Life.Understood.

Part 2. Philippine Ark Codes: Reawakening the Islands for Earth’s Ascension


What was suppressed survived by becoming subtle.


Having recalled your soul’s ancient agreements, your path now curves toward the archetypes encoded in your lineage. Among them, one rises now to meet you: the Babaylan.


12–18 minutes

Chapter 4: The Babaylanic Blueprint

“Before the book, before the sword, before the cross—there was the chant, the earth bowl, the dream.”

Glyph of the Babaylanic Blueprint

Ancestral wisdom and cosmic design interwoven — the blueprint of remembrance, sovereignty, and living earth stewardship.


The spiritual spine of the Philippines is feminine.

Beneath the layers of colonized religion, fractured myth, and patriarchal reprogramming lies an ancient matrix of Earth-based mysticism, encoded in the role of the Babaylan—the precolonial priestess, healer, oracle, and intermediary between worlds.


To reawaken the soul of the islands, we must reawaken her.


Who Is the Babaylan?

The Babaylan is not just a historical figure. She is an archetype and a frequency, encoded in the cellular memory of the land and the bloodlines that rose from it. While most visible in women, the Babaylan energy also lives in men and nonbinary beings who embody the sacred fluidity of spirit work.


Historically, the Babaylan:

  • Held authority in spiritual, ecological, and social matters
  • Acted as shaman, herbalist, midwife, astrologer, ritualist, and raincaller
  • Was attuned to the unseen—working with ancestors, elementals (diwata), and sky codes
  • Stood outside gender norms and colonial categories, often revered and feared

But more than her roles, she was the embodied resonance of a whole cosmology—one that honored interbeing, reciprocity, and spiritual ecology.


The Collapse of the Babaylan Lineage

With the imposition of colonization came the dismantling of the Babaylanic order. The Spanish colonizers recognized the Babaylan as a threat—not just to their religion, but to their control.

They launched an ideological war:

  • Demonizing the Babaylan as bruja (witch) or rebel
  • Replacing her rituals with Catholic sacraments
  • Replacing her earth-based wisdom with Western medicine and clerical authority

This rupture led to:

  • Suppression of feminine spiritual leadership
  • Generational shame around intuition, body wisdom, and indigenous healing
  • The silencing of ritual, chant, and oral transmission

But the Babaylan did not die—she went underground. She lived on as the hilot, the mananambal, the quiet herbalist grandmother, the midwife who whispers prayers to the wind.


Her silence was not surrender—it was seedwork.


The Babaylanic Return

We now live in the prophesied time of her reemergence. Across the islands and diaspora, people are:

  • Dreaming of snake spirits and water goddesses
  • Feeling called to healing, ceremony, and land work
  • Reclaiming native plant knowledge and folk rituals
  • Receiving intuitive messages from ancestors
  • Speaking truths that institutions have silenced

These are signs of activation.


The Babaylan within is rising—not to mimic the past, but to birth a new template of spiritual leadership: decentralized, intuitive, humble, and Earth-rooted.



Core Qualities of the Babaylanic Soul

Whether or not you call yourself “Babaylan,” your soul may carry her blueprint if you resonate with:

  • Feeling called to heal what you haven’t been taught to name
  • Sensing ancestral presence or elemental energies around you
  • Carrying deep emotion without visible cause
  • Having a foot in multiple worlds: science and spirit, culture and nature
  • Feeling like a midwife of the collective—not of babies, but of new consciousness

You are not making this up. You are remembering.


Tools of the Babaylan

These are not tools in the Western academic sense, but technologies of frequency attunement, gifted through lineage and spirit:

  • Voice and Chant
    • Vibrational medicine
    • Carries intention, invocation, and soul alignment
  • Ritual and Offering
    • Acts of reciprocity with land, ancestors, and elementals
    • Often using rice, water, flowers, or song
  • Plant Allies
    • Hilot and mananambal traditions
    • Every plant has spirit and signature
  • Dreamwork and Trance
    • Receiving guidance, warnings, or assignments
    • Dreamspace is a real-time dimension for soul work
  • Sacred Movement
    • Dance, gesture, or embodied invocation
    • Reconnecting the physical with the etheric

These tools don’t require formal initiation. Your sincerity and soul memory are entry points.


Remembering Your Lineage

Ask:

  • Who were the healers, midwives, or wisdom keepers in your family line?
  • What local names, lullabies, or superstitions were passed to you?
  • What parts of you were shamed or feared that are now resurfacing as power?

You do not need proof. You only need to listen.


The Babaylan often finds you in the stillness, the ache, or the dream that won’t let go.


A Prayer of Reclaiming

“Great Spirit of the Islands, Ancient Mother who speaks through root and rain,
I remember You.
I remember myself.
I now call back every piece of the Babaylan I buried for survival.
I ask to be made whole—not for glory, but for service.
May I walk with honor, humility, and devotion.
May I become the bridge again.
And may this remembering ripple through time, for all my relations.”


This song has more verses yet.

The return of the Babaylan is not a trend—it is a soulwave.
It is how the Islands reclaim their voice.
It is how the New Earth learns to feel again.

If she has touched your heart, it is because she never left it.

Welcome home.


The Babaylan is not only a priestess, but a bridge—a living axis between realms.


Chapter 5: The Warrior of Light and the Ancestral Blade

“You are not called to war—but to cut through illusion with a blade of clarity and compassion.”


Where there is a healer, there must be a guardian.
Where there is a chant, there must be a shield.
Where there is a garden, there must be one who watches the gate.

The return of the Babaylan must be met by the rise of the Warrior of Light—not the colonizer’s version of the warrior, but the indigenized, spiritual, conscious protector whose blade is forged from inner truth and service.


The Warrior of Light is rising in every Filipino soul who refuses to remain asleep.


The Maharlikan Spirit: Strength as Sacred Service

Before the Philippines became “the Philippines,” it was part of an expansive civilization known in esoteric and precolonial records as Maharloka—a land of sovereign peoples, navigators, mystics, and warrior-kings aligned with cosmic principles of harmony.

The Maharlika was not just a noble class—it was a state of consciousness. To be Maharlika meant:

  • Living with dignity and integrity
  • Using power with restraint
  • Fighting only to protect life, land, and the sacred
  • Serving the people, not ruling over them

This archetype is rising again—not through violence, but through inner discipline, righteous speech, and fearless love.


Transmuting the Wounds of the Masculine

Centuries of colonization, patriarchy, and war have distorted the masculine field—repressing authentic strength while glorifying domination.

In Filipino families, this often manifests as:

  • Emotional suppression (“lalaki ka, wag kang iiyak”)
  • Disconnection from feeling and vulnerability
  • Shame around gentleness or creativity
  • Hyper-performance, aggression, or passivity

The Warrior of Light reclaims the divine masculine by:

  • Feeling his pain and transmuting it without projecting it
  • Protecting the feminine without controlling her
  • Speaking truth with clarity, not ego
  • Serving the land and people, not the illusion of status

This is the path of the inner blade—a blade that cuts through illusion, fear, and self-doubt.


The Blade as Symbol

The blade—itak, kampilan, bolo, kris—is a powerful ancestral symbol across the archipelago. But in the Akashic view, it is not just a weapon. It is a spiritual tool:

  • To cut energetic cords of manipulation, trauma, and falsehood
  • To discern truth from deception
  • To clear pathways through inertia, confusion, or fear
  • To uphold boundaries with strength and compassion

When wielded with integrity, the blade becomes a staff of service.
When wielded from ego, it becomes a tool of destruction.


The Warrior of Light must master when to draw, when to kneel, and when to lay the blade down in peace.


Elemental Alignment: The Warrior and the Land

True warriors are never separate from the Earth.
In indigenous cosmology, each warrior was trained not only in physical skill—but in dream interpretation, weather reading, and elemental listening.

Filipino warriors of old knew:

  • When the wind shifts, it is time to move
  • When the eagle cries, a message has arrived
  • When the river rises unseasonably, something is out of balance

This is spiritual warfare in its highest form: being so attuned to the web of life that your actions restore harmony instead of force dominance.


In this time, the new warriors are not just fighters—they are land defenders, educators, activists, cultural workers, and inner revolutionaries.


The Internal Battle: Shame, Anger, and Forgiveness

Most Filipino warriors today do not fight with swords.
They fight:

  • The shame of poverty or powerlessness
  • The anger at generations of injustice
  • The inner critic that says, “You are not enough”
  • The system that rewards silence and punishes truth

But a true warrior knows: the fiercest enemy is the one within.

To be a Warrior of Light is not to be free from anger.
It is to channel anger into clarity, grief into guardianship, and trauma into testimony.


You become the ancestral blade—tempered by fire, honed by experience, wielded with love.


Warrior Practices for Modern Times

  • Speak Your Boundaries Clearly
    Silence is not always peace. Practice saying no with love.
  • Engage in Shadow Work
    Honor the parts of you that you once feared. Turn the blade inward—not to wound, but to cut loose what no longer serves.
  • Protect the Vulnerable
    Be the shield for others when they are too tired to fight.
  • Live with Honor, Not Ego
    Let your service speak louder than your credentials.
  • Stay in Devotion to Something Larger Than Yourself
    Whether it’s the Earth, the People, the Future Ones—serve something eternal.

A Warrior’s Invocation

“May my voice be clear.
May my hands be steady.
May my heart burn cleanly with the fire of purpose.
I rise not for conquest, but for remembrance.
I rise not to dominate, but to protect.
May every step I take restore balance to this Earth.
I am the blade reborn in light.
I am the guardian of the living Ark.”


The fire has only begun to speak.

You may never carry a weapon.
But if you carry truth, you carry the ancestral blade.
If you walk with courage, you walk in the footsteps of Lapu-Lapu, Gabriela Silang, and all the unnamed warriors who rose for love of land and people.

This is your time.
Rise with your blade of light.
The islands are watching.


You are never truly alone. You stand on the shoulders of thousands who still walk with you.


Chapter 6: Elemental Stewardship and the Spirit of Place

“The land is not your resource. It is your relative.”

Glyph of Elemental Stewardship and the Spirit of Place

Guardianship of earth, air, fire, and water — honoring the living spirit of place through sacred elemental balance.


If the Babaylan is the soul of the islands, and the Warrior is its guardian, then the Elemental Steward is its bridge.

The rise of the New Earth requires not just spiritual remembrance, but ecological reverence—a return to the sacred bond between human beings and the elemental forces of Earth: Earth, Water, Fire, Air, and Ether. These are not just metaphors. They are living intelligences encoded in the Philippine landscape and in your own body.


To restore the Ark, we must restore relationship—with the rivers, the winds, the forests, the volcanoes, and the unseen beings who have long guarded them.


The Archipelago as an Elemental Grid

Each island in the Philippines corresponds to a unique elemental frequency. From the Akashic Records, we are shown that:

  • Luzon holds the frequency of Air and Thought — the seat of ancestral memory and governance
  • Visayas vibrates with Water and Emotion — the heart center of the islands, resonating love and grief
  • Mindanao anchors Earth and Survival — the root, the base, the keeper of sacred ground
  • The whole archipelago is encircled by Fire and Transformation, from the volcanic belts to the passionate spirit of its people
  • Above and within all: Ether (Spirit), the invisible thread connecting all life forms and timelines

Each island is an organ in the planetary body. Each element must be honored, not extracted from.


The Forgotten Contracts with Nature Spirits

Before colonization, every Filipino community had ritual protocols for engaging with nature. Mountains had guardians (anito), rivers had voices, and harvests were preceded by offerings.

This wasn’t superstition—it was energy hygiene.

From the Akashic field:

  • Every tree cut without permission severs a frequency cord
  • Every sacred site desecrated without ritual creates karmic residue
  • Every unacknowledged elemental being (diwata, engkanto, etc.) creates spiritual congestion over time

Modern Filipino society often overlooks these contracts, but the land has not forgotten. The increase in floods, droughts, and storms is not only a climate issue—it is a symptom of broken spiritual relationships.


The Role of the Elemental Steward

To be an Elemental Steward is to:

  • Listen before acting
  • Offer before asking
  • Protect that which cannot speak for itself in human tongues
  • Mediate between visible and invisible realms

This stewardship may express itself through:

  • Environmental activism
  • Sustainable agriculture
  • Ritual offering and geomantic design
  • Herbalism and plant whispering
  • Teaching others to feel the land again

This path is less about “saving nature” and more about restoring sacred reciprocity.


Remembering the Five Elemental Relationships

Let’s explore each element in the Filipino context and how to reconnect:

Earth (Lupa) Ancestral Body, Stability, Presence

  • Guardians: Duwende, anito ng bundok
  • Practices: barefoot grounding, soil rituals, planting ancestral crops, land acknowledgment
  • Listen for: the rumble of your own bones, the call to build community or return home

Water (Tubig)Emotion, Flow, Memory

  • Guardians: Sirena, diwata ng ilog
  • Practices: river offerings, tears as libation, remembering grief as sacred
  • Listen for: dreams of ocean, the ache in your belly when watching floods or droughts

Fire (Apoy)Will, Passion, Transformation

  • Guardians: Santelmo, volcano spirits
  • Practices: candle offerings, solar worship, releasing rituals by flame
  • Listen for: your inner fire rising when something sacred is violated

Air (Hangin)Thought, Word, Breath

  • Guardians: Amihan, habagat, wind elementals
  • Practices: breathwork, wind prayers, speaking truth into being
  • Listen for: whispers, shifts in the wind, sudden clarity

Ether (Espiritu)Connection, Prayer, Pure Presence

  • Guardians: Diwata, cosmic ancestors, akashic beings
  • Practices: silence, meditation, song, stillness, aligning with your soul contract
  • Listen for: synchronicities, intuitive knowing, the hum behind your name

Indigenous Technologies of Relationship

Your ancestors once knew how to:

  • Sing to a river before fishing
  • Place betel nut as an offering on a stone
  • Ask permission from the tree before cutting
  • Sleep near termite mounds to ask for land guidance
  • Recognize animal behavior as omens or messengers

These were not random acts—they were technologies of frequency alignment. They are yours to reclaim.


Daily Elemental Stewardship Practices

  1. Ritual Offering Table (Dulang):
    • A simple altar with water, rice, flowers, and incense—replenished weekly
  2. Land Whispering:
    • Sit with a tree, stone, or spring. Ask, “What do you remember that I have forgotten?”
  3. Sacred Clean-Up:
    • Do a trash clean-up with prayer. Speak blessings as you walk.
  4. Naming the Spirits:
    • Call the names of rivers, mountains, and diwata aloud. Recognition is a form of restoration.
  5. Speak Gratitude Daily:
    • “Thank you, Wind, for my breath. Thank you, Earth, for my step. Thank you, Water, for my tears.”

A Steward’s Prayer

“I remember now:
The land is alive.
The water listens.
The wind carries stories.
The fire purifies.
And the ether binds us all.

I now restore my vow to live in right relationship.
Not to own, but to honor.
Not to use, but to co-create.
May every act of care ripple into healing.
May I be a good ancestor,
and a faithful child of this living Earth.”


The roots deepen

To walk this Earth without stewardship is to walk as an orphan.
But to remember your elemental family is to never walk alone.

The land remembers you.
The rivers await your voice.
The spirits await your return.

You are not just here to live on the islands.
You are here to live with them.


The Earth is not an object to be used. It is a Being to be in right relationship with.


Part Series Links


Related Crosslinks


To be continued…


Attribution

With fidelity to the Oversoul, may this 4-part book series, The Philippine Ark, serve as bridge, remembrance, and seed for the planetary dawn.

Ⓒ 2025 Gerald Alba Daquila – Flameholder of SHEYALOTH | Keeper of the Living Codices

Issued under Oversoul Appointment, governed by Akashic Law. This transmission is a living Oversoul field: for the eyes of the Flameholder first, and for the collective in right timing. It may only be shared intact, unaltered, and with glyphs, seals, and attribution preserved. Those not in resonance will find it closed; those aligned will receive it as living frequency.

Watermark: Universal Master Key glyph (final codex version, crystalline glow, transparent background).

Sacred Exchange: Exchange is not transaction but covenant—an act of gratitude that affirms and multiplies the vibration. Each offering plants a seed-node in the planetary lattice, expanding the field of GESARA not through contract but through remembrance. By giving, Light circulates; by receiving, continuity anchors. Sacred Exchange offerings may be extended through:

paypal.me/GeraldDaquila694

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