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00:00They said Mindology is too dark, too mysterious, too chilling to watch at night.
00:05Well, the haters are always welcome, but the brave ones, hit like, subscribe,
00:09and let's dive for the sea guards at secrets. Welcome to Mindology, I'm your host Hamza Sabir.
00:16Tonight, we uncover a story where psychology, mythology, and philosophy collide with the
00:22restless ocean a graveyard of ships, treasure, and human souls. Beneath the storm-tossed waters
00:28of the Isles of Scilly, billions of pounds in treasure lie abandoned gold, silver, jeweled
00:33artifacts all locked away by the jealous sea. But these wrecks are not just accidents of
00:38navigation. In ancient myth, the ocean was never merely water, it was the subconscious
00:43of humanity, a living god that punishes arrogance. The Greeks called it Thalassa, Mother of Storms.
00:50The Norse saw it as Ran, the goddess who drags men down with her net. The philosopher Heraclitus
00:56whispered, Into the same rivers we step and do not step, for the waters are ever flowing.
01:02To risk the sea's wrath was to challenge fate itself. And in October 1707, fate struck hard.
01:09Admiral Sir Claudus Lee Shovel, master of the British fleet, sailed home from Gibraltar with
01:14twelve ships of the line. Yet, hubris blinded them. Against the warning of one lone captain,
01:21they steered east, straight into Hell Bay. That night, the waters rose like a living myth.
01:27The flagship HMS Association struck the gillstone reef and was swallowed whole. Eagle and Romney
01:34followed her into the abyss. Within hours, over 1,648 souls were dead. The sea, once calm,
01:42boiled with corpses. They say mindology is too unsettling, too deep, too myth-soaked to handle.
01:49But the haters always watch in silence. To those brave enough, like and subscribe now,
01:55because tonight, we descend into a realm where oceans swallow empires, myths bleed into reality,
02:00and treasure becomes a curse. Welcome, I'm Hamza Sabir, and this is Mindology.
02:07Tonight, we unlock a story of shipwrecks, treasure, and the timeless myth of hubris.
02:12But this is no mere tale of gold it is about the human mind, philosophy, and the ocean as a
02:18living
02:18myth. From the dawn of civilization, humanity feared the sea. Not merely for its storms,
02:25but for what it represented, the unknown. Ancient Egyptians believed the underworld lay across dark
02:30waters. To the Greeks, the sea goddess Thalassa was both womb and tomb. Norsemen spoke of Rand,
02:38whose net ensnared the arrogant. Philosophers too turned to the ocean. Heraclitus declared,
02:44you can never step into the same river twice. Nietzsche likened the sea to eternal recurrence
02:50infinite, cyclical, merciless. And you mourned that water is the symbol of the unconscious,
02:55dive too deep, and you face your own darkness. The Royal Navy sailed home under Admiral Sir
03:01cloudlessly shovel. Twenty-one ships strong, they had triumphed at Gibraltar. Spirits were high.
03:09Pride was higher. But pride blinds. In those days, sailors could calculate latitude north and south,
03:17but longitude, the east-west position, was guesswork. The longitude problem haunted every
03:23voyage. A single miscalculation meant doom. On October 22, 1707, a captain begged Shovel to change
03:32course, fearing they were too near the Isles of Scilly. Instead of heeding warning, Shovel silenced
03:38dissent. Some accounts whisper he even executed the officer for defiance. Night fell. The sea rose.
03:46By midnight, HMS Association struck Gillstone Ledge. A thunderous crack split the night. The ship
03:54capsized in moments, devouring over 800 men. The Eagle, Romney, and Firebrand followed, torn apart on
04:02locks. In less than three hours, over 1,648 souls vanished beneath the waves. The sea had been patient,
04:10now it was merciless. And yet the tale darkens. Admiral Shovel's body washed ashore, still clittering
04:18with jeweled rings. A local woman discovered him alive, but Kree triumphed over mercy. She strangled
04:25him, pried the rings from his fingers, and left him to die. The myth echoes psychology, men can conquer
04:32storms, but not human greed. The sea had claimed his fleet, but envy claimed his life. Legends whispered
04:39that billions in treasure rested below. Cannons, coins, gold chalices, even church relics from
04:45captured Spanish ships. In the 1960s, diver Roland Morris recovered relics, cannons, jewelry, coins,
04:53but most treasure remained elusive. Each dive reminded explorers, the ocean does not give freely.
05:00In Jungian terms, the treasure is the shadow archetype. Cold symbolizes not fortune, but the
05:06buried truths of humanity, greed, ambition, mortality. To recover treasure is to awaken the
05:12shadow. Local fishermen speak of phantom bells ringing beneath the waves on stormy nights,
05:18the HMS Association calling from its watery grave. Divers have reported eerie whispers,
05:23shadows moving just beyond torchlight, sensations of being dried downward. Whether myth, psychology,
05:30or oceanic pressure playing tricks, one truth stands, the wrecks still breathe. Ancient mariners
05:36believed drowned men became part of the sea, their spirits forever restless. Perhaps that is why
05:42treasure glitters below but feels cursed above. The tragedy of 1707 is not unique. It is the eternal
05:50myth of hubris punished. Just as a curse flew too high, shovel sailed too boldly. Just as Odysseus
05:57defied Poseidon, the fleek defied warning. Philosophy teaches us that arrogance blinds reason.
06:03Myth teaches us that the sea punishes pride. Psychology teaches us that greed consumes faster
06:09than drowning. The ocean is not just water. It is a mirror. It reflects the hidden truths we dare not
06:17face, pride, greed, mortality. So I ask you, would you descend into the abyss, chasing gold,
06:24knowing the ocean demands payment? Would you risk fortune, knowing the price might be your very
06:30soul? This is Mindology, I am Hamza Sabir. Stay brave, stay curious, and remember, the sea does not
06:38forget. It only waits. Legends claim Sir Shovel washed ashore alive, only to be murdered by a local
06:46woman for the rings on his hand. A story both psychological and mythical, man survives the wrath
06:51of the sea, only to fall to human greed. Yet, philosophy whispers, was it the sea that killed
06:57them, or arrogance? Was it navigation error, or the timeless myth of hubris punished?
07:04Just as Icarus flew too close to the sun, Shovel sailed too close to Silly. Treasure hunters like
07:10Roland Morris later braved the depths, pulling cannons, coins, and relics from the wrecks. Yet for every
07:16coin raised, more lay hidden reminders that the ocean still holds what it took, demanding sacrifice for
07:22every secret revealed. And here is the chilling truth, what we call treasure is merely bones of
07:28forgotten empires. What we call shipwrecks are tombs where myths, psychology, and philosophy
07:34intertwine. The sea does not give without taking first. So I ask you, would you risk fortune,
07:40knowing the price might be your soul? This is Mindology, and I am Hamza Sabir. Stay brave,
07:48stay curious, and remember, some myths never die, they just sink deeper.

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