-kennealy-morrison/)

Sounds like this Pagan-type stuff was a fad, from what I have read just about all of the rock musicians in the sixties were dabbling in the occult and exploring new realities and Jim Morrison was one of them.

I'd also like to point out that Lisciandro did include Kennealy in this book but did include statements from people who were a part of The Doors' inner-circle and they went on record to deny her version of events.

Pagan rituals, blood bonding, women dyeing their hair red because Jim Morrison liked redheads. Hmmmm. Are we sure that Kennealy didn't simply steal other people's stories and then turn them into her own? According to former friends Kennealy has a solid history of doing just that.