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Mayan 2012 End Age
Prophesies (their meaning in
plain terms) With so much interest in
the Maya predictions of 2012 it is difficult to understand the actual
prophesies from their many interpretations.
This guide will provide you with enough information to “decode” their
meaning. Considerations The Mayan civilization
of Central America was and is the most advanced in relation to time-science
knowledge. Their main calendar is the most accurate on the planet. It has
never erred. The Maya calendar
describes not only time but combines it with the evolution of consciousness in
all of its aspects and how man passes through it. Therefore Maya prophesies are not only a
clock but a condition of the human state. The Maya indicate that
we are living in the “fifth sun” world.
Earth entered the Fifth Sun on August 13, 3113 BC. The previous four worlds were destroyed by
natural disasters. The last cataclysm
destroyed civilization by a great flood and left little survivors. According to the Maya we are their
descendants. Incredibly the ancient
Maya were able to predict an astrological alignment that only occurs every
26,000 years. The Great Cycle of the Mayan Long Count calendar (the fifth
world) ends on the winter solstice of 2012 A.D (December 21). This date happens to coincide exactly with
our Sun aligning with the intersection point of what is known as the Great Rift,
a band of dark dust clouds in the Milky Way, which the Maya called the Xibalba
be or "Black Road”. Watch: Doomsday 2012: The End of Days Tarahumara (cave and cliff dwellers hand carve violins) The Tarahumara
(Raramuri, in their native tongue) are an indigenous
people of northern Mexico that retreated to
the Copper Canyon in the Sierra Madre
Occidental on the arrival of Spanish explorers in the sixteenth
century. They are renowned for their
long-distance running ability, sometimes as far as 100 miles without
stopping to catch animals such as deer.
Most still practice a
traditional lifestyle, inhabiting natural shelters such as caves or cliff
overhangs and observe strict ceremonial practices. The Tarahumara use violins, flutes and
drums for their religious ceremonies and festival dances. Violins
were introduced to the Tarahumara by the Spanish missionaries in the
1600's. Since then, the Tarahumara have been hand carving these
instruments. A talented Tarahumara
musician is believed capable of communicating with divine beings and able to
request good fortune from them. Watch: Light Feet (a Raramury Tale) trailer
winner fiction (Chihuahua Film Festival)
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