PART 2|| The Galactic New Year & The Lions Gate Portal
888 Tracing the Origins of a New Age Myth
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PART 1|| The Galactic New Year & The Lions Gate Portal
The blanket statement that 8/8 is somehow "the peak" of the heliacal rising of Sirius, aka "the Lion's Gate Portal," is not entirely accurate. This cosmic alignment unfolds from around January 26th to August 12th.
Mathematical visibility is its own thing and may occur several days sooner, but it varies by location according to latitude and longitude. Figure eight also represents the above so below. Eight is like a spiritual wedding ring.
The mainstream wants you to believe the Lion’s Gate is simply a symbolic portal, but I FELT IT. Coupled with prayer, meditation, yoga, journaling, and plant medicine, I raised my frequency and opened my heart. The divine love I felt when Clover kissed me sparked the spiritual activation that coincided with this cosmic gate.
The Flooding Of the Nile In Eygpt
The ancient Egyptians' land was "given them by the river."
The Nile, which flows northward for 4,160 miles from east-central Africa to the Mediterranean, is part of Egypt’s identity. It provided ancient Egypt with fertile soil, water for irrigation, and a means of transporting materials for building projects. Its vital waters enabled cities to sprout in the desert. The Nile even played a role in the construction of the pyramids.
It’s a critical lifeline.
"Without the Nile, there would be no Egypt," writes an Egyptologist in a 2012 book, ‘The Nile.'
It was believed that the union of Osiris and Isis flooded the Nile every year and gave Egypt life by providing fertility. This occurred during the Lion’s Gate. The symbol of the ankh, also known as “the Key of the Nile,” represents the union of heaven and earth and man and woman. The ankh symbolizes the creation of life through this union. When it was placed on the mummies, the ankh symbolized the numerous reincarnations these souls would undergo until they gained immortality and became God-like entities. I assume that’s when an ancient soul finally liberates from the wheel of birth and death.
The impact of the Nile's flooding is why Egyptians marked their calendars with this annual weather event. Eventually, time was captured and stuffed into a watch, but that’s for another future Substack. Much of the social stratification, spirituality, and economy of Ancient Egypt was dictated by the Nile and its movements, and the yearly flood heralded a period of future abundance as waters drenched the fallow fields, priming them for a fertile sowing season.
This certainly makes for a good metaphor for rebirth and prosperity, and, in truth, the original GALACTIC NEW YEAR starts with the Lion’s Gate portal in the month of Virgo, the sign of the Virgin, yet the early Jews and Christians messed that up. (More later.) The archetype of Virgo is the priest or priestess. Virgo is devotional, self-sufficient, detail-oriented, and complex.
The Lion's Gate is intrinsically linked with the Nile, the stars, and planning for the flood. It’s time to carefully plan, strategize, and cultivate.
The historic Nile flood was benign, predictable, and timely. With almost calendrical precision, the river began to rise in southern Egypt in early July, and it reached flood stage in the vicinity of Aswan by mid-August. The flood surged northward, reaching the valley's northern end about four to six weeks later.
The Ancient Egyptians used advanced irrigation systems (among other methods) to control floods, and thanks to this diligence, Sirius' return to the sky was a welcome event rather than a terrible, devastating burden.
The Spiritual Sun
Sirius was the most important star to ancient Egyptian astronomers because it signaled the approaching inundation and the beginning of a new year. The new year was celebrated with a festival called “The Coming of Sopdet.” Even into modern times, every June 17th, Egyptians celebrated the "'Night of the Drop,' when the celestial tear fell and caused the Nile to rise.
The earliest evidence of water control in ancient Egypt is the famous historical relief of the mace head of the Scorpion King, which dates to around 3,100 BC. It depicts one of the last predynastic kings holding a hoe and ceremoniously cutting a ditch in a grid network. Besides attesting to the importance of these waterworks and the grand ceremony, this picture confirms that Egyptians began practicing water management for agriculture about 5,000 years ago.