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Grounding is super important. For a deep dive, check out episode 562 of Once Bitten (link in NOSTR profile) in which I walked @npub1hghn...fyz2 through my research. Grounding induces theta neural oscillations which are the key to accessing the Akashic records, Placebo effect style healing modalities (Qigong, Reiki, etc.), and, most importantly, spiritual (kundalini) awakenings. There are enhanced grounding techniques that are ancient: cave incubation, hypogeums, Aesculapian baths, Osireon, Osiris shaft sarcophagi, Saqqara necropolis sarcophagi, Great Pyramid sarcophagi, etc. Walking barefoot on ground is good. Meditating in lotus position with the receptive root chakra in contact with the ground is better. "Surround grounding" (caves, hypogeums) is better. Water grounding in Earthen containers is better (Osireon, sarcophagi) because you get more surface area contact which improves the rhythm entrainment process. Water grounding while surround grounding is better. Sensory deprivation water grounding while surround grounding is better. Sensory deprivation water grounding while surround grounding in a biogeometrically designed structure (Great Pyramid) in precisely located sarcophagi to capture a precise resonance is even better. Placing an impossibly heavy lid on the Queen's Chamber sarcophagus while an adept is experiencing sensory deprivation induces a state of surrender necessary to activate the 3rd eye. Adding lavender oil or blossoms with the Epsom salts further helps. Certain psychedelics (e.g. mescaline if timed correctly) further helps. Grounding is the foundation of the original version of the baptism ritual. It explains so many ancient mysteries. (P.S. Epsom salts were not discovered 400 years ago in Epsom, England...they were REdiscovered. Egyptians were converting basalt to magnesium sulfate using hydrochloric and sulfuric acids - see the work of Geoffrey Drumm. This is how Egypt, chemistry, and spiritual alchemy tie together.)
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zora 3 weeks ago
Your healing power has started to work. Seeing you makes me feel so much better. 🤝
Man, what an insightful episode. 🧙‍♂️ I had some intuitive ideas about what you're explaining and suggesting there but actually hearing it from someone else makes me feel a lot less nutty.
If by "the author" you mean Geoffrey Drumm, I have a copy of his book and I can tell you that his work doesn't talk about the conversion of basalt via hydrochloric and sulfuric acid into magnesium sulfate. His book is a fictitious narrative that bakes in his research. I'm reminded often of the words of Evey Hammond's father from V for Vendetta who is said to have said that "artists use lies to tell the truth". Drumm moved to Egypt a few years back to more fully immerse himself in his research and Egyptians often don't take kindly to suggestions that the pyramids were used for anything other than Pharaonic burial so by publishing his book as a fictitious narrative, he is leaving himself an easy "out" if anyone comes at him with anger over his research. Drumm suggests that the Great Pyramid was used for sulfuric acid production and that the Central Pyramid was used for hydrochloric acid production. In his youtube channel content (The Land of Chem), Drumm does offer some of his own speculations as to what the ancient Egyptians were using these synthesized chemicals for, he doesn't push the idea that they were creating what we would commonly refer to today as Epsom salts. That's my speculation which stands upon the shoulders of his work. I've tried to reach out to Drumm before, multiple times, but I'm sure his inbox is inundated by lots of people with lots of theories and it's easy for my attempts to communicate with him to get lost in the crowd, so to speak. Maybe some day I can get him on a call and explain how beautifully my research dovetails with his and get him to dedicate some of his time and attention towards looking for evidence of magnesium sulfate production.