{"id":277,"date":"2020-09-14T01:17:47","date_gmt":"2020-09-14T01:17:47","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.kheper.net\/?page_id=277"},"modified":"2020-12-23T03:22:35","modified_gmt":"2020-12-23T03:22:35","slug":"canberra","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.kheper.net\/ecognosis\/canberra\/","title":{"rendered":"Spiritual Canberra"},"content":{"rendered":"\t\t
Cities of ancient times had walls and gateways to protect them. Some places, like Delphi where the oracle resided, had natural protection. Around Canberra there is a natural ring of protective hills. Then, inside ceremonial Canberra three sacred mountains that enclose the place in a protective triangle.<\/p>\n\n
Canberra is known for its being cut off from the rest of Australia. Its common to hear, “Canberra’s politicians, they live in a world of their own, they have no idea of what is going on in Australia.”<\/p>\n\n
Even by legislation Canberra is different.<\/p>\n\n
Canberra lives in its own separate state in which all land is held in leasehold ownership, there is no so called ‘private property’. The Government owns all land in the Australian Capital Territory. So we, as the people of Australia, own Canberra and its surrounding area. Lease holding creates a different relationship between land and people. The continual exsistance of the Aboriginal tent embassy is an example of this, it could never have happen in a land ownership state.<\/p>\n\n
The hills around Canberra form an outer circle, through it are a number of gateways. Approach Canberra on any of its major roads and you feel a jump, a transition as you enter. Each of the gateways is overshadowed by a guardian.<\/p>\n\n
Approach on the Federal highway from Sydney and you can sense the guardian at the boundary maker that announces the ACT. The gatekeeper here checks out every person that visits the city. Slip into\u00a0dreaming<\/a>\u00a0mode and you will be able to feel him penetrate your different levels of consciousness. He is checking out your needs, frustrations and intentions. Fail in your assessment and by the time you reach central Canberra you will dislike the place and plan to leave.\u00a0Devas<\/a>\u00a0do much to create our moods and feelings.<\/p>\n\n Approach Canberra from Coast and you meet another guardian where you cross the fault line that created Queanbeyan hill. Its very similar to the Federal highway Deva and may be an aspect of the same being.<\/p>\n\n Coming in from the South you hit the Cooma road guardian on Hill, from which you can look down into suburban Canberra. There is more of the wilderness and less sternness in her … there is no serviceable direct link between Canberra and Melbourne through the Snowy Mountains and so she has less to do. The southern Deva can give a feeling of joy and pleasure in the beauty of city, a jewel carved out of the wilderness.<\/p>\n\n The Melbourne road comes in on the Barton highway from Yass and has a series of gateways. The most noticeable is just outside the ACT boundary where high tension power lines cross over the highway just past the Hall village’s Uniting church. This Deva has much of the fire Deva in her, the effect of the electric field. She is unsettling and unpleasant, it is hard to get a good impression of Canberra if you are coming in from Melbourne.<\/p>\n\n Canberra has a western line. It connects Canberra to the Brindabella the range of mountains that mark the eastern edge of the Snowy Mountain wilderness. The Cotter road corridor lets Canberra vent off the accumulated energies of the day as sunset approaches. In the morning wilderness energies arrive into ceremonial, inner Canberra down this route.<\/p>\n\n The western guardian is a sylph, a being of mountains and air. She likes people, enjoys releasing tension and works at bringing the wilderness into Canberra. Like all sylphs she is only loosely linked to place but can usually be found near the mount Stromlo ridge where the pine forests end and water begins to flow freely towards the Murrumbidgee.<\/p>\n\n At Canberra airport is another air Deva. She sits over the airport building and checks people when they walk off their plane. Sometimes she is up in the air playing with the planes as they come in. When the little planes take off she gets really involved with the experience and enjoys seeing people fly. A nice Deva she alerts the guardian along the Queanbeyan river at the first traffic circle if someone unusual is coming to Canberra. I meet the Queanbeyan river guardian 30 years ago when I was flown into Canberra for a job interview as a psychologist with the public service. She, a river nymph, covered me in a feeling of reassurance and told me that I had the job. She came along to the interview and filled the room with a radiant light, perhaps she influenced the committee members? I got the job, which included a relocation allowance, and I have stayed around Canberra ever since.<\/p>\n\n Three hills, each with a different personality, protect the ceremonial area of Canberra with its Parliamentary triangle. The strength of the radiations from the hills vary from day to day and from half hour to half hour. Everybody who moves within the area of these hills is affected by them. In combination they do much to reduce the input from areas outside their area of influence. In central Canberra, Sydney, Melbourne or New York seem remote, the hills seem ever present locking Canberra in their embrace.<\/p>\n\n It has two aspects. The newest and most obvious is the space needle. Telecom tower is a major structure that literally hums with power. A power that seems to attract interstellar intelligence. The Mount Stromlo observatory complex also contains interstellar intelligence but it is intellectually stimulating. Interstellar activity on Black Mountain operates more at the emotional and will levels of our human consciousness.<\/p>\n\n The second aspect is old. Black Mountain has entry and exit portals to the underworld to an area occupied by beings that can be called\u00a0trolls<\/a>\u00a0if you wish to give them human characteristics. They are dark and feed off our human need and desire to control situations. This implies that they respect money, and they do. The radiations from Telecom Tower enlivens them, making them jumpy and overactive.<\/p>\n\nInner Canberra<\/h3>\n\n
Black Mountain, a strange place.<\/h5>\n\n