Come Again Soon - Landscapes of the Sacred
October 20 2017
The most sacred places to us are the ones which we have internalized. If we imagine a place better than it actually was because it was special to us, that perception becomes our imagined reality. A sacred place also has the power of polarity over us due to us. Because of our fond memories of a place, it makes us want to come back.
Native Americans have this concept that the landscape is “embedded with mystery” due to its proximity to the beginning of the source of life (76). The visible world is the counterpart of some cosmic universe that existed prior. The world now draws its energy from that prior world. This makes the sacred inseparable from the profane.
This intriguing quality of the soil itself encourages Native Americans to return to that land. To some, it is just seen as land. Because natives hold this belief that it is much more than meets the eye, even if it has no magical properties, it becomes sacred to them. Similar to a business, a sacred place must leave us a good impression or we may not come back to it. When we have a positive experience at either of these places, we become subject to the polarity of the place. A company lures people in with advertisements while a sacred place promises a chance, not a guarantee, to have a spiritual experience.
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