HISTORY
OF THE END OF THE WORLD
THE
LIMITS OF LEY-LINES
What
do I see? I'll describe the view from my study. It's quite idyllic.
In front of me an old defensive canal. My present “hometown” was
an important marine and naval port and it was heavily fortified. Most
of it has disappeared, but on my left. The place, where the canons
stood, is still to be seen. To the left is an important sluice, which
connects the sea with the Frisian waterways. Many ships pass by.
Opposite
my study is a grave-yard, which means big trees. The last remains of
a period, in which Europe was a colossal forest and a monkey could
travel from Moscow to England, without touching the ground. Which
they actually did. In ancient tribal culture forests were used as
holy places, places of gathering and judgment. Not far from here,
there once was a place like that. Dominated by hugh trees, waterways
and a beautiful landscape, full of life. That's all gone now. The
christian missionaries cut down the holy trees, to build a (wooden)
church on the same place. They knew the power of those places, but
kept it a secret. In South-America cathedrals have been built on top
of pyramids and the Spaniards used the ancient stones and slave
labor. Power points (like Stonehenge, the Borubudur and Angkor Wat)
are places where energy flows meet. When using the right time and
ritual, mysterious things happen. Energy follows a straight course,
and that is why these so called “ley-lines” are straight and
global. You can test this by connecting the churches in your
neighborhood and see what happens. From “the Dome”, our oldest
church it's easy to connect 5 to 6 churches in a straight line.
(officially built in 777, and so being the oldest christian church in
the region. But don't trust the numbers). 777 is a “power-number”,
with many symbolic (christian) meaning (7 days of Creation). My home
town became officially a city, in the year 1234. This is a
“power-number” too. So I doubt the chronicles. The local
government ignored this important historical fact. Strangely enough,
because they could celebrate the 777 year old city in 2011. We are
conditioned to follow straight lines. That's how we build at the
moment, that's how we count and that's how we live. On a collision
course. There are other ways, you know. Waterways for instance. They
meander to a single point (so it seems).
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