| 'It's
like a big lightbulb switches on'
BY BILLY COX
Source: www.heraldtribune.com
In the late Cold War era, before the dawn of
the World Wide Web, the Harmonic Convergence generated
sociological magnetic fields from Stonehenge to
Myakka River State Park.
On Aug. 16-17, 1987, across mountaintops, seashores
and flatlands, untold numbers of Earthlings found
themselves drawn like iron filings to pray, dance,
meditate, sing and emit good vibes to promote
global harmony.
The catalyst was a New Age author named Jose
Arguelles, whose ruminations on American Indian
cosmology became a bestseller in "The Mayan
Factor."
Within a few years, seismic shifts were recorded.
The Iran-Iraq war ended. The Russian army withdrew
from Afghanistan. Apartheid disintegrated in South
Africa. The Berlin Wall fell. The Soviet Union
collapsed.
Even the cynics who dismissed the event as the
"moronic convergence" were caught flat-footed
by these rapid realignments of power.
So what happened to all those high hopes?
Nearly six years after suicide jetliners brought
down the World Trade Center, two wars are leeching
blood, treasure and stature from the United States;
terrorism fueled by religious fundamentalism is
accelerating; Russia is reverting to authoritarian
rule and polar icecaps are contracting beneath
runaway greenhouse gases.
"We saw the light then, but there was also
the other side," says Zan Benham, of Sarasota.
"Dark pushes the light. It's kind of like
a wound; before it can heal, it has to come to
the fore. Before the Earth can be restored, the
clutter has to be cleaned out first."
Benham, a certified hypnotherapist, counselor
and Reiki master, is undeterred by the grim headlines
now splattering across the news. As the 20-year
anniversary of the Harmonic Convergence approaches,
she and half a dozen like-minded optimists have
converged once more to contemplate what they insist
was a glimpse of the future.
The venue is the home of artist Jo Mooy. She
publishes an online, metaphysical newsletter called
"StarSoundings Journal," which offers
periodic updates on local, esoteric goings-on
(new moon meditations, healing classes), celestial
conjunctions (meteor showers, lunar eclipses)
and testimonials about how the universe responds
proportionately to appeals for guidance.
One of her colorful silk Mandalas -- a sacred
circle in Sanskrit -- is draped over the living
room TV screen like a funeral shroud. Mooy enjoys
watching the occasional documentary on the tube,
but is wary of the medium's potential for distraction.
"I just don't want that big box coming into
the house," she says. "To me, it's just
an electronical device."
Today's agenda is not merely the Harmonic Convergence,
but its larger context -- the ancient Maya calendar,
and its imminent conclusion, on or about Dec.
21, 2012. The onset of 2012 is spawning a cottage
industry of books and forecasts, from transcendence
to meltdowns reminiscent of the Y2K buzz.
In a recent edition of The New York Times, Arguelles
predicted "the post-2012 world will be a
world of universal telepathy." In "Apocalypse
2012," Lawrence E. Joseph outlines the collapse
of civilization beneath the weight of war, superstorms,
and other natural disasters. John Major Jenkins,
author of "Maya Cosmogenesis 2012: The True
Meaning of the Maya Calendar End Date" anticipates
"transformation and renewal."
Fueling the debate are the Maya "world age
cycles." These are a complex but elegant
series of repetitive, nonlinear stanzas of time
calculated during the supremacy of a civilization
whose own cities had been emptied, as if by plague,
when Spanish conquistadors marched through them
in the 16th century. The current Maya world age
cycle, calculated to have begun in 3114 B.C.,
will have run its 5,126-year course five years
from now.
The pre-Columbian mathematicians were silent
on the ramifications, but at Mooy's place, the
gathered prefer to accent the positive.
Norma Martin -- like Benham, a Reiki healer --
says the Harmonic Convergence was simply the most
publicized aspect of the 25-year countdown to
the end of the world age cycle.
For instance, on Jan. 11, 1992, at 11:11 a.m.,
Martin invited the public to wear white and hook
up at a sacred dance circle in east Sarasota.
It was called the 11:11 Planetary Activation,
an event designed "to bring us into higher
dimensional consciousness," according to
Martin, and expedite telepathic communication.
"Oh, it went on for a long time," says
Martin, adding that more than 100 people showed
up. "Some stayed until midnight. I never
expected such a turnout."
The doorway for accessing that energy, according
to proponents at www.nvisible.com,
will close on Nov. 11, 2011. But even more opportunities
may present themselves between now and then.
On July 17, United Church of Sarasota hosted
an hour-long "Fire the Grid" communion,
part of a coordinated, worldwide effort to foster
planetary healing by plugging into meditative
energy nodes.
"The Earth has a grid system that looks
like a huge spider web stretched across lay lines,
or energy lines," says Unity co-pastor Dorothy
Ann Jackson. "This energy has a vibration,
and vibration has a frequency. In your mind, you
send out a signal and draw everything that's on
that particular frequency.
"Whenever huge groups of people come together,
you can put out a positive wave of vibration that
reaches a peak. There's a plateau, then an ebb,
and then another flow. What you think is projected
out there."
Mooy's guests are in harmony about this point,
too: Sarasota is a key vector on that grid. Maybe
it has something to do with the quartz crystal
sand at Siesta Key. It is where they often go
to meditate.
"Crystals are transmitters as well as receivers,"
says Rose Lettiere, a Sarasota feng shui consultant.
"They hold thought, they form energy, they
talk. They feed us what we feed it. And when we
have a collection of like-minded souls or beings
gathered for the same purpose, it's like a big
lightbulb switches on."
In fact, Mooy says Dec. 21, 2012, is not so much
a date as a consciousness whose arrival will be
as smooth or as rocky as individual preparations
for it. Despite the apparent chaos in the world,
she says the conditions for uniting its inhabitants
behind a turnaround are considerably better than
in 1987.
"New technology has become available, and
that's the Internet," Mooy says. "People
found out about the Harmonic Convergence through
flyers and word of mouth. We are much more connected
today through technology.
"We are the vanguard of that new human that
we will become." |