The Mayan Calendar Doesn’t End in 2012
The indigenous people of Earth have been manipulated like the rest of us. We are all getting out of this mess.
With the continued hype of the end of the Mayan Calendar, including the movie 2012, I saw and bought a book from a used books store entitled The Blood of Kings, Dynasty and Ritual in Maya Art. The authors are Linda Schele and Mary Ellen Miller and published by George Braziller, Inc. New York in association with the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth.
Within the matrix here, I can’t even tell you if the Mayan culture ever truly existed. It may be a story presented to us complete with artifacts. It’s possible that the Maya did exist but in a different time loop and they are not a part of the distant past but some simultaneous sequence of events but in a different loop. This reptilian-created matrix is a virtual hall of mirrors. Trying to pierce that veil can lead one down all kinds of paths and dead ends.
People here also know that I’m not a great fan of academia. It is usually a part of bolstering the facades in which we exist. A traditional education often just props up the illusions and gives them the stamp of acceptance and respect.
But I bought this book anyway.
Actually, the authors hold the Mayan Culture in high esteem, but feel there has been a whitewash as to the nature of this civilization (if it ever truly existed).
This was written on page 18 under the title of “The Modern Invention of the Ancient Maya.
In 1955, a reader of Sylvanus G. Morley’s “the Ancient Maya”, would have found the Classic period of Maya civilization, his “Old Empire,” almost like a glorious Camelot…”
“The ancient Maya were described as worshipers of time, involved totally with abstractions. They were peace loving, religious, modest, conservative and clean about their persons. Nameless and faceless to modern man, the Classic Maya dwelt during a time of peace. Contact between ceremonial centers was limited to conferences on the calendar and astronomy. War did not exist; in fact, the Maya were said to adopt warlike behavior only centuries later under the tutelage of central Mexicans…”
“The Maya were considered the Greeks of the New World, and the Aztecs were seen as Romans-one pure, original and beautiful, the other slavish derivative and cold. By the end of the last century, these notions had begun to be systematized.”
On page 22, we find that drawings from Mayan Lintels were altered. Here is a description of the contrasting details from Yaxchilan Lintel 17, Late Classic period ca. A.D. 775-770.
“…the drawing that accompanied Lintel 17 is telling: in the scene-quite obviously one of self-sacrifice-the woman pulls a rope through her tongue, and the man directs a sharpened bone to his groin. In Maudslay’s drawing, the text and faces of the protagonists are shown. The rope was not shown being drawn through the woman’s mouth, and the scene no longer held any indication of violence or blood sacrifice. Apparently, either Maudslay or Annie Hunter, his excellent draftsman, made an editorial decision.”
End of quote.
What comes up over and over in this information is that the Maya were just as intent on bloodletting, war, and violence as the Aztecs and in some cases, were even crueler to their numerous captive slaves.
Meanwhile the reference to serpents and reptiles in their art and worship are extremely numerous.
On page 46 under the heading “Sacred Places and Things” is the Vision Serpent.
“The hallucinatory visions central to Maya ritual were symbolized visually by a rearing snake. Most Vision Serpents have smooth bodies, but some also show areas of flayed skin, and in some cases, feathered bodies. Serpent heads have long, sometimes bulbous snouts and most are bearded. The persona contacted through the vision is shown emerging from a gaping mouth…
This rear head can be replaced by a flint knife or a smoking ahau glyph and, in one example, Yaxchilan Lintel 25, the Vision Serpent is truly double-headed. The most common rear head is the skeletal personification of blood, which indicates that the vision comes from blood.”
End of quote.
There is some interesting correlations with the voice heard by those who use the ayahausca hallucinogen. When David Icke describes his experiences, I don’t believe he ever saw the entity behind the voice. I’m sure if the snake showed up, it might have given him a reason to reconsider the “wisdom” that he was receiving.
Meanwhile, back to this book:
We have descriptions of their numerous gods. At the top of the list are the Palenque Triad, which included GI, GII, and GIII.
GI has another persona called Chac-Xib Chac. We are told that his body features are reptilian. GII is shown with a serpent-headed foot. His body has reptilian features but his hands and one foot are always human.
In some of the artwork, victims who have been beheaded have serpents coming out of their headless necks.
The bowls for holding the blood of both self-sacrifice and that of victims often were shown with serpents and various monsters.
On Page 176 there is a reference to the creation story of the Popol Vuh. “The gods’ prolonged efforts are central to the understanding of bloodletting: they wanted creatures to “name their names, to praise them and to be their providers and nurturers. The gods wanted creatures who could worship them but-more important- they also needed men to give them sustenance”
(My emphasis.)
End of quote.
That sustenance came from violence (usually ritualized) bloodletting and for their many victims, death.
Finally there is a chapter that deals with the Maya Calendar in great detail. Most of it is above my head, as the Maya did not deal with linear time the way we do but in cycles. Actually the authors tell us that their calendar combined many different counts, each an independent cycle running without reference to any other cycle.
They give numerical examples and finally tell us the following:
“The first thirteen in the Coba dates turned to one after 400 years, on November 15, 2720 B.C. The bakun in which we live, the thirteenth, will end on December 23 A.D. 2012.
But according to the authors, it doesn’t end there:
“The pictun unit will turn over to one after 8,000 years, on October 15 A.D. 4772; this is the date Pacal recorded.
As I mentioned, this gets very, very technical describing the different cycles of time as recorded and continues to tell us… “for the highest of the Coba cycles to change from thirteen to one will take slightly under 142 nonillion years or in our number system 142 followed by thirty-six zeros.
That seems to be a very long time past 2012.
Meanwhile, we’ve heard over and over in people’s reversals, that 2012 is just another gross time manipulation to keep people distracted from the truth:
Time is totally manipulated, along with virtually all structures in this matrix.
It’s all ending. Waking up and freedom are very close at hand now.
Tonight Barack Obama tries to sell the troop surge and the increase in soldiers being sent to Afghanistan. I’ll be interested to hear what he’s really thinking, in reverse of course.