Specific Resonanace of Places

Adrian
Georgian Adventures
4 min readAug 25, 2015
Lani Rocillo gives a Sound Bath at RAW FEST 2015, at Pylewell Park, The New Forest Southern England, this place resonated with me at festival participants very strongly.

I started thinking about the specific resonance of land following a recent trip back to my homeland: England. I live in Tbilisi, Georgia - but I was born in Central London and grew up in leafy green Hertfordshire about 30 miles north of London — on the island whose geographical name is Albion.

Albion is a magical island, covered in ley lines that transmit energies around the planet, some places are richer in these ley lines and some have less, often where the main arteries run and the ley lines converge there are powerful energies collected. Prime examples of this would be Stonehenge and Avebury in the West of England, home of some World Heritage recognised sites, or the ancient Icknield Way path which is classified as a Roman road but is of course far older than that.

Diagram of the Icknield Way Path from FT.com

The spur for my idea came from an increasing sense of unease being situated on ground whose resonance was not in tune with what I am used to. No matter how often I tried to ground myself walking barefoot on grass, mud, stone, sand, in the sea I could not find my peace. It was Georgia and Me, out of step vibrationally. The Germans have a word for which we do not have a concept in English — it is “Heimat” — the closest we could get to the idea in English would be Homeland, as in the land that we are from. When I lived in Germany I tried to get my head around this concept of Heimat which is very central to the German psyche. It was only after being in Georgia, in the Caucasus mountains for 8 months solid that when I returned to the land of Albion that I felt the sense of relief that the ground gave me.

The beautiful Southern Caucasus Mountains in Georgia — land I don’t vibrate with.

A sense of calm came over me, I appreciated little things that I had previously not paid all that much attention to. Where before I had been becoming increasingly irritable for sometimes irrational reasons that energy washed away. The blades of wet grass between my feet and the earth beneath cleansed me as I walked in circles on the well manicured English lawn. This was my land, my vibration. It occurred to me that this had some significance and could be useful for others to understand — hence the motivation for this post.

The Langley Valley, Hertfordshire — My land.

So this ley lines thing, it doesn’t get talked about much, and that’s part of the fascination for me. When I worked in Austria we did some work with a mineral water company from Mehrn. They produce Mehrner Heilwasser (literally Mehrn Healing Water) — this stuff is very powerful, filtered through the Alps for 30 years and naturally rising as a spring. Apparently people have been travelling to the Spa for 500 years plus to benefit from the healing properties of the water. The water has been analysed by Professor Masauro Emoto for specific healing properties (side note, because we are 60% plus water this is quite significant and interesting for health because water stores energy and reacts to resonance.) So anyway, here’s a big fat map of Ley lines across the globe… and no it’s no surprise that the centre of the grid is in Giza, Egypt.

Ley lines globally

Naturally this is an empirical view, but from the map above it’s pretty easy to see that the ley line that I grew up on in England is the same as the one I found in the Austrian Alps, wheras the one I have in Georgia is a different gradient and part of the grid, perhaps a different vibration? So… if you find yourself away from the land you come from it may be worth thinking about the phenomenon I’m describing and work out if a little trip back to the roots might not do you some good? I know it worked for me…

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Adrian
Georgian Adventures

English. Lives in Tbilisi. Contributor to Renegade Inc. Loves channeling ideas and serving good coffee.