Ancient people seemed to understand that the Earth has energetic pathways.
Sacred sites were like acupoints.
Ley lines were like meridians.
Pyramids may have functioned like transmitters.
Stone circles, temples, wells, and monuments may have been placed with more awareness than modern people realize.
But what about the human body?
Could the body have its own living circuit board?
Here’s a possible breakdown:
Acupoints = sacred sites
Meridians = ley lines
Chakras = temples
Organs/glands = command centers
Fascia = conductive web
Nervous system = communication grid
Blood/lymph/fluids = rivers of life-force
Biofield = surrounding atmosphere
So here’s the question I’m playing with:
Could changing what people trust, eat, and believe about their bodies influence what might be the most powerful technology of all — us?
Just playing with these thoughts.
But I did do a scan to see if any of our “circuit board” elements might be experiencing stress — etheric, not physical — and what came up was organs.
We have an “organs functioning below par” scan, and the area of greatest stress was the thyroid.
From the book Metaphysical Anatomy by Evette Rose, here are the related emotional themes that came up for the group:
Explosive raging fits when your truth is twisted.
Suppressed anger has become a shield of protection.
You fear that if you speak, you will make things worse.
Thought provoking.
And now, here’s the next episode in:
The Soup That Opened the Pantry
Chapter 2: The First Door — The Room Where Food Wisdom Was Locked Away
The first doorway was labeled 1910.
The doorway opened.
Tess stepped into an old medical school hallway.
At the end of the hallway stood a man holding a report.
“Who is that?” Tess whispered.
“Abraham Flexner,” said the angel.
“Should I know him?”
“You probably know the world he helped create.”
Tess did not like the sound of that.
The angel explained that in 1910, Abraham Flexner had been hired to create a major report on medical education in the United States and Canada.
He was an educator — not a scientist or doctor — chosen by the Carnegie Foundation to inspect medical schools and judge which ones met the new standards of respectable medicine.
The model the report favored promoted institutional power, university prestige, licensing boards, and foundation money.
Black medical schools were all but wiped out.
Nutrition, herbs, homeopathy, and other healing traditions were labeled unscientific — quackery that did not deserve funding.
Over time, drugs became the answer to more and more questions.
Tess swallowed.
“So people might spend years thinking their bodies are broken…”
“When in many cases,” said the angel, “their bodies could have been reacting to a food environment no human body was designed to process.”
Tess was quiet.
“So this is where the confusion began?” she asked.
“One layer of it,” said the angel. “The first door.”
Ahead of them, another doorway began to glow.
This one had a heart painted on it.

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