when you're sensing with the lower body, the anatomy is such that to function you need something to oppose. The basics of digestion and the responses are not defined by consuming energy for the body, but by keeping the first responses of it's reference to the expansion ability as the concept that you start the reference association as the case for individuality and the way of peace as the development of the various angles you need to create a field of expansion , like the CE-5 initiative and the ,"close encounters of the 5th kind", to use group signals to outer space at some angle that will include the detection of peaceful alien beings coming closer to Earth. The larger the angle the more definite the contact.So then, to use old age techniques from the ancient civilizations and the method of ,"prolonged" states of consciousness in the field of the ,"source of the body energy" by keeping it still so that it is changed to the expression of the ,"expansion way of the alien beings". Meaning that contact may occur when we and aliens are keeping the body energy, "response" in a state of stillness and increase the expansion value just like expanding the angle makes contact more sure.
The thing that does this, is known as ,"biological energy" = 5 as ancient.
The number 5 in ancient civilizations :
as Mayan,
credit
commons wikimedia.com
The thing that does this, is known as ,"biological energy" = 5 as ancient.
The number 5 in ancient civilizations :
as Mayan,
credit
commons wikimedia.com
The number 5 in hindi defines the upwards directed opening by which we learn to accept and learn to know the values of the lessons given to us from the way in which the letter or number spirals into the ,"inner resource" that has the knowledge.
Type ,"shamablaya warrior".
from
Wikipedia
2019
june 20
ShambhalaFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kalachakra thangka[1] from Sera Monastery
For the Buddhist practice community, see Shambhala Buddhism.
For the town in China, see Shambala, Xiangcheng County, Sichuan.In Hinduism and Tibetan Buddhist tradition, Shambhala (Sanskrit: शम्भलः Śambhalaḥ, also spelled Shambala or Shamballa; Tibetan: བདེ་འབྱུང, Wylie: Bde'byung; Chinese: 香巴拉; pinyin: Xiāngbālā) is a mythical kingdom. The kingdom is said to be laid out in precisely the same form as an eight-petalled lotus blossom surrounded by a chain of snow mountains. At the centre lies the palace of the King of Shambala who governed from the city called Kalapa. Shambhala is also often called Shangri-la in some texts. [2]
Shambhala is mentioned in various ancient texts, including the Kalacakra Tantra[3] and the ancient Zhangzhung texts of western Tibet. The Bon scriptures speak of a closely related land called Tagzig Olmo Lung Ring.[4]
Hindu texts such as the Vishnu Purana (4.24) mention the village Shambhala as the birthplace of Kalki, the final incarnation of Vishnu, who will usher in a new Age (Satya Yuga).[5]
Whatever its historical basis, Shambhala (spelling derived from Buddhist transliterations) gradually came to be seen as a Buddhist pure land, a fabulous kingdom whose reality is visionary or spiritual as much as physical or geographic. It was in this form that the Shambhala myth reached Western Europe and the Americas, where it influenced non-Buddhist as well as Buddhist spiritual seekers—and, to some extent, popular culture in general.
Type ,"shamablaya warrior".
from
Wikipedia
2019
june 20
ShambhalaFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
Kalachakra thangka[1] from Sera Monastery
For the Buddhist practice community, see Shambhala Buddhism.
For the town in China, see Shambala, Xiangcheng County, Sichuan.In Hinduism and Tibetan Buddhist tradition, Shambhala (Sanskrit: शम्भलः Śambhalaḥ, also spelled Shambala or Shamballa; Tibetan: བདེ་འབྱུང, Wylie: Bde'byung; Chinese: 香巴拉; pinyin: Xiāngbālā) is a mythical kingdom. The kingdom is said to be laid out in precisely the same form as an eight-petalled lotus blossom surrounded by a chain of snow mountains. At the centre lies the palace of the King of Shambala who governed from the city called Kalapa. Shambhala is also often called Shangri-la in some texts. [2]
Shambhala is mentioned in various ancient texts, including the Kalacakra Tantra[3] and the ancient Zhangzhung texts of western Tibet. The Bon scriptures speak of a closely related land called Tagzig Olmo Lung Ring.[4]
Hindu texts such as the Vishnu Purana (4.24) mention the village Shambhala as the birthplace of Kalki, the final incarnation of Vishnu, who will usher in a new Age (Satya Yuga).[5]
Whatever its historical basis, Shambhala (spelling derived from Buddhist transliterations) gradually came to be seen as a Buddhist pure land, a fabulous kingdom whose reality is visionary or spiritual as much as physical or geographic. It was in this form that the Shambhala myth reached Western Europe and the Americas, where it influenced non-Buddhist as well as Buddhist spiritual seekers—and, to some extent, popular culture in general.