RM SOCCOLICH

Visionary/Author
R.M. Soccolich was not an ordinary child. At nine
years of age, he wrote his first essay, it was called China
of the Mind and dealt with his reflections on the prevailing social
hypocrisy he found in his school, his catholic church and in the nature of his
diverse, yet painfully similar, peers.
By the time
Soccolich reached High School, his ironic outlook upon the world found him
deeply entrenched in the relentless search for the spiritual essence of material
existentialism and the synthesis of all opposites he found in his perceptive
path!
Soccolich had
come to see, in the dawn of his youth, the
deep and paradoxical nature of truth. He knew this truth, which he had come
to see so clearly, would never define itself as this or that. No, this
truth, this truth, was always going to
reveal itself as a dynamic synthesis between this AND that, a formula
which could (and would) be expressed in a thousand different ways.
It was this
gathered intuition, and nothing less, which led Soccolich to amass massive files
of global information. And, it was this
intuition which challenged Soccolich to go one step further and cross-correlate
this huge catalogue of information into the creation, or rather synthesis of, a
dense archive of purposeful human history.
He decided to
dive right into the belly of the beast; that is to say he leapt square into the
center of the seemingly innate contradiction
of mankind in its sum total experience!
After processing
the results of this faithful leap, an initial outline of mankind’s
contradictory truth appeared before him. With
tongue in cheek, he decided to call the collection: The 100 Steps Necessary for Survival on the
Earth.
It was right
about this time when Soccolich met Doctor and Publisher, Mr. Sam Chekwas. It was
Sam, a Nigerian national educated in Greece, who encouraged Soccolich to
elaborate upon his initial outline and have it published exactly as it stood.
Within a year, the outline, now a book, was published by Seaburn Publishing
Group.
The book’s
popularity soon became a catalyst to transform its concept into a series of
publications. These
publications were called The Survival Series and brought the world a slew
of notable titles, including:
The 100 Steps
Necessary for Survival in the Global Village
The 100 Steps Necessary for Survival in America for
People of Color
The 100 Steps Necessary for Survival in a Stressful
Environment
Soccolich next turned his juggernaut of
global research toward the significant and historic direction of universal
symbolism.
Three years of research gave birth to Soccolich’s third and most
popular book to date. It was called Night
Symbols, 11000 Dreams and Interpretations. In dictionary form, the work
laid out the fundamental bearing of historic symbolism in the human experience.
The book detailed countless correlates of cultural and ethnic images and clearly
uncovered the Unconscious mind of the dreamer as well as the artist and even to
a large extent, the spiritualist.
The book achieved #1 in sales to libraries in the continental United
States and Canada for Small Press
Publications. The book went on to be sold in Greece, Germany, the Netherlands,
England and France (at the time of this printing).
Inspired by the
spiritual content of this popular work, Soccolich collaborated with Dr. Chekwas
to create a short story novella based on the spiritual principle known as Karma.
This book was called Mischievous
Acts and Repercussions and received, and still receives, far reaching
critical acclaim.
However, Soccolich felt he was barely scraping the surface of his
expression and enthusiastic content. He immediately went to work on a spiritual
opus titled Divinity’s Magick Works.
Four years in
the making, Divinity’s Magick Works ambitiously
sought to detail and place into vital chronology one continually occurring spiritual path which occurred in the
historic record of so many diverse peoples over and over again in the unique
archetype of their own cultural signatures. The similarity of the widely removed
spiritual Icons of so many cultures which fluidly created a single dynamic path
of transcendence was uncanny and had to be seen to be believed.
Arguably remarkable, the book was inspired not only in its content which
was divinely rich and captivating, but also in its dynamic writing style.
Soccolich managed to capture the subtle hypnotic quality of each
prayer/meditation which unfolded the next expanding layer of the deeply resonant
universal path found in the finished product. The work was so aptly titled Divinity’s Magick Works and deserves to be considered a liturgical
text in and of itself.
I invite all readers to join the path which led to the Transcendent Vision of Soccolich.
It’s a wild, roller coaster ride of a pilgrimage, but in the end, its a
journey well worth the tight seatbelt, bells and world of flashing lights.
Stepping into time...