CELTIQUES NET OF WORKS
CELEBRATING NATURE ~ Promoting Respect And Admiration Of All Life
Based in the heart of Scotland we are immersed in the beauty and raw power of life. We want to share some of this with you.
Nestled over 1000ft up in the Cairngorms of the Southern Highlands, our heids are often in or above the clouds. This is a place for rarefied inspiration and calm observation. Here, nature rules and it’s voice is heard.
Our intent is to focus on the light within human nature and reinforce connections of unconditional love and mutual respect.
Sustainable change is long overdue and remains an urgent necessity in our human collective.
Nurturing nature and living positively must become mankind’s new habit . . . Now!
Let’s put our combined Positive Actions into making the difference; being and enjoying Life-Positive Change!
To support a better reality for us all, we must address the issues outlined in our ARTICLES section.
We hope to inspire you . . .
DAILY RESONANCES
Using The Tzolk’in, The Mayan “Division of Days”, We Have Calculated ‘The Sense Of The Day’ or ‘The Round Of The Days’ or ‘The Organization Of Time’ – For Today’s Resonance.
With An Open Mind You Will Recognise Where You Are
The 260-day calendar spread throughout the Mesoamerican cultural region and is regarded as the oldest and most important of the calendar systems.
Sacred Almanac: Used for religious ceremonies, prophecies, and tracking important dates, including births.
Structure: 260 unique days (20 day signs x 13 numbers).
Integration: Combined with the 365-day Haabʼ calendar for the 52-year Calendar Round.
The earliest evidence of this calendar comes from an Olmec-like inscription in the Oxtotitlán cave and dated to 800-500 BCE.
Oxtotitlán is a natural rock shelter and archaeological site in Chilapa de Álvarez, Mexican state of Guerrero, that contains murals linked to the Olmec motifs and iconography. Along with the nearby Juxtlahuaca cave, the Oxtotitlán rock paintings represent the “earliest sophisticated painted art known in Mesoamerica” thus far. The paintings have been variously dated to approximately 900 years BCE.
Read More On:
Smithsonian Museum: The Calendar System / Living Maya
Wikipedia: Tzolk’In
