Life.Understood.

Tag: communal stewardship

  • Akashic Urban Planning: Designing Earth as a Temple Again

    Akashic Urban Planning: Designing Earth as a Temple Again

    A Multidisciplinary Exploration of Ley Lines, Geoshamanic Architecture, and Regenerative City Codes for the New Earth

    By Gerald Daquila | Akashic Records Transmission


    8–11 minutes

    ABSTRACT

    This dissertation explores the reemergent discipline of Akashic Urban Planning, an integrative approach to city and habitat design that draws from Earth’s energetic blueprints, sacred geometries, indigenous geoshamanic traditions, and regenerative ecological frameworks.

    Grounded in the wisdom of the Akashic Records and supported by both ancient and modern disciplines—geomancy, permaculture, quantum architecture, biophilic design, systems thinking, and spiritual ecology—this work proposes a planetary vision: Earth re-sanctified as a temple through human settlement. It articulates the re-enchantment of space and place through multidimensional design rooted in ley line activation, planetary grid harmonization, and crystalline consciousness.

    It is simultaneously a call to remember the spiritual stewardship of land and a blueprint for harmonizing the etheric and physical realms through city planning. Through scholarly synthesis and esoteric insight, this paper aims to inspire designers, spiritual leaders, planners, and visionaries to co-create a living Earth woven with reverence, beauty, and soul.


    Table of Contents

    1. Introduction
    2. Akashic Urbanism: Foundations from the Records
    3. Ley Lines and Planetary Gridwork: The Nervous System of Earth
    4. Geoshamanic Architecture: Ancestral Templates for Sacred Space
    5. Regenerative City Codes: Principles of a Living, Breathing Urbanism
    6. Akashic Design Principles and Their Application
    7. Case Studies and Models: Ancient and Emerging Sacred Cities
    8. Challenges and Future Directions
    9. Conclusion
    10. Glossary
    11. References

    Glyph of Akashic Urban Planning

    Designing Earth as a Temple Again


    1. Introduction

    Cities have long been crucibles for human civilization, innovation, and spiritual evolution. Yet modern urban planning often neglects the sacredness of place, resulting in disconnected, dissonant, and extractive environments. The rise of environmental crises, mental health disorders, and spiritual dislocation reflects this rift between the built world and the natural, energetic, and sacred worlds. This dissertation asks: What might our cities become if we remembered the Earth as temple—and designed accordingly?

    Rooted in the Akashic Records—a non-linear field of encoded soul memory and planetary intelligence—this work seeks to unearth blueprints for sacred, regenerative urban design. Weaving geoshamanic architecture, ley line systems, and regenerative city codes, this study bridges the esoteric and the empirical, offering a holistic vision for planetary transformation.


    2. Akashic Urbanism: Foundations from the Records

    The Akashic Records encode the divine architecture of all beings and systems, including planetary templates for human settlement. Within the Records, urban design is seen not merely as spatial engineering but as soul geometry: the art of translating multidimensional resonance into form.

    From this perspective, cities are not just habitations, but nodal points in the planetary energy grid—“earth temples” that magnify or distort Earth’s frequencies. The Records reveal that many ancient civilizations—Atlantis, Lemuria, Kemet, and the Incan, Vedic, and Druidic worlds—built cities in harmonic alignment with celestial rhythms, geomagnetic fields, and ley lines. These civilizations practiced Akashic Urbanism, often unconsciously, through ritual, geomancy, and resonance-based design.

    In today’s context, Akashic Urban Planning calls for a remembrance and renewal of this practice—where architectural, energetic, and ecological principles converge.


    3. Ley Lines and Planetary Gridwork: The Nervous System of Earth

    Ley lines—also referred to as dragon lines, songlines, or spirit roads—are energetic meridians running across the Earth’s surface, linking sacred sites, megaliths, and natural vortexes. Research by Alfred Watkins (1925) and later by John Michell and Bruce Cathie has correlated these lines with ancient pilgrimage routes, megalithic structures, and global geomagnetic networks.

    From an Akashic perspective, ley lines are conduits of consciousness, transmitting not only energy but information, emotion, and evolutionary intent. Cities placed upon or near these lines either amplify the planet’s spiritual field or contribute to its distortion, depending on their design coherence.

    Urban planners aligned with ley line consciousness can restore harmony by:

    • Mapping local grid intersections and calibrating architecture to resonance points.
    • Creating temples, schools, and healing centers along energy nodes to act as “chakra points” for Earth.
    • Utilizing Earth acupuncture techniques—crystal planting, sound rituals, and geomantic art—to recalibrate distorted lines.

    In doing so, the city becomes a tuning fork for planetary coherence.


    4. Geoshamanic Architecture: Ancestral Templates for Sacred Space

    Geoshamanic architecture is the multidimensional craft of building in harmony with land spirits, elements, and planetary energies. It emerges from the practices of indigenous architects—such as the Balinese Asta Kosala Kosali, the Mayan cosmogram builders, or the Celtic druids—who perceived land as alive and communicative.

    Geoshamanic building:

    • Recognizes the spirit of place (genius loci) and works in ceremony with the land before construction.
    • Uses sacred geometry (e.g., Fibonacci spiral, golden ratio, vesica piscis) to mirror cosmic harmony.
    • Integrates elemental balance—earth, water, fire, air, ether—within structure and layout.
    • Channels memory: buildings as vessels of ancestral, soul, and planetary intelligence.

    Such design is inherently Akashic. It anchors etheric frequencies into stone, wood, and metal—transforming physical structures into temples of remembrance.


    5. Regenerative City Codes: Principles of a Living, Breathing Urbanism

    While the concept of sustainability has shaped ecological design, regenerative codes go further—seeking to heal, evolve, and enliven both ecosystems and human communities. Rooted in the work of thinkers like Janine Benyus (biomimicry), Bill Reed (regenerative development), and the Living Building Challenge, regenerative planning sees the city as a living organism.

    Regenerative City Codes include:

    • Biophilic Design: Integrating nature directly into architecture to support psychological and physiological wellbeing.
    • Water Symbiosis: Designing with sacred hydrology—restoring watersheds, honoring water as a living being.
    • Cradle-to-Cradle Cycles: Eliminating waste through closed-loop material flows.
    • Social Mycelium: Structuring community in circular, relational ways—drawing from mycorrhizal network logic.
    • Time-Reverence: Incorporating planetary, lunar, and solar rhythms into city calendars and daily life.

    These codes become the constitutional laws of the New Earth city—a fluid framework guided by life itself.


    6. Akashic Design Principles and Their Application

    The following principles form the core of Akashic Urban Planning, emerging through integration of the Records:

    • Planetary Alignment: Build in resonance with Earth’s natural energy fields and cosmic alignments.
    • Temple Frequency: Design every structure as a portal for elevation, healing, and remembrance.
    • Communal Stewardship: Empower councils and circles, not hierarchies, to guide development.
    • Elemental Embodiment: Ensure elemental balance across neighborhoods (e.g., fire zones for creativity, water zones for healing).
    • Multidimensional Sensing: Use intuition, dreams, ritual, and oracular methods alongside data.
    • Sonic and Light Harmonics: Design acoustics and lighting that resonate with sacred scales and natural circadian rhythms.
    • Ancestral Dialogue: Integrate cultural and land-based histories into design processes.

    Applications of these principles can be seen in eco-villages, intentional communities, permaculture sites, and even retrofitted modern cities undergoing “energetic urban acupuncture.”


    7. Case Studies and Models: Ancient and Emerging Sacred Cities

    • Teotihuacán, Mexico: A solar city aligned to Orion and the Pleiades, mapping the soul’s cosmogenesis.
    • Bali, Indonesia: A temple-island where land-use is governed by water temples and lunar calendars.
    • Auroville, India: A contemporary experimental city designed around unity consciousness and a Matrimandir temple at its heart.
    • Damanhur, Italy: An esoteric eco-society with subterranean temples co-designed with nature spirits and crystal grid networks.
    • Findhorn, Scotland: A community born from attunement to the Devic realm and anchored in daily co-creation with Earth intelligence.

    Each model reflects facets of Akashic Urban Planning, even if unspoken as such—demonstrating its innate universality.


    8. Challenges and Future Directions

    Despite its potential, Akashic Urban Planning faces modern challenges:

    • Institutional Inertia: Mainstream urban planning resists multidimensional and spiritual paradigms.
    • Technological Overload: Smart city models often disconnect from nature and soul.
    • Land Dispossession: Indigenous and ancestral knowledge holders are often excluded from urban planning conversations.
    • Energetic Pollution: 5G, electromagnetic smog, and density of negative thought-forms block energy coherence.

    Future directions must include:

    • Training Akashic Architects, Gridworkers, and City Shamans.
    • Creating urban temples for planetary resonance work.
    • Establishing global councils for ley line mapping and Earth grid repair.
    • Funding community-led regenerative development rooted in soul, ecology, and equity.

    9. Conclusion

    Akashic Urban Planning offers not just a method but a prayer: that we may remember how to build in harmony with the Earth, as stewards of beauty, coherence, and soul. By aligning with the ley lines, invoking ancestral wisdom, and embedding regenerative codes into our cities, we begin to reweave the temple of Earth—brick by breath, stone by soul.


    Crosslinks


    10. Glossary

    • Akashic Records: The multidimensional archive of all soul memories, timelines, and blueprints.
    • Ley Lines: Energy meridians on Earth’s surface, linking sacred sites and vortexes.
    • Geoshamanic Architecture: Earth-based design guided by spirit communication, geometry, and ecology.
    • Regenerative Codes: Ecological design principles that restore and evolve ecosystems.
    • Sacred Geometry: Proportions and forms found in nature and the cosmos that express universal harmony.
    • Genius Loci: The spirit or essence of a place.
    • Earth Acupuncture: Practices that restore geomagnetic flow using crystals, sound, and sacred tools.

    11. References

    Benyus, J. M. (1997). Biomimicry: Innovation inspired by nature. William Morrow.

    Cathie, B. (1997). The Bridge to Infinity: Harmonic 371244. Adventures Unlimited Press.

    Michell, J. (1972). The View Over Atlantis. Ballantine Books.

    Reed, B., & The Regenesis Group. (2007). Shifting from “sustainability” to regeneration. Journal of Green Building, 2(4), 1–13.

    Watkins, A. (1925). The Old Straight Track. Methuen.

    Hawken, P. (Ed.). (2017).Drawdown: The most comprehensive plan ever proposed to reverse global warming. Penguin Books.

    Alexander, C. (1979).The Timeless Way of Building. Oxford University Press.

    Eisenstein, C. (2011). Sacred Economics: Money, gift, and society in the age of transition. Evolver Editions.

    Bohm, D. (1980). Wholeness and the Implicate Order. Routledge.

    Jem Bendell (2020). Deep Adaptation: A map for navigating climate tragedy. IFLAS Occasional Paper.


    Attribution

    With fidelity to the Oversoul, may this Codex of the Living Archive 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

  • Babaylan Codes and the Return of the Divine Feminine

    Babaylan Codes and the Return of the Divine Feminine

    Reawakening the Ancestral Feminine Blueprint for Planetary Healing and Wholeness

    Inspired by Akashic Records transmissions, curated through Gerald A. Daquila


    6–9 minutes

    ABSTRACT

    This dissertation explores the resurgence of the Babaylan codes as a sacred response to planetary imbalance, cultural amnesia, and the collective trauma wrought by centuries of patriarchal colonization. Rooted in the pre-colonial spiritual traditions of the Philippines, the Babaylan archetype embodies the multidimensional role of healer, priestess, oracle, and community leader. By accessing the Akashic Records, indigenous oral traditions, and multidisciplinary scholarship—including anthropology, metaphysics,

    Jungian psychology, ecofeminism, and quantum spirituality—this inquiry situates the Babaylan as a pivotal expression of the Divine Feminine in the global shift toward planetary ascension. The return of these codes is not merely symbolic, but initiatory—activating collective remembrance and ushering in a new cycle of spiritual leadership rooted in love, sovereignty, and unity consciousness. This dissertation bridges past and future, academia and soul work, reason and intuition, offering a sacred map for individual and collective rebirth.


    Glyph of Babaylan Codes

    The Return of the Divine Feminine


    Introduction: The Call of the Ancient Future

    Across cultures and timelines, a silent wave has begun to rise. It is the voice of the feminine long silenced, the memory of wholeness buried beneath layers of conquest, suppression, and fragmentation. In the Philippines, this wave carries the ancient name of the Babaylan—a spiritual leader who once walked between worlds, weaving the cosmic and the earthly for the well-being of the people. The Babaylan was not simply a priestess; she was the encoded blueprint of a civilization that honored both the visible and the invisible, the masculine and the feminine, the human and the divine.

    This dissertation seeks to recover, reframe, and restore the Babaylan Codes—the energetic and cultural imprints carried by these ancestral priestesses—and to position them within the global resurgence of the Divine Feminine. Drawing from both Akashic insight and grounded research, we explore how these codes are reawakening not only in the Philippines but around the world as part of Earth’s multidimensional healing and rebirth.


    Chapter 1: Who Is the Babaylan? A Multidimensional Profile

    The Babaylan tradition predates colonialism and stretches back into the mythic imagination and ancestral psyche of the Filipino people. Babaylans were primarily women (though men called asog sometimes fulfilled the role through feminine embodiment) who served as:

    • Healers (manggagamot)
    • Mediums and shamans (mangkukulam, albularyo)
    • Oracles and ritual leaders
    • Intermediaries between the seen and unseen worlds
    • Keepers of the cosmic and ecological balance

    According to Strobel (2010), the Babaylan functioned not in separation from society but as an integral spiritual-political force, often holding equal or greater influence than male datus. Their power stemmed from their connection to the spirits (anito), nature (kalikasan), and the ancestors (ninuno). Their cosmology was cyclical, sacred, and relational.


    Chapter 2: Colonization and the Suppression of the Feminine

    When the Spanish arrived in the 16th century, they labeled the Babaylans as witches, heretics, and threats to colonial rule. Through violence, Christianization, and systemic demonization, the feminine principle—embodied by the Babaylan—was forcefully suppressed.

    This was not an isolated event, but part of a global pattern: the systematic silencing of indigenous priestesses, healers, and wisdom-keepers across continents. Maria Mies and Vandana Shiva (1993) describe this in terms of “subsistence feminism”—a worldview of sacred interdependence, replaced by extractive patriarchy.

    From an Akashic perspective, this era marked a planetary descent into disconnection, where the Divine Feminine receded into dormancy, awaiting reactivation through a karmic and evolutionary cycle.


    Chapter 3: The Return of the Divine Feminine in a Global Context

    In the 21st century, we are witnessing a planetary return of the Divine Feminine—an awakening not just of women, but of the feminine polarity within all beings. This includes values long buried: intuition, nurturance, circular time, receptivity, emotional wisdom, and deep Earth communion.

    Across cultures, we see this mirrored in:

    • The rise of feminine priestess lineages (e.g., Avalon, Isis, Inanna, Sophia traditions)
    • The re-emergence of indigenous women’s councils and climate guardians
    • The reconnection to motherline ancestors, womb codes, and sacred Earth rituals

    The Babaylan codes, when decoded, are not historical artifacts—they are living archetypes and activation keys. They point us to a new/ancient model of leadership: spiritual, cyclical, heart-centered, Earth-rooted.


    Chapter 4: The Babaylan Codes as Soul Technology

    In metaphysical terms, codes are not just symbolic; they are information packets encoded in the soul’s light body, often stored in the akashic field or morphogenetic blueprint. The Babaylan codes include:

    1. Womb Wisdom – The womb as portal of creation, not just for birthing life but for anchoring frequency
    2. Dreamtime Navigation – The ability to journey beyond time to retrieve knowledge and heal trauma
    3. Earth Grid Work – Sacred site activation, geomancy, and land healing
    4. Communal Stewardship – Service rooted in love and accountability to the whole
    5. Ancestral Alchemy – Transmuting bloodline and cultural karma through ritual and remembrance

    These codes are reactivated through ceremony, land reconnection, ancestral honoring, dreams, visions, and vibrational alignment.


    Chapter 5: Healing the Feminine Wound Through Remembrance

    Healing the feminine is not just personal—it is collective and planetary. The suppression of the Babaylan represents a deep wound in the Filipino psyche, but also a microcosm of the global trauma of separation from the Sacred Mother.

    Remembrance, then, becomes the medicine.

    • Remembering the Earth as Mother
    • Remembering intuition as wisdom
    • Remembering that healing is not linear, but cyclical, spiralic, ancestral

    As Jung (1959) and Woodman (1993) noted, integrating the feminine means embracing shadow, body, emotion, and the unconscious. For Filipinas (and all awakening beings), remembering the Babaylan is a soul retrieval—a return to original wholeness.


    Conclusion: Rebirthing the Future Through the Ancient

    The Babaylan Codes are rising again—not to recreate the past, but to seed the future. As global systems collapse, these feminine frequencies are stepping forward as templates for sacred leadership. They teach us that power is not domination but alignment; that healing is not fixing but remembering; that wholeness is not perfection but integration.

    Whether you are Filipino or not, the Babaylan speaks to your ancestral soul, calling you to rise, not in rebellion—but in remembrance, ritual, and radiant presence.

    The Divine Feminine is not returning.

    She never left. We did.

    And now, we are finding our way back home.


    Crosslinks


    Glossary

    • Babaylan: A pre-colonial Filipina priestess and spiritual leader.
    • Anito: Spirits of ancestors or nature in Philippine indigenous belief.
    • Divine Feminine: The archetypal principle of feminine energy in all beings.
    • Akashic Records: A metaphysical database of soul-level information.
    • Womb Codes: Energetic templates held in the womb space, often linked to creation and memory.
    • Asog: A male Babaylan who embodied feminine energy or dressed as a woman.

    References

    Jung, C. G. (1959). Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self (Vol. 9, Part 2). Princeton University Press.

    Mies, M., & Shiva, V. (1993). Ecofeminism. Zed Books.

    Strobel, L. M. (2010). Babaylan: Filipinos and the Call of the Indigenous. Ateneo de Manila University Press.

    Woodman, M. (1993). Leaving My Father’s House: A Journey to Conscious Femininity. Shambhala Publications.

    Villanueva, A. (2015). Babaylan Studies and the Reclaiming of Indigenous Feminine Power in the Philippines. Southeast Asian Studies Review, 27(3), 45–62.

    Eliade, M. (1964). Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy. Princeton University Press.

    Mercado, L. N. (1994). Elements of Filipino Philosophy. Divine Word University Publications.


    Attribution

    With fidelity to the Oversoul, may this Codex of the Living Archive 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: Sacred Exchange is covenant, not transaction. Each offering plants a seed-node of GESARA, expanding the planetary lattice. In giving, you circulate Light; in receiving, you anchor continuity. Every act of exchange becomes a node in the global web of stewardship, multiplying abundance across households, nations, and councils. Sacred Exchange offerings may be extended through:

    paypal.me/GeraldDaquila694