Amazing observations before
the dawn of history
By: Ken La Rive
Every
person who has ever lived on this earth has tried in their own way to
understand their place in it. Before children can talk they are already
questioning the world. It is what we are as human beings. Even infants have an
ability to be amazed by life’s beauty and grandeur.
We
marveled at the stripe of crystalline glitter on a rock as we held it to the
sun, danced laughing in sprinkler rainbows, and watched cloud shapes on a
summer’s day from piles of autumn clover. A glass prism held magic for a dimpled
hand, and gave us inklings to creation’s awesome complexity.
We
saw life struggling in our garden, astonished by its diversity, convolution and
splendor, and both the smell of the rose and multicolored butterfly dust on our
fingertips stirred our souls.
When
we are young, before perception was formulated by our mostly well-meaning
teachers, good and bad melted together, and both Christmas angels and shooting
stars were caught in the corner of our eyes. Experience was fringed with awe,
where meaning longed to be understood, but was not yet assigned and
categorized. Learning is, in and of itself, a self realization, and it may be
in the mere trying where both solace and comprehension lie. It is our very
nature to learn, and to travel this world in search of answers, and it was soon
found that learning had a law, a universal law, the law of attraction. The
quality of the questions we ask will determine the quality of the answer. Every
question will be answered in like kind...
Early
men lived in a dark, dangerous, and bewildering world. When the sun set there
was only the moon and stars, and a tiny flickering firelight. Even this fire
wasn’t a pure comfort to him, and though it gave him warmth and light, it also
distorted shadows and shapes in its flickering. His imagination flickered too,
and was pulled into the sharp edges of the dark where fear of the unknown
longed for the light of day. He attempted to temper imagination with
understanding, and he saw it to be the key to his very survival, even his sanity.
The lack of perception was the essence that darkened his mind, and that
primeval glimmer that stirred his psyche nurtured into what we call
consciousness. It became the greatest survival tactic this world has ever seen,
and spurred him into newfound quests with fresh tools …faith and hope!
The
marks he made in his pursuit for knowledge are still visible today. High atop
mountains he etched patterns under ledges of rock pierced by a single ray of
sunlight. He measured this beam as it traveled through the day and into the
changing seasons, and he etched the patterns it made on the stationary rocks
below. From there, he held burning embers and clay lamps as he traveled deep
into caves, drawing pictures of the world of day, and his newfound dreams.
The
night sky glowed in a glory unhampered by modern electric lights, holding his
fascination long into the night. Eyes
upward, wrapped to the cool night winds, human faces would shine from the
firmament glow, and stars hung like pendulums of glass just beyond reach. Some
saw the sky with the glazed look of bewilderment, but a few, as years
progressed, realized that there was a redundancy to the seasons, and the
glittering dots of light that moved across the heavens were the maps to future
events. Predictions of the next occurrence gave that person a special
instrument, a knowledge that other men had not observed. Forecasting them gave
him power, and as civilization progressed, mystery and magic became tools for a
new societal elite where religion and government became one.
Now,
with the sun, moon, planets and stars as template, the knowledge taken from
these observations could be transferred from one generation to another. Longer
annotations beyond our life span could be predicted, like a comet’s return, or a
solar eclipse. Early primitive religions governments found these predictions to
be useful, as a naturally reoccurring phenomenon could accent a religious
dance, or worship service, instilling credibility not only for their invented
supernatural gods, but for the priest who was their self made mediator.
These
new Astronomer/Astrologer priests were found all around the world, and though
historians think that they observed the heavens quite independently from each
other, all were poised to make an astounding discovery almost at the same time.
This amazing paradox would go unnoticed in the casual observer’s lifetime, but
longer observations, possibly for many thousands of years, and a phenomenon
called The Precession of the Equinox was found. To his amazement, he saw that
the point of reference he was using to mark time was not finite, but somehow
moving along the skies axis! His great grandfather’s observation had moved,
slowly but perceptually slipping past his line of sight!
To
understand this we must start near the beginning, when one year was divided
into four, and the seasonal Equinox and Solstice was used to predict the time
to plant and harvest. Men found that the heavens moved across the sky in a
predictable manor, and measuring its shadow or the number of days between each
section could predict the seasons. A primitive calendar was found.
Sounds
so simple today, but it was quite a psychological leap for early man. He was
able to actually tie in the external world into his own life, and this semblance
of order must have given him, the astrologer, a great comfort.
Just
before the eastern sunrise each year, on a particular chosen night, observers
would mark the view of sky by the stars on the horizon. This was done mostly in
December, where the New Year was brought in. An observer would sit in the exact
same position and gaze at the eastern horizon set between two objects, just
before dawn. These objects could be man-made, like the stones of Stonehenge, pyramids, or natural mountains. These amazing
star gazers found that an unexplained wobble made the stars shift ever so
slightly every year, and with time they would move completely out of their line
of sight. So slight was this wobble that it took 24,000 years to go a full 360
degrees, and yet these men found it!
An
illustration of this is simple. A top is spinning, just like the earth, with
the point of reference being the poles. The top, just as the earth, always has
a slight wobble, so that if a person was observing the heavens, marking them, measuring
them, this wobble would finally be evident. What makes it difficult is the time
element!
After
this revelation, the more advanced observers began to divide the sky into
sections. Our Zodiac has twelve sections, or houses, but some civilizations,
like the Chinese, have more. Each section of sky has inside a star cluster
constellation representing some religious metaphor, or possibly a symbolic
representation of that society itself.
Ancient
European observers have us traveling from the sign of Pisces, the fish, to the
Age of Aquarius, the lady with the water jug, at this time, and each one of
these star clusters took about 2000 years to move past that observable arc. Now
this may seem a simple concept today, but remember that just a few hundred years
ago it was understood that the earth was flat. Back then most thought the
wobble was caused by a glob of dirt, where we actually lived, found on the back
of a great turtle making its way through the stars. The wobble was his steps.
Others observed that we were the exact center of the universe, and everything
was revolving around us.
Even
with these misconceptions, our ancestors were truly amazing. They tried and
found order in what seemed like a world of chaos. Can you imagine the reasoning
patience it must have taken to understand such a phenomena as The Precession?
What in the world would motivate a string of people to take on what the other
left off, if not faith and hope? And then, how far back could these
observations actually go? Would they in fact name a constellation that wouldn’t
be seen for 24,000 years? Or is it possible that these Astrologers have seen
the Procession make full arc many times as some think the Maya have in their
Long Count Calendar, 3 X 33,000 years. In perspective, it would take more than
forty generations of observations to witness and record one house!
Man’s
inquisitive imagination has propelled him into ground breaking revelations.
Without this singular intrepid spirit our brave new world would still be afraid
of flickering shadows. With tremendous leaps of faith today’s explores pull
from the same spectrum of faith and hope our ancestors did, where unknown
realms of knowledge are found on the sharp edge of reality. Physicists today
are actually questioning our linear way of thinking as inadequate to understand
their science, and see that possibly an artistic mind would be more effective.
We men relentlessly pick and probe the unknown, and now with break-neck speed
forge exponentially our store of knowledge by computer catapults, extensions of
our selves, and propels that identical spirit for learning our ancestors had.
We
have in each of us the same childlike fascination that initially started us on
this fantastic road of learning, so long ago. While lying on a blanket with a
couple of kids and field glasses we can melt away all layers of time, again
viewing the great expanse with wonder. We have in us the same needs as our so-called
primitive ancestors did, and those wonderful oohs and ahs that children have
for shooting star sparks and comet streams still runs hot in our blood. Our
human connection to the stars, and the consciousness that set us free, makes
full circle every Precession, by a tiny wobble.
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