On a misty morning take a walk outside and into nature.
You will have revealed to you a clue to the code of the ancients, for you will suddenly find millions upon millions of beautiful mathematical structures that you did not see before.
A subtle change in nature itself has revealed to you a hidden world - the world of the spiders web, revealed to you now by glistening drops of moisture. Take a good look. Go up close and peer into a world you could not see only hours before. Your eyes have been opened.~
The Ancient Code ~
Oh, Gaia.
My favorite thing about living in the end times (manufactured or otherwise ;) is all the fluttering curiosity and speculation around
what it all means. For someone who loves creativity and who's drawn to wonder (especially when it comes to the future) it's fun. And in the case of 2012, oh, there's apparently much to be said.
Last week, yet one more movie on the topic was released--this one by Reality Entertainment and Warner Brothers.
It's called The Ancient Code, and it offers another explanation for the 2012 phenomenon. After connecting the dots of climate change, consumer culture, medicated children, celebrity worship, and the current financial crisis into a picture of our current situation, the film (like those magic-eye pictures that pop into 3-D) describes a rich pattern underlying it--a beautiful mathematical world upon which all nature depends, which is visible if you know where to look, and which the current crisis is merely one small and predicable part of.
It's unusual, to be sure, and fascinating, and if you have any curiosity about sacred geometry, or the reasons for the rampant materialism of the past few decades, you'll probably enjoy the film. And what can I say? I have a soft spot for those perceptual flips that takes an otherwise bleak situation and reveals the beauty and hope inside.
You can find the trailer on the Reality Films site (where you can also sign up to receive the
free sampler DVD.) And tomorrow, do go take that walk outside. There really is magic everywhere--as long as you know where (or perhaps how?) to look.
To spiderwebs and raindrops and conspiracies of wonder,