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Return to the energy of Shambhala complete set

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There are 2 meditations included for each Sacred Place. For a total of 41 Places.


It is time to return to the energy of Shambhala into our physical reality.


We all have heard about it; we have read the stories and we have our own ideas about it.


I have always seen Shambhala as a spiritual place, the stories are that the ones who did enter this place usually did not return.


They raised their awareness and frequencies enough to move into Shambhala and stay there.


As the changes are taking place on earth, we are ready to bring these energies here.


There are many portals that can take you to Shambhala if you have the right frequency.


We will visit some of these portals and adjust our frequencies to move through them and visit Shambhala.


Each time we visit Shambhala, we will bring back with us a part of the energies within Shambhala.


As well as receive personal lesson from the teachers that live in Shambhala.


This is a two-part process for each visit, as the first visit the energy needs to be adjusted to the portal.


And when we move through it you will receive part of your lesson.


The second time we will move through and complete the lesson and bring back with us part of the energy frequencies that make up Shambhala.


These are some of the portals we will visit.

1. Kentucky Mammoth Cave, in south-central Kentucky, US.


2. Mount Shasta, California, US – the Agharthean city of Telos allegedly exists within and beneath this mountain.


3. Manaus, Brazil.


4. Mato Grosso, Brazil – the city of Posid supposedly lies beneath this plain.


5. Iguaçú Falls, border or Brazil and Argentina.


6. Mount Epomeo, Italy.


7. Himalayan Mountains, Tibet – the entrance to the underground city of Shonshe is allegedly guarded by Hindu monks.


8. Mongolia – the underground city of Shingwa allegedly exists beneath the border of Mongolia and China.


9. Rama, India – beneath this surface city is a long-lost subterranean city, they say, also named Rama.


10. Pyramid of Giza, Egypt.


11. King Solomon’s Mines.


12. Dero Caves,


13. North and South Poles.


More about Shambhala

Is there really a hidden galaxy of minds living in seclusion in an inaccessible part of Asia, or is it merely a myth?


Shambhala, the “Hidden Kingdom,” is thought of in Tibet as a community where perfect and semiperfect beings live.


And they are guiding the evolution of humankind.


Shambhala is considered to be the source of the Kalacakra, which is the highest and most esoteric branch of Tibetan mysticism.


The Buddha preached the teachings of the Kalacakra to an assembly of holy men in southern India.


Afterwards, the teachings remained hidden for 1,000 years until an Indian yogi-scholar went in search of Shambhala.


And was initiated into the teachings by a holy man he met along the way.


The Kalacakra then remained in India until it made its way to Tibet in 1026.


Tibet

Since then, the concept of Shambhala has been widely known in Tibet, and Tibetans have been studying the Kalacakra for the least 900 years.


Learning its science, practicing its meditation, and using its system of astrology to guide their lives.


As one Tibetan lama put it, how could Shambhala be the source of something which has affected so many areas of Tibetan life for so long and yet not exist?


Hidden Land

Tibetan religious texts describe the physical makeup of the hidden land in detail.


It is thought to look like and eight-petaled lotus blossom because it is made up of eight regions, each surrounded by a ring of mountains.


In the center of the innermost ring lies Kalapa, the capital, and the king’s palace, which is composed of gold, diamonds, coral, and precious gems.


The capital is surrounded by mountains made of ice, which shine with a crystalline light.


The technology of Shambhala is supposed to be highly advanced.


The palace contains special skylights made of lenses which serve as high-powered telescopes to study extraterrestrial life.


And for hundreds of years Shambhala’s inhabitants have been using aircraft and cars that shuttle through a network of underground tunnels.


Enlightenment

On the way to enlightenment, Shambhalans acquire such powers a clairvoyance, the ability to move at great speeds, and the ability to materialize and disappear at will.


The prophecy of Shambhala states that each of its kings will rule for 100 years.


There will be 32 in all, and as their reigns pass, conditions in the outside world will deteriorate.


Men will become more warlike and pursue power for its own sake, and an ideology of materialism will spread over the earth.


When the “barbarians” who follow this ideology are united under an evil king and think there is nothing left to conquer.


The mists will lift to reveal the icy mountains of Shambhala.


The barbarians will attack Shambhala

The barbarians will attack Shambhala with a huge army equipped with terrible weapons.


Then the 32nd king of Shambhala, Rudra Cakrin, will lead a mighty host against the invaders.


In a last great battle, the evil king and his followers will be destroyed.


By definition Shambhala is hidden.


It is thought to exist somewhere between the Gobi Desert and the Himalayas, but it is protected by a psychic barrier so that no one can find the kingdom who is not meant to.


Tibetan lamas spend a great deal of their lives in spiritual development before attempting the journey to Shambhala.


It is a guarded secret

Those who try to get there who are not wanted are swallowed by crevasses or caught in avalanches.


People and animals tremble at its borders as if bombarded by invisible rays.


There are guidebooks to Shambhala, but they describe the route in terms so vague that only those already initiated into the teachings of the Kalacakra can understand them.


Strange sightings in the area where Shambhala is thought to be seems to provide evidence of its existence.


Tibetans believe that the land is guarded by beings with superhuman powers.


In the early 1900s an article in an Indian newspaper, the Statesman, told of a British major who, camping in the Himalayas, saw a very tall, lightly clad man with long hair.


Apparently, noticing that he was being watched, the man leaped down the vertical slope and disappeared.


To the major’s astonishment, the Tibetans with whom he was camping showed no surprise at his story.


They calmly explained that he had seen one of the snowmen who guard the sacred land.


Snowmen

A more detailed account of these “snowmen” guardians was given by Alexandra David-Neel, an explorer who spent 14 years in Tibet.


While traveling through the Himalayas she saw a man moving with extraordinary speed and described him as follows:


“I could clearly see his perfectly calm impassive face and wide-open eyes with their gaze fixed on some invisible distant object situated somewhere high up in space.


The man did not run. He seemed to life himself from the ground, proceeding by leaps.


It looked as if he had been endowed with the elasticity of a ball and rebounded each time his feet touched the ground.


His steps had the regularity of a pendulum.”


While people (especially Tibetan lamas) have been searching for Shambhala for centuries.


They never return

Those who seek the kingdom often never return, either because they have found the hidden country and have remained there or because they have been destroyed in the attempt.


Tibetan texts containing what appear to be historical facts about Shambhala.


Such as the names and dates of its kings and records of corresponding events occurring in the outside world, give Tibetans additional reason for believing that the kingdom exists.


Recent events that seem to correspond to the predictions of the mythic kingdom add strength to their belief.


The disintegration of Buddhism in Tibet and the growth of materialism throughout the world, coupled with the wars and turmoil of the 20th century, all fit in with the prophecy of Shambhala.


Tibetans believe the land is guarded by beings with superhuman powers.


Sightings of these beings is normal to them.


People have searched for centuries

People (especially Tibetan lamas) have been searching for Shambhala for centuries and have found it, those who seek the kingdom often never return.


Either because they have found the hidden country and have remained there or because they have been destroyed in the attempt.


In Tibetan Buddhist tradition, Shambhala (or Shambala) is a mystical kingdom hidden somewhere beyond the snow peaks of the Himalayas.


It is mentioned in various ancient texts including the Kalachakra and the ancient texts of the Zhang Zhung culture which pre-dated Tibetan Buddhism in western Tibet.


The Bon scriptures speak of a closely related land called Olmolungring.


Kalachakra teachings

Shambhala in the Buddhist Kalachakra Teachings Buddha prophecized that all who received the Kalachakra empowerment would take rebirth in its mandala of consciousness.


The Kingdom of Shambhala takes a central place in the Kalachakra teachings.


Shambhala (Tib. bde ‘byung) is a Sanskrit term meaning place of peace/tranquility/happiness.


Shakyamuni Buddha is said to have taught the Kalachakra tantra on request of King Suchandra, also the teachings are said to be preserved there.


Shambhala is said to be a society where all the inhabitants are enlightened, centered around a capital city called Kalapa.


War and injustice are said to be unknown there, and it is said to be peopled by beautiful women and men dwelling in magnificent abodes.


Shambhala is ruled over by the Kulika or Kalki (Tib. Ridgen) King, a benevolent monarch who upholds the integrity of the Kalachakra tantra.


Religious scholars believe that this figure developed out of the myth of the Hindu conqueror Kalki, a similar personage.


The Kalachakra prophesizes that when the world declines into war and greed.


And all is lost, the twenty fifty Kalika king will emerge from Shambhala.


With a huge army to vanquish the corrupt world rulers and usher in a worldwide Golden Age.


Some scholars put this date at 2424 AD. As with many concepts in Vajrayana Buddhism.


the idea of Shambhala is said to have an ‘outer,’ ‘inner,’ and ‘secret’ meaning.


The outer meaning understands Shambhala to exist as a physical place.


Although only individuals with the appropriate karma can reach it and experience it as such.


There are various ideas about where this society is located, but it is often placed in central Asia, north of Tibet.


The inner and secret meanings refer to more subtle understandings of what Shambhala represents, and are generally passed on orally.

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