Bashar explains why certain locations become 'haunted' while others remain neutral, focusing on the interaction between consciousness, emotion, and material structure. This entry covers: (1) the recording surface—certain building materials (stone, particularly limestone and quartz-rich rock) have crystalline structures that retain energetic imprints more effectively than wood or modern synthetic materials; ancient sites, stone circles, and old masonry buildings are therefore more likely to preserve residual consciousness, (2) the vortex convergence—haunted locations often sit at geological anomalies, water crossings, or ley line intersections where Earth's energetic field is naturally stronger; these amplified fields both attract intense human activity and preserve its residue, (3) the repetition principle—locations where similar emotional events repeat (battlefields, hospitals, prisons) build up layered imprints that become increasingly perceptible; each new trauma reinforces the existing energetic pattern, (4) the architectural psychology—buildings with confusing layouts, dead-end corridors, and poor natural light create disorientation that makes occupants more susceptible to perceiving residual energy; design affects consciousness perception, (5) the clearing process—Bashar supports location clearing through: geological assessment (understanding the site's natural energy), historical acknowledgment (honoring what occurred), energetic intervention (sound, light, prayer, smudging), and conscious re-use (transforming the space through new, positive activity). The entry emphasizes that haunted locations are not necessarily dangerous but are energetically saturated; sensitive individuals should trust their body's response and avoid or protect themselves accordingly.
Haunted Locations: Where Memory Sticks to Matter
CORE-062 Deep ·
Controversial Content
未證實宣稱
Translation Note
Haunted locations connect geology, architecture, and energetic imprint preservation.
Haunted locations connect geology, architecture, and energetic imprint preservation.
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