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Open Your Third Eye With This Ancient Egyptian Technique

By consciousreminder - November 19, 20160894


First of all, you should know that few cultures were as preoccupied with the afterlife as the ancient
Egyptians. And, you probably already know that their society relied heavily on a myths of rebirth
and transformation through the attainment of higher levels of consciousness.
This is especially true of the fortunate few that made up the ruling class, as evidenced standing the
symbolism-heavy narrative they left behind etched in stone. According to the experts, one of their
most important symbols the Eye of Horus- bears testimony to their search for the secrets of this
life and, as it turns out, this ancient symbol might be a key to unlocking the perspective of a
continued existence on higher planes of existence.
The experts also say that the Sky God Horus was the one of the ancient Egyptians most significant
deities. The Eye of Horus, also known as Wedjat (sometimes Wadjet) was a symbol of protection
and the royal power that the gods bestowed upon mankind. When used properly, it acted as a ward
against evil and offered protection in the afterlife. Should it come as a surprise when we realize that
this symbol of immense power is actually very similar to the structure in the brain at the center of
which the pineal gland is found? The pineal gland is found in the center of the human brain,
between the two hemispheres. It resembles a pine cone (hence the name) and can be found in nearly
all vertebrates. Biology tells us that its role in the human body is to secrete melatonin, a hormone
that modulates sleep patterns. Some evolutionary biologists believe that the vertebrate pineal cells
possess a common evolutionary ancestor with retinal cells. Structurally speaking, the pineal gland
acts like it was once an eye.
The Egyptians werent the only ones to hold the pineal gland and its representations in such a high
regard. This symbol can be found from the ruins of Babylon to the Christian scriptures and
everywhere in between. The ancient Greeks considered it the seat of the soul, a notion that was later
picked up by the Romans. In Hinduism, it plays an even greater role and is associated with the Ajna
chakra, the part of the brain that signifies the conscience.
Throughout history, various cultures have identified the pineal gland as the Third Eye, the AllSeeing organ Plato so ceremoniously described in Republic:
In every man there is an Eye of the soul which is far more precious than ten thousand bodily eyes,
for by it alone is truth seen. The Eye of the soul is alone naturally adapted to be resuscitated and
excited by the mathematical disciplines.
Mathematical disciplines. Hmmm. Was Plato talking about Sacred Geometry, by any chance?
Because the ancient Egyptians made heavy use of this concept, and it permeated many aspects of
their culture. The Eye of Horus itself stands testament to this idea.
The ancient Egyptians architecture is further evidence of their special relationship with
numerology. Many Egyptologists have dedicated their energy to uncovering the sacred knowledge
the builders of the pyramids possessed.
One of them was French occultist Ren Adolphe Schwaller de Lubicz, and in his book The Temple
in Man, he describes the multiple instances of hidden symbolism present at the Temple of Luxor in
Egypt. In 1935, Schwaller de Lubicz moved to Egypt with his wife and daughter and began the
arduous process of mapping and measuring the entire temple. He would spend the next 15 years of
his life trying and succeeding in finding clues regarding divine mathematics.

Built nerly 3,500 years ago, the Luxor Temple is a perfect example of the use of sacred geometry in
architecture, as it reflects the exact proportions of the human body. Even more important, this
masterpiece of symbolist teachings reveals the occult anatomy of man. Schwaller discovered that
inside the Temple of Luxor, representations of the Eye of Horus abound in the southern secret
sanctuaries. This means that the ancient Egyptians viewed the pineal gland as a doorway or a
passage. It represented the symbolic entrance to mans head, the seat of his intellect and his soul.
The ancient Egyptians relied heavily on symbolism and our knowledge of their culture was
extracted from their figurative representations. But this process of deduction is far from being
perfect and you can be sure that some of the intricacies of their beliefs were lost in translation.
Despite all this, one thing is abundantly obvious: they held the pineal gland in high regard and they
knew it held the key to exploring the spiritual world. By subjecting it to the principles of sacred
geometry, they acknowledged the Third Eye as a corridor to the outer cosmos that originated man.
There are reasons to suspect the Egyptian culture might be much older than modern science is
willing to accept, pushing back the use of this divine symbol by millennia and giving birth to a
legitimate question: did the Egyptians discover the role of the pineal gland on their own or did they
receive this esoteric knowledge from a much older and wiser culture? The fact that symbolic
representations of the All-Seeing Eye can be found throughout the globe in cultures spanning
thousands of years seems to support the latter.
So what does this mean for us? Should we rely on what human anatomy tells us and further
demystify the capabilities of this spiritual organ? Do we let it become calcified without attempting
to investigate its life-changing powers that seem to transcend time and space? Do we rub sand in
our own eyes?

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