Ley Lines, The Red Centre and taking the next step

Ley Lines, The Red Centre and taking the next step

Goddess News‘ axiom:

‘If you want to be spiritual, ask uncomfortable questions,’

Goddess News, Spiritual Blog, Divine Feminine, Dr Joanna Kujawa, Spiritual Detective :).

Last February, after 14 years’ living in Australia, I finally undertook a long-dreamed-of trip to Uluru (Ayers Rock) in Central Australia. The trip was only meant to soothe the adventurous stirrings in my soul, away from the boredom of academic life and lecturing, but instead it gave me great insight into the discussion on the Mother Goddess, Mother Earth, and the Goddess concept in general.

First of all, let me begin with a description of how it feels to be in the presence of Mother Nature as She is represented by Uluru. Uluru and neighbouring Kata Tjuta (also known as the Olgas) feature in the Red Centre of Australia and, as far as we know, are about 550 million years old – so show some respect, right?

I can tell you from the experience that you feel a certain gravitas and seriousness in the place, and if you go there because you want to acquaint yourself with Mother Nature, I can tell you right now it is nothing like that New Age nonsense from the film The Last Avatar about Mount Shasta. This Mother means business – the business of life and death. I must add that the sound of the Aboriginal didgeridoo best expresses the feeling of the place. This area is not the all-loving mother we might imagine; here is a power to respect, love and, at times, even fear.

It is probably no coincidence that just before I went to the Red Centre I found an article on the Earth’s ley lines. Ley lines, in case you have not heard of them, are subtle energetic centres that criss-cross the Earth. All of them have a certain charge, a current, which is different in magnitude; they are, as someone called them, the ‘energetic signatures’ of Earth. As mentioned in articles from the Journal of Anomalous Sciences and then repeated in numerous blogs, the lines, metaphorically speaking, are the Earth’s chakras, where often major spiritual centres have been built throughout the centuries or even millennia of human history. Unsurprisingly, many spiritual shrines are on the exact point of certain ley lines.

Uluru and Kata Tjuta are considered the third Earth chakra, or its solar plexus; how appropriate as the giant red rock looks like a huge navel and could not have been named better. As you drive or, even better, walk towards the rock, you can feel the pull – yes – right from your belly towards its magnetic centre. You walk towards it, whether you want to or not, and if you are a little bit open and sensitive, you know it wants you to walk towards itself. This Mother is calling a vagrant child; you know Mother wants to see you and you better obey. This is a place of immense spiritual power.

This is one of those moments in your life when you are filled with AWE. Not at the beauty of nature (a completely different feeling) but at the power of the energy around and the gravity of it. A power  that you suddenly remember (it is so easy to forget in the modern arrogance of the cities) can destroy you and remake you in a split second. The power is temporarily dormant but when it wakes up, you pray with all your might that it likes you. This is a healthy fear of something much bigger and more powerful than yourself.

The place is completely different from Jerusalem, for example, the site of another powerful intersection of ley lines meet and which is, by the way, considered (along with the Pyramids of Giza) the Earth’s throat chakra. In Jerusalem, you are not in awe, but you run around amok, like a lover possessed by demons who can’t help but scream to the world about your obsessive love for a deity that cannot be faithful. Jerusalem is a holy madness type of centre. But Uluru makes you feel your BEING. Both the grandness and ridiculousness of it.

The Rock makes you remember what Andrew Harvey once so brilliantly said: that the eastern religions came to be because of human beings’ need to transcend Nature and Its merciless rules of life and death. That is why we need Brahman, why we need Shiva or Kali – to escape the relentless cycle of death and rebirth. At some point a yogi stood up from meditating and said, ‘ENOUGH!’

But as, Harvey says, we now may have aspired too much in attempting to transcend Nature. I would add that we are so lost in our cities and new technologies that we believe we are robots. And here is what Uluru and Kata Tjuta do – they bring balance.

Curiously, Uluru is where Aboriginal men’s secret business is done, while across the road Kata Tjuta is a place for women’s secret business. Balance.

I was, and still am, desperately out of balance, debilitated by the jobs I do to earn a living, and as I was leaving the Red Centre I fell sick for a few weeks. No doctor knew what ailed me. But I did. The solar plexus chakra deals with action and busyness. The mad accumulation of our modern lives. I came back to Melbourne with 1000 things on my agenda and discovered that I could not do a thing.  I had to stand up for myself at my workplace and ask for temporary relief from some of my duties, and I got it. I lay in bed sick, and it took weeks before I fully recovered.

I was in bed long enough to remember that when I started my spiritual journey over 20 years ago and was travelling around Asia meeting gurus, I regularly fell ill.  I was told at the time it was due to a cleansing of the system of impurities in the presence of a guru. Then when I met a teacher, with whom I spent 15 years (12 years in person) and with whom I occasionally stayed in his ashram, I often became sick too. And it was the same inexplicable, violent sicknesses – before a new phase of my life was meant to start. This also happened in Jerusalem. Nobody says that walking the spiritual path is a bed of roses.

J A Kent, in her book The Goddess and the Shaman says this is a normal way of the Goddess. The Mother creates and destroys. If She appears merciless it is because we forget that She re-creates after She destroys. Like Kali-Durga, She destroys what does not serve us anymore – even if we, on our human level, desperately cling to these things. We cling to them because we do not know any better, unless we TRUST the Process.

Which is why the Celtic idea of the Elphame is so interesting. As Kent says, this is the bridge between the worlds. The bridge between what we consider the physical, and the Spirit or the immaterial. In fact the Spirit (a human invention to escape the wheel of life and death) and Nature (what we perceive as the physical) are one and are interconnected but limited by our senses. We are able to glimpse this interconnection only in ecstatic ‘spiritual’ states or shamanic rituals. Kent calls the Elphame the ‘foundational subtle reality’ from which everything springs. Carl Jung, in his Seven Sermons, preferred the Gnostic term for this ‘Pleroma’ – the Cosmic Soup from which everything emerges and which even modern physicists are trying to come to grips with.

It is time we acknowledge that we, the Earth and the Spirit are one in the Cosmic Soup.

So, as I was standing in the desert, in the 40OC heat, noting the sky above me was bluer than you can imagine, and that the Red Centre had summoned me, I pondered the concept of God as Love and the answer I got was – ‘You do it’. If you want the Universe as Love, if you want the God(dess) as Love, you do it.

You are the next step. Not only in your own life but also in the fate of the Universe.  As Carl Jung said: even gods and demons have to bow to human beings – because it is not up to them; it is up to us where we all collectively go from here.  The fate of the Universe, literally, Depends on our choices.  Angels and demons are only a supporting characters.  We are the main players who decide whether we get to the Omega point where all consciousness meets.

Take the right step.

Sending Love, Joanna

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Dr Joanna Kujawa
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5 Responses to Ley Lines, The Red Centre and taking the next step

  1. timozpagan says:

    Wow Joanna, reading and following your journey resonated with me on many levels. These images brought back memories of my own pilgrimage to Uluru and red desert and the ancient.

    These pilgrimages take us across vast and sometimes arid spaces to locations that are sacred. There’s an ordeal involved, serving to show the importance of the sacred in places of raw nature.

    Thank you for the reminder.

    Nature within us. Nature outside of us. Nature is all.

    • sundari says:

      Thank you and am so happy that this has resonated with your own journey! I need this reminder as it is so easy to get lost again and again in the artificial labyrinth of our daily lives in the city. Pilgrimages of this sort is what keeps me sane.:) xxx

  2. G. says:

    Always remember wherever you are is the spiritual center! Is Jerusalem! Though these places hold magical power we can access the holy place beneath our feet at any time!

  3. Agata says:

    “The arrogance of the cities” – I love that! It think it’s the same ignorant narcissistic arrogance that wants to transcend Nature. There is no transcending Nature. We can only embrace Nature with every cell of our Being, realise we are one with it and as eternal as She. Cities have gone beyond practicality (good and reasonable) to attempting to create an illusion that we have tamed Nature. This is ridiculous- both COVID and climate disaster is demonstrating to us very clearly that we haven’t.

    I think (my humble opinion) that it’s in fact PATRIARCHAL religions which tried to transcend Nature – all this talk about Nirvana, Heaven etc. I’ll dare to offend some people by saying that many hinduist cults, some varieties of Eastern Asian shamanism and Buddhism belong to them. I believe, even if I’m not there yet even if I’ve experienced glimpses, that certain matriarchal religions (e.g. paleolithic cults, Old Europe religions) really embraced the idea of Goddess of Life-Death-Resurection in an eternal cycle (see Maria Gimbutas). I believe that what is now known as tantra has roots in those ancient European mysteries (or should I say also Egyptian and Fertile Crescent ones) – Gobekli Tepe, Malta, Irish etc megalithic temples are their remains, not to forget about a Chauvet Cave and Paleolithic Venuses etc. I believe it’s possible to transcend the fear of death by embracing the nature of Nature and ourselves (Oneness). This is gnosis, direct experience. Fear dissolves and power arises – or, rather, the ability to channel the power of One.

    I’m curious about your point of view on that.

    • sundari says:

      Agata, I have just returned to this space after a long absence as I was bus with the book. I think that all of these sites actually pass the knowledge of transcendence to us which is encoded in Nature and our bodies. The ‘living Spirit within us ‘.x

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