THE Most Perfect Morning Energy Music 528Hz https://t.co/HOyCCw0Ib8 via @YouTube
Let’s do some energy clearing together… Close your eyes and just breathe.
Solomon’s Temple Was Built Inside Your Brain https://t.co/1OOwGnA4xV via @YouTube
What’s inside your head? What is allegory, for internal representation? Things, that I ponder…
Mary Magdalene Revealed Why The SALT WATER Destroys ARCHON Energy - Use ... https://t.co/63t7l4CaxT via @YouTube
We have touched on the use of salt in the esoteric traditions. This is a good episode on its use.
Roku, free tv for the win today! Have you ever watched the DreamKeeper, series? You really, should. A storm rolled in so I am binge watching these stories from the Lakota.
Found out by accident that my new phone does all kinds of cool stuff. I bought it for the camera capabilities. It’s moist heat for sure. It gets pretty oppressive when I am foraging in the bogs. River’s of sweat keep me in a bug suit in Summer. Goes great, with my hot pink boots. 😂
This Giant Figure Has Been Standing Here for Thousands of Years… But No One Knows Why
Deep in a remote desert canyon, a massive white skeleton-like figure is carved into the rock. No signs, no barriers — just this huge, silent image watching over the land.
It wasn’t made recently. It’s ancient. Thousands of years old.
Think about that.
Long before modern cities, before cameras, before written history as we know it — someone stood here and created this. Not small, not hidden… but something this big, this bold. Something meant to be seen.
In the photo, a few researchers stand in front of it. They look tiny. Almost nothing compared to the scale of the figure behind them. One of them sets up a camera, trying to capture it… but being there in person must feel completely different.
Because this isn’t just art.
It’s a question.
Who made it? What did it mean to them? And why choose a skeleton-like shape?
The desert has changed over time. Civilizations came and went. But this figure is still here — untouched, unmoving, and unexplained.
And maybe that’s what makes it so powerful.
Not everything from the past wants to be understood.
Prehistoric art is often described as symbolic.
But some of it is surprisingly technical.
At sites like Göbekli Tepe, Chauvet, Altamira, Karahan Tepe, and Dabous, artists captured posture, weight distribution, muscle shape, and movement in ways that still make the species recognizable today.
How much visual knowledge existed before writing?