When I am visiting sacred sites, I like to test the energy flow with my pendulum. Most of the locations that we visited on this trip were built and occupied by the elite of the Mayan societies, so there were many ceremonies that were performed there in the distant past. The energy that I was testing for might be created by the lingering effects of those ceremonies, in addition to the sacred geometry of the buildings themselves or to how they were laid out. Other factors might include solar and lunar alignments, the energy of the earth itself, the stone that the buildings were made of, or ley lines and underground streams, etc.
The energy of the sites on this trip included anything from no energy at all to a very positive and elevated energetic sensation. My pendulum would move in a clockwise motion for positive energy, or have no motion at all for no energy. There were a few rare instances on this trip when the pendulum moved in a counterclockwise motion, indicating that the energy there was negative or heavy. Here are some of the most energized locations.
Of course, the Temple of the Seven Dolls that I mentioned in the previous post had fabulous energy as did the cenote on the other end of the sacbe.
At Chichen Itza, the energy was mixed throughout but there were a few standouts. First, the El Castillo Pyramid.
The cenote, where many ancient ceremonies were conducted.
The temple called the Red House, which was off in a secluded part of the park.And of course that fabulous observatory.Labna.
One of my favorites on this trip was Kabah. We got there at the end of the day, and the whole place was full of the most sublime energy. The photo at the top of this post is of the wall of masks honoring the rain god Chaac.
Edzna was another of my favorites. I remembered it fondly from my last visit to the Yucatan.
Our last stop of that day was a site called Zpuhil. The energy here was heightened but quite different from the rest. Turns out that this site was very feminine in nature. The Goddess was quite present there.
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