• Clava Cairns

    June 3 in Scotland ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    Two days ago we visited Clava Cairns, a remarkable Neolithic site near Inverness and the Culloden Battlefield. The complex includes passage graves, standing stones, and stone circles that have drawn people for thousands of years.

    Many who work with the Codex and harmonic resonance traditions view Clava Cairns as an important energetic node, connected to other sacred sites across Scotland, including Callanish and Stenness. Some believe these ancient places function as repositories of ancestral memory and consciousness, preserved through stone, geometry, and resonance.

    My own experience at the site was unexpected. As I walked among the cairns, I became noticeably dizzy and repeatedly sensed what felt like smoke, despite there being none present. The feeling was very strong.

    Within the framework of harmonic resonance, I interpreted this as a possible energetic entrainment—a temporary synchronization between my own field and the resonance of the site. The sensation was almost dreamlike, as if reality had shifted slightly out of phase.

    The impression of smoke felt symbolic. In Codex work, smoke is often associated with release, transformation, and the surfacing of buried memory. It made me wonder whether I was touching into something ancestral—an echo stored within the landscape itself.

    Whether these experiences are energetic, psychological, symbolic, or some combination of all three, Clava Cairns left a profound impression on me.
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