Human beings have a strange relationship with water. If you submerge something - it tends to slip from the collective memory. Master thieves (these existed) would often submerge stolen jewellery in water so they were forgotten about quickly. Throwing rings and coins into the water also has that same effect and meaning in a ritualistic sense. "Casting" a wish. Get it? Forget about that which you're discarding, pull it out of your conscious mind so that it's not held in place as a thoughtform by your psyche - only for it to return to you at a later date. For example, most people believe the Titanic just "gone". There's a strange black-and-whiteness with things that have gone underwater. It was there and it's there no longer. But it's actually still there, at the very bottom of the ocean floor. Sitting, rusting, decaying. Like ancient viking boat-burials, or the Kursk submarine tragedy as well. They're not only buried deep beneath the waves, but also in the collective memories of mankind. Never truly forgotten but definitely taken out of conscious thought and mind. In The Lord of The Rings - the One Ring could not be found by its original creator and master because it was submerged underwater - where it became untraceable. There is deep symbology in this. Only after it was retrieved from its coral resting place could the hunt for it begin anew. If you want something forsaken, to be forgotten about - submerge it into water so that it's not seen anymore, so that its reflection no longer rises up and reflects onto its surface - on either surface. And remember, everything you do is of ultimate importance. Everything you do has deeper meaning and ritual, whether you're aware of it or not. ![[IMG_3731.jpeg]]