news about Stonehenge

http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/europe/09/22/uk.stonehenge.healing.ap/index.html

Have any of you who’ve been to Stonehenge been healed?

Yes, I used to be totally unable to type, but I have seen the light and now I can type with either one or both fingers. It’s a miracle! Thank yuh, Jeepers!

djm

I’ve been to Stonehenge and I have been healed, also been to Lourdes and been healed plus went to Lourdes High School and have been healed. Lourdes wins :laughing:

No, but one of the park service ladies told us to stop throwing a frisbee in the field nearby.

I was totally cured of not having seen Stonehenge before…
So there’s that.

well, in 1982,
I was painlessly releived of about 12 quid I was carrying around… :smiley:

When I visited Stonehenge in June of 2007, it was pouring down rain and not all that warm. I wasn’t in the mood to sense any kind of special healing energy to the place, but that, of course, doesn’t mean that Stonehenge is not an energetic center. I think that earlier generations of humankind were much more aware of subtle energies than are tourists today, like myself, who get off the bus, grab a hand-held electronic tour guide and walk around the perimeter of Stonehenge. Our busy lives with myriad stimulation helps to close our receptivity to subtle energies that the early visitors most likely experienced at Stonehenge.

One thought that I had is that the location on the Plain of Salisbury is not that remarkable, judging only from a geographic perspective, although, quite obviously, there must have been a very good reason why that particular location was chosen to build such a labor-intensive structure. Pendulum-bobbing occultists might tell me that Stonehenge was on the intersection of two ley lines, but modern scientists would, no doubt, scoff at that idea.

At other places on the earth I have felt the subtle earth energies. At the Dome of the Rock on the Temple Mount in the old walled city of Jerusalem the energy is so strong that it made me feel uncomfortable. My thought at the time was that the Jewish Temple at Jerusalem may have been built at that particular location for the very same reason that Stonehenge was built on the Plain of Salisbury in southern England: early people sensed that this was an auspicious place to build a temple because of the energy field that they could feel.

Well, I’m no occultist, but at one time as an armchair adventurer I did discover the ley line theory, as something of a grid, which theoretically may have served as some form of directional guidance system, and, perhaps coincidentally, it seems there are a number of historic places which today exist on such ley lines.

So, could space aliens have landed in Roswell, New Mexico, guided by some sort of perhaps similar directional guidance system?

???

No, but I saved money on my car insurance there.

That is where those funny talking geckos come from.

If you ever wondered why they talk like that, well, now you know.

True story.

Perhaps but it must have been malfunctioning because they didn’t come down in Roswell. Foster Ranch is closer to Corona actually.

Didn’t happen anyway.

Fun story though.

There’s an article in the newest Smithsonian magazine about this dig and their findings. Apparently there’s also going to be a documentary sometime soon.

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/light-on-stonehenge.html

Susan

Also, it seems to be that people who are into the whole earth energy idea favor Avebury over Stonehenge. For one thing, you can get up close and personal with the rocks, as evidenced by these 3 scruffy little girls in 2000:

I read somewhere that Merlin the Magician made Stonehenge.

I suspect that from here on out there will be a lot of healings reported there, and that the market in necklaces with bluestone will increase.

IIRC, apparently Avebury could be yet another of those places along the ley lines Doug had mentioned, indeed, as a notable place.

Must’ve been Mary Stewart’s books. Her story suggests Merlin built it as a tomb/memorial for his papa, Ambrosius… brother of Uther, Arthur’s papa… so it goes.

My parents were at Oxford in the fifties, and tell a story of heading down to stone henge one midsummer’s eve, when there was no fence around it and you could climb up like the kids at Avebury.

There were a number of folks doing the waiting for dawn vigil, including a party of neo-druids in robes, who were having a ceremony, and another group of young students who’d been working their way through some mead-substitutes all night. As dawn came and the sun rose over the kingstone, all the druids got up and started chanting, elaborately pretending not to notice (as only the english can) the drunk student who was perched on one of the sarsen stones ‘conducting’ them with a stalk of celery.

Yes, that was Mary Stewart. I don’t think she’s alone, however. Pretty much anything weird in britian has had the name merlin attached to it at one time or another.

Archeology, however, says that it was built several millenia before any of the indo-europeans left asia. By beaker-folk, iirc.

But not that kind.

Or this one.

I was healed once, but it soon got better. :slight_smile:

True fact: It is not the location of Stonehenge that is important but the stone itself. And it is better if the stone comes straight off the parent material in Wales, it’s more natural. That stuff in England is over processed.