Did We Find Evidence of a Missing Person While Using Randonautica?!?



#interview with the vampire#iwtv#the vampire armand#assad zaman



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Did We Find Evidence of a Missing Person While Using Randonautica?!?
Randonauting and geocaching are the two most mindful activities I have yet to do. The first couple I pictures are from a randonauting adventure. An abandoned motel site in Chesterfield VA. The motel has recently been torn down.
The last two were near a geocache outside of a church. This is a prayer labyrinth. You are supposed to think of a question for God as you walk the path towards the middle. When you get to the middle it is supposed to strengthen your relationship with him.
me: randonautica take me somewhere abandoned
randonautica: ass
adventures in randonauting.
INTP: It wants you to turn here.
INFJ: Where am I supposed to park?! A stranger's front yard? Is this thing rando-nuts?
A growing community called Randonauts believe that journeying to random locations can help put us in new realities.
It’s a sad truth that most of our lives are pretty boring, geographically speaking. Live in one place long enough and you will develop routines, walking the same streets and patronizing the same coffee shops and generally making it easy for a simulation, should one exist, to anticipate where you will be at any given time. Randonauts hope to use this tedium to their advantage, by introducing unpredictability. They argue that by devising methods that force us to diverge from our daily routines and instead send us to truly random locations we’d otherwise never think twice about, it just might be possible to cross over into somebody else’s reality. “New information and causality can pull you out of the filter-bubble and change your life,” writes The Fatum Project, the online team responsible for the technological and philosophical framework of the movement. Even if you don’t buy into the dense thicket of theoretical quantum physics underpinning the logic of it all, going on a Randonaut-style adventure can be a lovely way to spend an afternoon.
[...]
Getting started is easy. Log into the Telegram messaging app and send the command “/getattractor” along with your location to @shangrila_bot (formerly, you could also message @Randonaut_bot). The bot will plot out thousands of nearby geolocation points using a quantum random number generator, and spit out the area with the highest concentration of points near you. Conversely, if computer-determined desolation is more your style, you can send the command “/getvoid” and through a similar process, the bot will send you a location where there are no randomly plotted points. On Reddit, Randonauts have reported finding things like an upside-down airplane; a llama, standing totally still; three identical black cats; a family of horses in a public park; and a bird that also refused to move. Under the auspices of “/getvoid,” users have reported finding derelict locales, creepy signage, and other marks of decay. Think of it as geocaching by way of Marianne Williamson.
I just followed some crazy shit in the woods to an attraction point. I got a huge pit in my stomach and had to flee. The intention was "understanding" and I was just terrified. Genuinely thinking of doing a protection spell, cause the feeling still hasn't left.
Went randonauting for the first time and....and on god I want to start a randonautica blog,