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Thursday, January 20, 2022

4⊗1@Inipi-spot
一路上
i.e. any lead to — by markers, milestones or men•hir — any EM node — on the Earth's Grid — reinforced by the construct of lodges (churches, temples, pyramids of a sort) of fire or steam.
Utterly disturbed nowadays by all sorts of traffics.

Baths in 旅館りょかん (ryokan), which is from Middle Chinese 旅館 (MC lɨʌX kuɑnH, “inn, traveller's lodge”)
Sources & Ressources
龍門客棧, Dragon Gate Inn
西山温泉慶雲館 Nishiyama onsen kyōun-kan or Nishiyama Onsen Keiunkan

I-ni-pi (Purification Ceremony)

Those that run this sacred rite should be able to communicate with Tun-ca-s'i-la (our Sacred Grandfathers) in their Native Plains tongue. They should also have earned this rite by completing 'Han-ble-c'i-ya' (vision quest) and the four days and four years of the Wi-wanyang-wa-c'i-pi (Sundance Ceremony).
The inípi ceremony (Lakota: iní- from inyan, rock + -pi, lodge), a type of sweat lodge, is a purification ceremony of the Lakota people. It is one of the Seven Sacred Rites of the Lakota people, which has been passed down through the generations of Lakota.


Triangle 1. Saint-Gilles Croix-de-Vie, 2. Saint-Sébastien-sur-Loire (51/52 Nantes) and 3. the Carnac alignments or leys, from ley (“meadow”) +‎ line, a term coined by archaeologist Alfred Watkins, who believed that the toponyms ley, lea and leigh indicated Neolithic paths. Ley lines are straight alignments drawn between various historic structures and prominent landmarks.
"The Earth has its own subtle energy field and meridians (called ley lines). If the earth's grid is disturbed, geopathic stress is generated."
— Judy Hall, Crystal User's Handbook: An Illustrated Guide, 2002, page 72.

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