Belize 2004

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It was at the end of July when I flew into Belize. The airport reminded me of Cancun circa 1987. It was a breath of fresh air compared to many other tourist destination airports. Belize is a land of jaguars, iguanas, parrots, butterflies, hummingbirds, an abundance of medicinal plants and the endangered Morelet’s Crocodile (water dragon). This is a sacred land of mountains and jungles, waterfalls, caves and lagoons, and literally thousands of Maya sites, with more being discovered every year. It is the Caribbean at its best, no wonder the buccaneers of the past fell in love with it—English being the official language.

I have been blessed to have journeyed to many distant lands before the advent of eco-tourism and New Agers. When there is an increase in tourism, restrictions are put into place on sacred sites and the ability to conduct spiritual practice is limited and the silence of the land disappears. I felt that Belize had not been discovered and was still “virgin land.”

I also chose Belize for another reason. As the Morning Star this was a most auspicious time to visit Belize. We were entering an eight-year period beginning with the passage of Venus, or transit, across the sun on June the 8th, when Venus goes from evening star to morning star. Venus will be as the morning star when we are in Belize. This is the last Venus cycle of the Fifth Sun, which was birthed by Venus on August 12, 3114 BCE. It ends on the winter solstice, December 21, 2012 CE. According to prophecies 2012 on is the difficult time of labor foreshadowing earth changes that ushers in the birth of the enlightened age of the Sixth Sun. During this transition time, the Maya World Tree, Ceiba, will shake but not fall. The shaking symbolizes earth quakes and earth changes…

This post is continued in my pages And Then It Rained

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