Welcome to this Place of Emergence!

According to a Hopi legend, the world consists of several levels - or worlds - all connected and placed ontop of eachother. The Hopis tell that in ancient times, they migrated into this present Fourth World from the one below, climbing through a small hole in the ceiling of the latter. This tiny hole was named a Sipapu, or place of emergence.
Whether we want to label this story as true or false is perhaps not really the point. Some things are not intended to satisfy our rational, analyzing mind. Some stories are perhaps more correctly approached as mirrors - reflecting exacly what contents we ourselves put into them.

My intention is that the material of this blog may be approached as such mirrors. Perhaps a truth changes it's face every time it is observed from a new angle? Perhaps everything really depends on where we ourselves stand? Perhaps there are many levels to reality, like the Hopis themselves depict in their legend? And finally, perhaps every moment is a place of emergence, existing right within oursleves?

I'll leave the answers up the the viewer to decide. An answer is always present within every question. Similarly, a story is always planted inside every beginning, ready to be unpacked and unfolded.

Enjoy all that lives, grows, changes and is!



søndag 31. mai 2015

Triad

Supposedly, a perfect equilatteral triangle exists between Machu Picchu in Peru, the Mauna Kea volcano at Hawaii and a glacier called Snaefellsjokull in Iceland.

Each of these locations transmit a different energetic vibration too, relative to the perceptions of the human species:

- One place is the source of the ever-present beginning; the "nowness" of the moment.
- The other acts like the library of all that has been and all that can be.
- The third location represents the ever-watching eye that gazes over the entire time-space continuum.

These words draw in elements from all three. They lie at the heart of three circles which outline the true nature of time:

its nowness
its infinity
and its intrinsic connection to our own point of view.