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Welcome to my Blog

As far I can remember I write. I write for joy. I write to express my emotions. I write to know my soul. I write to compose poetry typed from my heart. I write for the pleasure to share the knowledge that helps me along my path. But most importantly

“I write to honour my voice”.

Desire Cara Desire Cara

Chiron the Wounded healer

Chiron the healer,

You, as a human being, are made up of different forms of frequency. Science knows this and this is why there are so many different frequency bands that exist in everything around you. Where your energy is, or where your frequency is, is what you attract into your existence. This concept is also valid for your life. Your existence is based on what matters to you. What attracts you into your life is based on the energy, or frequency, that you emit and the compared energy frequencies are drawn back to you. This is how the universe works.

Since unheard emotional wounds are energetically stored in the body, they are the number one cause of blocked energy, and consequently a primary cause of health problems. As we release emotional wounds, the flow of energy in the body naturally increases, and if we clear enough emotional blocks, our vibration can rise to a level where the body can self-heal.

The good news is that once you understand the true cause of emotional wounds, you will immediately possess the cure, and this foundational knowledge will give you the power to heal yourself.

The myth of Chiron represents the essence of the health sciences. It speaks of a character who dedicated himself to healing the ills of the body and the soul, due to his great compassion towards others. It is also a metaphor that shows how to help someone, save from their own suffering.

The word "Chiron" etymologically means "skilled with the hands" or "the one who heals with the hands." The word operating room is derived from this character.

Chiron was known as a wise teacher, healer, and prophet. The Greek mythology surrounding the figure of Chiron, 'The Wounded Healer', is helpful in gaining a deeper understanding of the energies reflected by Chiron in our sky.

In Greek mythology Chiron was a centaur - half man, half horse. The son of the titan Cronos, who took the form of a horse when he lay with (more like raped) the ocean nymph Philyra. She became pregnant and upon seeing her child, when she was born as a centaur, Philyra was shocked and so disgusted that she abandoned her child. With both parents rejecting him, we now have a centaur with some very deep wounds.

With the understanding of our wound, the path to healing lights up.

It is also we who heal ourselves, sharing the wisdom of what we learn on this journey to help others. Part of this wisdom is accepting that we may not perfectly heal our wound and even if that is true, what we know can help others heal themselves. It is essential that we share our knowledge, even if we are far from perfect. Also, when we try to help others, we become more intimate with our own hurts and hopefully more compassionate with ourselves.

The Wounded Healer. He is the person who has gone through suffering, and as a result of that process he has become a source of great wisdom, healing power, and inspiration to others. In fact, the archetypal wounded healer undergoes a transformation as a result of his wound, his suffering, and his pain. You can actually transcend it, and lead yourself successfully to a path of service. It is as if the wound itself helps lead you on an inner journey that becomes transformation itself. One removes the selfish and self-centered feeling of being alone in our wound and expands to see others and how if one chooses a different role, one can help.

We all have our deep wounds - be it rejection from a parent, self-esteem, past life karma, ancestral trauma, etc. We often enter jobs or vocations where this wound appears. This appears as projecting onto others or healing them in the way that we are trying to heal ourselves or polarity, we run in the opposite direction and overcompensate.

This wound is a mark from where we need to expand our consciousness, clear energy or raise our own vibration.

I want to end with a beautiful quote from Rumi that for me sums up how important our inner Chiron is - 'the wound is where the light enters'. This is Chiron's blessing.

The healed become the healers ...

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Desire Cara Desire Cara

Blessing

Blessings

When we bless another, we are literally raising their frequency to that of the Divine.

When we bless another, we do something sacred.

Today, the blessing is given with holy water. Holy water is water that has been blessed by a member of the clergy or a religious figure. Use for cleansing before baptism and spiritual cleansing is common in various religions, from Christianity to Sikhism. The use of holy water as a sacramental for protection against evil is common among Lutherans, Anglicans, Roman Catholics, and Eastern Christians.

Gnostic Christians used to call their religion Sineisaktism, another word for agape, meaning The Way of Shaktism, referring to Tantric yoni worship.

But where does this ancient tradition come from?

Blessing comes from the Bletsian word.

bledsian

From Proto-Germanic *blōþisōną ("to sprinkle, mark, or sanctify with blood"), from *blōþą ("blood"), from Proto-Indo-European *bhlo-to- ("to sprout, sprout"), from *bhol-, *bhlē-dh- , *bhlō(w)- ("prosper, flourish, blossom"). Cognate with Old Norse bletza ("bless"), whence Icelandic blessa. Related to Old English blēdan ("to bleed").

How many of you are now imagining the holy grail?

The Holy Grail, in its true original essence, is the womb.

One of the most important rituals for Gnostic Christians was to prepare an immortality drink made from menstrual blood, which is full of healing stem cells, which can activate our cellular capacity to regenerate and transport us to endocrine states of ecstasy. Or in a spiritual sense, open us to the cosmic consciousness of heaven or paradise.

This love feast or sacred marriage, a fundamental part of the menstrual mysteries, was eventually declared heresy and women were prohibited from participating in Christian rites.

However, the power of rebirth and resurrection previously associated with the menstrual blood of the Divine Mother was transferred to the story of Jesus and his Eucharistic ritual - hic est sanguis meus - this is the chalice of my blood - where worshipers they drank his blood to gain the power of rebirth.

Interesting huh!

Let's go deeper, let's go back to the end. Must?

In our beginnings, when our communities were matriarchal. Women used to bleed together. Our blood was sacred. The only blood that created life. We used to bleed directly onto the earth, to fertilize the Earth. In the Temples, the Priestesses were the guardians of that knowledge, they were healers, midwives, oracles... They lived in a sacred ceremony with the rhythms of the Earth and the Moon. Menstrual blood was used to initiate, protect, and bless.

In most ancient myths and religions around the world, dating back hundreds of thousands of years, the power of rebirth has always been a blessing from the female womb, embodied and endowed by the priestesses of the sacred womb in many cultures. It had never been in the hands of a man, although there are many legends about the menstrual powers of shaman women being stolen by male gods.

The word "menstruation" comes from the Greek root "men", which means month, and "menus", which means moon and power. That the moon and power represented the same thing is also quite revealing. In fact, it's how women created the calendar!

It turns out that many ancient cultures like the Egyptian, and even the Greek, used menstrual blood in rituals. The pharaohs actually instructed their priests and priestesses to ingest the material to enhance their connection with the spirits. The Greeks were a little less dramatic about it, using the blood to fertilize their crops.

In Celtic Britain, being dyed red (presumably menstrual blood) meant you were chosen by the goddess. The Celtic word "ruadh" means red and royal. Celtic rites were often bestowed by older women in the community due to the belief that being postmenopausal made her the wisest, as she had permanently retained her "blood of wisdom".

”The Goddess Eostre (symbols of the womb that have evolved to the present Easter) was traditionally colored red and placed on graves to strengthen the dead for the afterlife. In Greece and southern Russia, graves were reddened with ocher clay to make them more like the womb of Mother Earth from which the dead could be reborn.

As I have deepened my own reverence for my moon blood, I have been practicing returning it to earth each time it comes. There is an old Hopi prophecy that says, “When women return their blood to the land, men will come home from war and the land will find peace.

Could my menstrual blood be as powerful to our ancestors as it was to the Hopi people?

So I started giving my blood to my trees and plants every month (diluted with water, blood is powerful) and I saw my oak tree transform. Blood contains a high composition of nitrogen and protein, which is just what our plants need to grow strong.

Returning my blood to Earth is a small ritual that strengthens my connection to my lunar cycle and helps me reprogram my shame into pride in being a bleeding woman.

Information from different sources after long research, composed by me.

Desire

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