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Presented by Greatmystery.org
"For
indeed the crop circles, just as pyramids, cathedrals, standing stones and other pagan sacred sites are revealing a legacy
left to us by our ancestors that other levels of reality are but a whisper away, and if you know where to stand, you can connect
with them.” — Freddy Silva
 Stonehenge, photo by Freddy Silva
Gaia-metry, or geo-metry, is the measure of the Earth. In ancient times,
the correct estimation of the physical properties of the host planet was paramount to the success of the temple.
As with other planets, the Earth was seen as an expression of super-physical consciousness, the manifestation of spirit
and of God: a living organism. Since the temples were designed as analogs of universal principles, designing them according
to the same geometric proportions bound in the planet was to imbue the temple with soul. Thus, just like the Earth, the temple
was also regarded as a living organism.
The ancients figured out that the apparently physical world was constructed
from atoms and molecules, and that each and every one was governed by patterns of order that favoured balanced geometric relationships,
a view now held by modern physics.
Furthermore, by studying the heavens, and the orbits of planets in particular,
the ancients deduced that each mean orbit related one to another in orderly geometric relationships. Since the planets were
considered to be living bodies or akousmata (“resonant beings”) they were attributed the titles of Gods. And from
that point, geometry became sacred.
Therefore, the geometry of life– bio-geometry– was incorporated
into the fabric of temples the world over. Much of it is occult (‘hidden from the eye’), and yet its presence
can be felt by the atoms and molecules of the human body which are built on identical geometric platforms.
 Salisbury Cathedral TO ENTER AN ANCIENT TEMPLE IS TO ENTER ONESELF IS TO
KNOW THY SELF.
Some of the most celebrated uses of geometry are found in those deceptively simple buildings, the
pyramids of Egypt. The Great Pyramid at Giza incorporates a most unusual slope angle of approximately 51.49º, which neatly
references that most unusual of regular geometric figures, the seven-pointed heptagon. Unlike all other regular geometric
figures, the heptagon is the only one whose angles cannot bisect a circle to a whole number, and so it has traditionally been
associated with sound, the unknowable, and the seeking of wisdom. It has also been described as the geometry of the soul. )
The enigmatic Bent Pyramid at Dashur, often portrayed by orthodox archeologists as ‘a mistake’, is equally
encoded with an invisible geometry, and an important one at that. When unfolded like the petal of a flower, the top slope
angle reveals a pentagon, the bottom slope a hexagon.
This combination of geometries is inherent in the design
of the crystalline structure of human DNA. Since biogeometry is an eddy of energy, or a material expression of consciousness,
the energy field of a person walking into the Bent Pyramid is influenced by the actions taking place within that geometric
framework.
The same effects are found in Gothic cathedrals and their complex geometry, Chartres being one of the
finest examples. Russian scientists monitoring EEG brainwave patterns inside the nave of Chartres discovered that the building’s
special harmonics have a noticeable affect on peoples’ states of awareness. When combined with Gregorian chant—the
kind of music these churches were designed to amplify—people’s brainwaves went up as much as 4000% above normal
waking state.
At Stonehenge, the relatively simple series of rings and horseshoe alignments that typify the world’s
most famous stone circle belie the fact that the positioning of its stones is governed by a complex geometric blueprint. In
fact, it may be the only temple in the world that incorporates multiple sacred geometries: triangular, square, pentagonal,
hexagonal, and heptagonal.
Stonehenge is the classic example of an organic temple, built and expanded over the
course of some 4000 years, serving to amplify the specific needs and subtle energy requirements of the era. Consequently,
only parts of the temple were in use at any given ceremony: adepts would enter the temple with a specific purpose, and consciously
‘awaken’ only those geometries that served the intent of the moment.
It is also worth noting that,
when the temple is not in use or being misused, its subtle energy field shuts down. This is particularly so when thousands
of tourists and their clicking cameras and camcorders are present, blissfully unaware of the true purpose of the site. Without
the single-minded intent and respect, all that stands in front of them is nothing more than a bunch of upright, inanimate
rocks.
Because there’s a shared framework of biogeometry, the energy exchange between the stone temple and
the human temple only takes place whenever there is sympathetic resonance between the two. And when the intent of the participant
matches that of the temple, information is transferred between these two organisms.
In our era, the new geometric
temples are the enigmatic crop circles. Despite the vast amounts of money spent by special interest groups to debunk the subject,
crop circles have been scientifically validated as a genuine phenomenon, and that it is intelligently guided.
 2006 Crop Circle, photo by Lucy Pringle
Like pyramids and Gothic cathedrals,
genuine crop circles share the same occult geometric framework, and quite often the shape one sees in the flattened crop conceals
a far different geometry. As with the Bent Pyramid, the crop circles favour the use of pentagonal and hexagonal geometry,
and so it is not surprising that hundreds of documented cases describe alterations of awareness in people who interact with
the designs, as well as healings. Indeed, sacred sites around the world share the same rich tradition.
It seems
rather timely that, just as the sacred sites are experiencing a sudden resurgence in interest, so the crop circles have sprouted
in 29 countries. And wherever they manifest—from the fields of southern Britain to the prairies of Alberta and the rice
paddies of Japan—they always do so beside ancient sacred sites.
Perhaps someone is trying to remind us of
a connection that needs to be rekindled.

FREDDY SILVA is one of the world's leading experts on crop circles and sacred space. A life-long student of
Earth Mysteries, Sacred Space and ancient systems of knowledge, he is a principal researcher into the interaction between
temples and consciousness.
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