DiscoverOccult Confessions
Occult Confessions

Occult Confessions

Author: The Alchemical Actors

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Discover the secret history of cults, witches, magicians, conspiracies and the supernatural with occultism scholar Rob C. Thompson. His crew of Alchemical Actors explore life’s mysteries with a blend of research, ritual, and old-fashioned radio drama.

228 Episodes
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28.9: Margery Wept

28.9: Margery Wept

2025-11-1401:19:36

Margery Kempe cried so much and so loudly that she became one of the most annoying women in her hometown of Lynn as well as neighboring Lincoln and Norwich not to mention Jerusalem, Rome, and Santiago de compostella where she made pilgrimages. She was regarded as a madwoman, a heretic, a faker, and a lollard. She was also called a deeply pious and religious woman. She was examined by priests, bishops, and archbishops and threatened with burning at the stake. Friars denounced her from the pulpit. Anchorites alternately encouraged and rejected her. She idolized St. Bridget and met St. Julian of Norwich. And she wrote, with the aid of a priest as scribe, what is probably the very first autobiography in the English language.
The story continues. The actors blend subconscious exploration, devised theater, and occult theory in this experimental storytelling experience.
After four years, we have taken down the website for our experiment in audio storytelling created during the pandemic lockdown and so we're posting it up here on our main channel for your Halloween enjoyment (or whichever season you happen to be listening).
Where did the medieval via negative come from? In large part, it was inspired by Plato and those who followed him an innovated on his way of thinking. In the second of two parts on the Cloud of Unknowing we consider Plotinus and Pseudo-Dionysius.
Blind love is the only way to experience God according to the anonymous medieval mystic who authored the Cloud of Unknowing. In the first of two parts, we discuss the neoplatonic path outlined by an unknown priest to mystical understanding of the highest things.
28.3: Kabbalah

28.3: Kabbalah

2025-09-1901:10:25

Kabbalah has its roots in early rabbinic Judaism and became a distinct school of thought in the medieval period with the work of Isaac the Blind, Moses de Leon, and then Isaac Luria in the Renaissances. In this episode, we attempt to delineate basic principles and practices as well as the history of Kabbalah.
Magnolia Strange returns to complete her account of the life and significance of Hildegard. Included is some of Hildegard's music performed by Magnolia.
Chidabaram Ramalingam was one of the most famous Tamil poets of his day. He taught a new form of religion that recognized all gods as one, established hospitals and temples, and disappeared from inside a locked room never to be seen or heard from again.
After promising to publish a full account of the rites and practices of the Freemasons, William Morgan disappeared. A group of Masons were accused of kidnapping him and the case grew more sensational when a corpse washed up forty miles south of where he'd last been seen a year later. The Morgan Affair caused such a scandal that it launched a whole political movement.
Dr. Rob is flying solo for this exploration of the spiritual, ethical, and educational ramifications of the rise of consumer artificial intelligence; namely large language models like ChatGPT. Rob talks about his experience as a teacher and researcher and explores the logical limits of a machine that promises to think for us.
John Mandeville, who may or may not be a real person, claimed to travel the lands of Prester John where he saw chameleons the size of goats and hairy men who could swim really fast. Mandeville also made the argument that Christianity wasn't essential to earning God's favor, advocating for something like a natural religion.
In the twelfth century, Pope Alexander III received a letter from Prester John, a legendary Africa priest king rumored to be as powerful as the Great Khan. The letter made fantastic claims about the Prester's lands and power and may have been a hoax but then Alexander's own physician brought him news that he'd met the Prester's representative in the Holy Land. Could the Prester be the Pope's solution to his political squabbles with the Holy Roman Emperor?
Alice Kyteler was the first woman to be tried for witchcraft in Ireland and her servant, Petronilla of Meath, was the first to be burned for heresy. Kyteler's stepchildren with her three deceased husbands accused Kyteler of being a black widow my supernatural means and sought to use Pope John XXII's recent decree that sorcery was a heresy to rid themselves of their stepmother once and for all.
Renowned Renaissance Festival performers Judas and Magnolia return to discuss the sacred and spiritual components of performance. In a conversation that ranges from Plato to Georges Bataille, the theater becomes something more than just a place to see a show.
Rob and Luke sit down with Tahverlee, founder of the Moon Temple Mystery School, to discuss the archetype of the witch, healing generational trauma, and her experience with the Eleusinian Mysteries.
Miguel Conner discusses his new book on Elvis's interest and involvement with occultism. From charismatic Christianity to theosophy, Conner traces Elvis's journey and the strange symbolism of Elvis's Vegas period.
26.4: Utah

26.4: Utah

2025-03-2101:19:05

After the death of Joseph Smith, the Mormons relocated to the basin beside the Great Salt Lake, led by Brigham Young. The journey of the pioneering Mormons and Young's leadership were an amazing display of spirit and grit but the shadow of polygamy dogged them in their quest to become a state. Slavery further complicated things for the Mormons and their strange doctrine of blood atonement which resulted in the infamous Mountain Meadows Massacre.
Fleeing persecution from the government of Missouri, Joseph Smith and the Mormons found themselves in Nauvoo, Illinois. There, Smith established a militia, ran for governor, discovered his doctrine of plural marriage, and purchased a mummy. Nauvoo was Smith's last Zion at the scene for the events that would lead to his assassination at the hands of an angry mob. This episode contains a brief reference to suicide.
The Book of Mormon is full of intrigue and adventure. It also repeats the phrase "and it came to pass" over 1400 times. It tells the story of a lost tribe of Israel crossing the ocean to America to establish a new civilization and how that civilization was ultimately destroyed. We take seriously Joseph Smith's claim that his book was a historical document and consider points for and against the Book of Mormon.
26.1 Moroni's Golden Plates

26.1 Moroni's Golden Plates

2025-02-0701:02:40

Joseph Smith's discovery of a set of buried golden plates was the beginning of the Mormons or Church of Latter Day Saints. This was also moment deeply ensconced in folk belief and magic. Treasure-digging, seer stones, and magical parchments were all part of the Smith family tradition and they each played a part in the story of Moroni's Golden Plates.
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Comments (34)

Maisie Stevenson

I'm English and your Welsh made even me cry. You could have looked up the pronunciation when doing your research.

Oct 5th
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Maisie Stevenson

Love it 😜

May 12th
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King Dinosaur

would be much better without the attempted humor.

May 21st
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Brian Loftin

A great episode! I love what y'all do and am steadily devouring all your episodes on Castbox. Keep at it! There is ONE little thing that's been gnawing at me through several seasons though and I can't hold it in after finishing this episode. Rob, I know your specialization is in the American occult and not mideval Europe, but I found myself literally shouting in my truck on the way to work. Riley's (apologies if my spelling is wrong) impassioned defense of celibacy as a sacrifice practically moved me to tears when I wasn't shouting "YEAH, GET HIM!" So y'all got a 38 year old cable lineman to audibly cheer on a theological and philosophical argument. Short version: while the mideval church is undeniably easy to bash by modern standards (and for good reasons), I think it's important to understand and evaluate it (and other systems temporally or intellectually distant from our own) by the standards of the societies and/or times in which they came to be so we are better equipped as a peopl

Apr 6th
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Brian Loftin

A+, love it! I desperately enjoy y'all's balance of academic rigor and humor, and you've also managed to finally suck me in to podcasts.

Mar 28th
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Brian Loftin

I love these two movements and wish I'd heard of them before now! It's easy to translate our inability to fully comprehend the "chaos behind the grid" into some fairly dark nihilism, but they both managed to keep it fun.

Mar 28th
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Lena Prado

So much digressing it almost feels like an insult to the subject matter...

Nov 3rd
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Jessica Swystun

I had no idea Haden was a gender neutral name. I've only met 2 and they where both male.

Aug 12th
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Jessica Swystun

Ok Metal detector is actually awesome, but you need to come up with your own riff. The people listening to you, most likely also listen to last podcast on the left.

Aug 11th
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Zach Baker

would be a good podcast without the chicks. tuff pill to swallow....

May 21st
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AlexBanter

I wonder if different identities/personalities ever fall on different sides of the mandala effect.

Apr 23rd
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AlexBanter

String theory =?= Brahman noodles

Apr 23rd
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Mike Clark

% wife is ohio

Apr 1st
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Michael Mattson

complete jackassery.

Feb 2nd
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Paul King

Too much yucking it up.

Dec 10th
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Ronnie Lane

don't think I have ever had sleep paralysis, but I have experienced something that seems almost diametrically opposed. the way sleeping works for me may play a factor in this so, I'm a very light sleeper. to the point where someone about to wake up in a few minutes causes me to wake up. consciousness for me is also either off or on there are no in between states. anyways there are very rare occasions where I will be suddenly woken up and it's almost like I can't think for lack of a better description. I won't know where I am, I will have mild panic but no coherent thoughts, any movement I make has an almost drunken lag, and any vocalizations come out as a kind of panicked groan. over the next few seconds everything slowly comes back to me. these experiences are sometimes but not always linked to either falling asleep or waking up in a dream. (my dreams are an entire other discussion usually involving nightmare levels of being unusual and usually don't have much emotional impact) I actu

Dec 6th
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Ronnie Lane

Ahh... one of those moments where being an edgelord in school adds meaningful input to a discussion! So to start the biggest risk of cannibalism is something called a prion disease (the same type of infection as mad cow disease) which is a modified protein that attacks and converts other proteins into prions. Prions spread pretty quickly but usually have a pretty specific way to transfer to a new host. Now moving on to concerns of legality, cannibalism is not explicitly outlawed in the United States, however desecration of a corpse is. finally a little fun fact that isn't necessarily about cannibalism but can include it is that animal blood has similar culinary properties to egg whites. Do with that information what you will.

Nov 20th
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Seamus Moon

Try to steer clear of politics for at least one episode.

Jul 21st
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Ronnie Lane

I think my hype for Bathory leading directly to a vivisection of sociopolitical depravities in the form of loosely coherent and rigidly cognizant literary depictions may have given me whiplash.

Jul 4th
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Cammy White

I must confess that I love this podcast! A++

Jul 3rd
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