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WhiteFeather
4th September 2012, 13:13
The Galactic Butterfly and 2012. Seems something is common here. In response to one of our members concerning the topic of 2012. This member had asked me personally what I thought is going to happen on Dec. 21 2012. IMO My belief is that its happening now thru 2012 and beyond. And I believe its a transformational stage or The Metamorphosis Transformation Stage Of Mankind...........if you will.




http://www.mayanmajix.com/gb250.gif


The Galactic Butterfly Hunab Ku Crop Circle appeared in the fields at Cannings Cross, Wiltshire first on the 27th of June and then the circle maker(s) returned on 10th of July, 2009 to reconstruct and add on to the crop circle. The formation symbolizes solar flares and the galactic alignment of 2012 with a stylized version of the mayan supreme creator god, Hunab Ku, which the mayans and the indigenous people know as 'The Galactic Butterfly' - The one that represents all consciousness that has ever existed in the galaxy. In Phase 2 of the crop circle tiny Orbs were created around the edges of the rays depicting solar flares, also improvising on the 'Galactic Butterfly'.



Phase1
http://passion.edu/elearn/file.php/361/Butterfly_Pics/Crop_Circles/Hunab_Ku_2009_Phase1a.jpg


Phase 2
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_4A9r9yKkkNs/Sl27qAGGYRI/AAAAAAAADeY/rkHLVQ3U1lk/s400/The+Galactic+Butterfly+Hunab+Ku+Crop+Circle+Phase+2+Cannings+Cross+UK+2009.jpg

Overwhelmingly, cultural myth and lore honor the Butterfly as a symbol of transformation because of its impressive process of metamorphosis. From egg, to larvae (caterpillar), to pupa (the chrysalis or cocoon) and from the cocoon the Butterfly emerges in her unfurling glory. What a massive amount of transition this tiny creature undergoes. Consider for a moment the kind of energy this expends. Imagine the whole of your life changing to such an extreme you are unrecognizable at the end of the transformation. Mind you, this change takes place in a short span of about a month too (that’s how long the butterfly life cycle is).



http://passion.edu/elearn/file.php/361/Butterfly_Pics/Crop_Circles/Hunab_Ku_2009_Phase2a.jpg


http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m9jpchkrdD1r1yyz5o1_500.jpg


Herein lies the deepest symbolic lesson of the Butterfly. She asks us to accept the changes in our lives as casually as she does. The Butterfly unquestioningly embraces the changes in her environment and her body. This unwavering acceptance of her metamorphosis is also symbolic of faith. Here the Butterfly beckons us to keep our faith as we undergo transitions in our lives. She understands that our toiling, fretting and anger are useless against the turning tides of nature – she asks us to recognize the same. Interestingly, in many cultures the Butterfly is associated with the soul –further linking our animal symbolism of faith with the Butterfly. It’s connection with the soul is rather fitting

We are all on a long journey of the soul. On this journey we encounter endless turns, shifts, and conditions that cause us to morph into ever-finer beings. At our soul-journey’s end we are inevitably changed – not at all the same as when we started on the path. To take this analogy a step further, we can look again to the grace and eloquence of the Butterfly and realize that our journey is our only guarantee. Our responsibility is to make our way in faith, accept the change that comes, and emerge from our transitions as brilliantly as the Butterfly.


There is a resonant plan crystallizing around the world and butterflies in more than one way are helping to connect the dots. When I went to meet Hopi elder Thomas Banyacya, the one who presented the Hopi Prophecies at the United Nations, I was told that the butterflies were here on Earth to help wake us up. Almost all indigenous people have similar prophecies, myths and legends involving the butterflies and their divine mission. Most are creation stories involving butterflies. For thirteen years I have been researching this as a tool for global transformation and awakening and now even Deepak Chopra and Wayne Dyer are speaking of this butterfly connection.

The Mayans speak of the Galactic Butterfly or Hunab Ku as the supreme God and ultimate Creator located in the center of the Milky Way galaxy. It represented the gateway to all of the consciousness that has ever existed in this, our own galaxy. Hunab Ku is also the consciousness which organized all matter from a whirling SPIRAL disk -- into stars, planets and solar systems. Hunab Ku is the Mother Womb which is constantly giving birth to new stars and it gave birth to our own. They also believed that the ultimate Creator directs everything that happens in our galaxy from its center through the emanation of periodic energy bursts of consciousness.

Dwight Loop, one of our members performed Hunab Ku; the Trilogy at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco on May 17, 2006. It was a stunning, deep space, electronic music composition based on this ancient Mayan cosmological term.

Loop began composing and performing the first of the Hunab Ku trilogy in 1990 in Santa Fe, New Mexico and has performed it throughout the U.S. in various new music festivals and venues.

After reading Jose Arguelles' writings, he realized that what Arguelles was describing was a shift in consciousness coming at the 'end of time' of the Mayan Calendar at 2012, Loop came upon several realizations. One, was that Arguellas described the Hunab Ku being the galactic radio waves emanating from the galactic center were 'shifting. This concept coincided with a 'feeling' or intuition that we were in the beginning stages of this cosmic energy shift. The Berlin Wall had just come down in the late 80s and there was an incredible surge of 'energy' going on for change. I felt that I needed to express this energetic shift happening in music and thus the Trilogy. This trilogy represents the cosmic vibrations, emitted from the Hunab Ku, which are changing our consciousness and our DNA, preparing for the next phase of our evolution.

The symbol of Hunab Ku is called the Galactic Butterfly according to the late Ian Lungold of Mayan Majix. It is said to represent all of the consciousness that has ever existed in this galaxy. This is all of our physical ancestors both human, animal, reptile, fish, shell fish, plants as well as the consciousness which organized all of the raw material from a whirling disk into stars then planets and solar systems. Big Meaning. So big that the original Maya had no symbol for this. In their civilization it was like having no name for God. Just knowing the concept was good enough. Later this pattern was devised by Toltec or Zapatec weavers as a pattern for blankets and this is where Jose Arguelles came across it. The name Hunab Ku means the "one giver of movement and measure." The indigenous peoples call it "The Galactic Butterfly." Butterflies are seen as ancestors returning for a visit to physicality. Wearing one of these symbols is very powerful as it broadcasts your reaching to actively join the consciousness of our galaxy. See the symbol at www.mayanmajix.com/gb250.html

http://psychedelicadventure.blogspot.com/2009/07/galactic-butterfly-hunab-ku-crop-circle.html

Just A Thought Peeps!

Stay Spiritual and Grounded My Friends!

Peace.Love.One

W.f.



A Space Odyssey Quote:
~Something Wonderful Is Gonna Happen~


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZzNu9wUO-YM

SilentFeathers
4th September 2012, 13:31
Here's a little bit of another perspective closely related.....

Butterfly Totem

The Greek word for both "soul" and "butterfly" is psyche, and it was once believed that human souls assumed the form of butterflies while they searched for a new incarnation. Throughout Europe, Asia, and the Americas, butterflies have maintained their standing as a symbol of the soul and rebirth.

To the Chinese, the butterfly is a symbol of joy and conjugal happiness. A Chinese bridegroom would endear himself to his new wife by presenting her with a jade butterfly, which represented the union of their souls.

In the butterfly's unique lifecycle from dead and dried chrysalis to vibrant and soaring enity, the early Christians found a ready symbol of the resurrection of the human soul and the resurrection of Christ. Certain Christian sects, however, percieved the lovely but fragile butterfly as a symbol of the transient and perishable nature of the flesh.

In the Dakota tradition, the butterfly represents the Door of the East, wherein appears the splendor of dawn, the dwelling place of the Great Mystery.

To other native Americans, the butterfly was a living fragment of the rainbow, a beautiful creature that floats with soundless wings above wild flowers on sunny currents of air.

If the butterfly is your totem animal, you are probably a very lively person with rather exotic tastes who loves beautiful and colorful expressions of clothing, decor, art, poetry, music and self. Although you are a high energy person, you are also a visionary, so you have little difficulty in settling down in a quiet place, in nature, or in your own home and going deep into the Silence of meditation.

The butterfly totem will aid you in achieving depths of inner and outer exploration far beyond the ordinary. As a symbol of personal transformation, your spirit helper will hover ever-near to assist in all those changes within yourself and within your environment that are necessary for you to attain the highest levels of enlightenment.

gooty64
4th September 2012, 13:52
Nice post WF!

I have see what I call angelic butterflies in my dreams.
These butterflies are illuminated/animated and instead of wobbling they glide -and they see with an intelligent, confident, delighted purpose.
Not easy to describe but, I just tried.
Just like the earth wobbles and tilts in the 3d so does the butterfly.
So if the butterfly glides and shines in the higher dimensions maybe the earth will too.....?

johnf
4th September 2012, 15:57
Originally no symbol for this. The butterfly, the idea of soul etc seem to be ways to bridge our physicality, and ideas of identity into what actually is.
Timely post!

WhiteFeather
4th September 2012, 20:55
The Meaning of the Butterfly Symbol

Native American Indians were a deeply spiritual people and they communicated their history, thoughts, ideas and dreams from generation to generation through Symbols and Signs such as the Butterfly symbol. Native American symbols are geometric portrayals of celestial bodies, natural phenomena and animal designs. For additional information please refer to the Meanings of Animal Symbols here: http://www.native-indian-tribes.com/native-american-symbols/animal-symbols.htm

The Legends, Myths and Meaning of the Butterfly Symbol
The meaning of the Butterfly symbol signifies transformation as the ugly caterpillar changes into the beautiful butterfly. The butterfly is also believed to be a messenger from the spirit world. The message the butterfly brings depends their color. A black butterfly indicates bad news or illness, yellow brings hope and guidance, brown signifies important news, red signifies an important event and white signifies good luck. A butterfly who lands on your shoulder brings you comfort. According to Native American legends and myths of some tribes the Butterfly played a part in their Creation myth. According to Native American legends and myths of the Pueblo tribes of southeastern Arizona and northwest Mexico the Butterfly played a part in their Creation myth. The Creator took the most beautiful colors of all living things and placed them into a magical bag. He have the magic bag to the children and when it was opened colored butterflies flew out singing. The children were enchanted by the butterflies but the song birds were so jealous that the Creator took away the ability to sing from the butterfly.



The Butterfly Symbol - The Bringer of Dreams
To tribes such as the Blackfoot, the butterfly symbol is associated with sleep and dreams. They believe that dreams are brought to us in sleep by a butterfly. Women embroider the sign of a butterfly on a small piece of buckskin and tie it to a baby’s hair or on the baby's clothes to encourage the child to go to sleep.

The Butterfly Symbol - Meaning
There were so many tribes of Native American Indians it is only possible to generalise the most common meaning of the Butterfly symbol or pattern. Native Indian symbols are still used as Tattoos and were used for a variety of reasons and depicted on numerous objects such as tepees, totem poles, musical instruments, clothes and War Paint. Indian Tribes also used their own Colors for Symbols and designs depending on the natural resources available to make Native American paint.

Native American Indians had a highly complex culture, especially those who lived on the Great Plains.

Their religion was dominated by rituals and belief in a spiritual connection with nature and these beliefs were reflected in the various symbols they used such as the Butterfly symbol.

The clothes, tepees and all of his belongings was decorated with art and included symbols depicting his achievements, acts of heroism, his various spirit guides or the most important events in his life. Every symbol used by an American Native Indian had meaning which can be accessed from Symbols and Meanings.

http://www.native-indian-tribes.com/native-american-symbols/butterfly-symbol.htm