These ruins are not dead stones, but the visible remains of a consciousness once borne by the Greek Folk-Soul. The longing they awaken is not nostalgia for an extinct civilisation. It is the soul recognising something it has forgotten. Man cannot understand what he has become while remaining a stranger to what formed him.
Before these ruins, the modern Greek dimly encounters the hidden source of his own psyche, not a dead past, but a living inheritance that has never ceased to speak within him.
The salvation of the soul is not originally a Jewish or Christian idea. It is a native Hellenic conception, developed in the Mysteries, Orphism, Pythagoreanism and Platonic philosophy long before Christianity arose.
The Greeks taught that the divine soul had fallen into impurity, ignorance, wrongdoing and separation from its source. Through knowledge, virtue, repentance, sacred rites, ritual purity and philosophical ascent, it could be saved from this fallen condition, restored to its divine origin and ultimately attain Henosis.
Later Christian theology adopted this Hellenic conception of the salvation of the soul, made it the centre of its religion, and transformed it into a system of inherited guilt and eternal punishment. By means of the doctrines of original sin and eternal damnation, salvation became dependent upon fear and obedience, turning humanity's longing for reunion with the Divine and concern for the psyche into instruments of psychological control.
megadott elemeket szimbolikus inspirációként értelmezve:
Shukra (Vénusz) → harmónia, kedvesség, türelem.
Hattyú csillagkép → elegancia, belső béke és fejlődés.
Hosszú munkanap vár rád, ezért érdemes az energiáddal jól gazdálkodni.