Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Here Comes the Sun
Here Comes the Sun
Here Comes the Sun
Ebook187 pages3 hours

Here Comes the Sun

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

5/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

It is time to see the sun in a new light and elicit its secrets. Today there is resurgence in the practice of sun-gazing, along with the therapeutic use of sunlight and colour. While the sun’s benefits in providing vitamin D and aiding in the healing of depression have been known for some time, there are new revelations in 2016 that it prevents myopia and slows its advance. It is less well known that human biology reacts in a very direct way to the rotations of our star. A number of prominent doctors have come out to publicly endorse the absorption of sunlight in the human eye and skin, using common sense to avoid over exposure.
In the scientific field during 2016 researchers are making new discoveries about the ways our planet is intimately connected to the sun by invisible strings, and the real impact it has on our weather patterns and climate change. Quantum physics shows there may be corresponding connections on a different dimensional level that result in wormhole-type tunnels that bridge our earth to the sun and beyond.
Historically the star of our solar system has been honoured by the construction of megaliths such as Stonehenge and Glastonbury in England, Nabta Playa in Egypt and the Temple of the Sun in Mexico. Now alternative researchers believe there is evidence that solar power was harnessed and distributed in structures such as the pyramids and that giant obelisks such as the one at Abu Gurab were actually electrical transmitters. The concept and application of this fits perfectly with the theories of the 20th century genius Nikola Tesla. Great leaders in ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome were guided by mystical activities based on what may be called the solar sciences, and their traditions survive today within certain secretive societies.
Authors such as James Redfield have suggested that the human body may be destined to evolve into what is known as a light body, and this is now supported by scientific research into matter being constructed of photons. Along with modern technology’s steps towards transhumanism and artificial intelligence, we are witnessing the emergence of a new breed of humans referred to as Indigo children and the Super Psychic kids. Modern day organizations such as Cosolargy suggest that the transmutation can be accomplished by the intake of the sun’s rays.
Spirituality has a role to play in our reconnection with the sun and the technique of ‘Incubation’ as practised by the ancients, called the Way of the Iatromantis, provides an avenue in the pursuit of activating our light bodies and making the next evolutionary step. In rethinking our relationship with the sun, we see a way forward into a future filled with light.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 18, 2016
ISBN9781370445462
Here Comes the Sun
Author

Paul Vernon Young

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Paul Young was born in Melbourne, Australia, on the 17th March 1953. After leaving school he spent a couple of years in the opal fields of Lightning Ridge in New South Wales, before moving his home base to Brisbane, Queensland. His upbringing and education were along traditional Christian lines, yet from an early age he was drawn to mysticism and Eastern religions. Initially this tendency manifested in his choice of reading materials and the poetry he wrote himself; increasingly it has become a focal point in practical life. Paul belongs to the Rosicrucian Fraternity known as AMORC and holds a number of qualifications: •Certified as a level III Reiki practitioner (2002) •Certificate IV in Palliative Care and Conscious Dying (2003) •Diploma of the Writing School Australia (2003) •Certified TEFL English Teacher (2008) •Certified Law of Attraction Practitioner (2014) •Certified NLP Practitioner (2014) Paul's first book, The Sign of The Quatrefoil, was written without any formal training, but at the end of 2003 he obtained his Diploma from The Writing School of Sydney, with the intention of producing further books and magazine articles. In 2004 he self-published a novel titled ‘The Griffin in the Valley.’ A career in international trade and shipping has given him the opportunity to travel to many places in the world, and he has spent some years living and working in Taiwan, Hong Kong, the Philippines and Thailand. These days he is easing into retirement from the corporate world and concentrating on his investigations into the paranormal and esoteric writings, with a particular emphasis on the relationship between humankind and the Sun.

Read more from Paul Vernon Young

Related to Here Comes the Sun

Related ebooks

Occult & Paranormal For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Here Comes the Sun

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
5/5

1 rating0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Here Comes the Sun - Paul Vernon Young

    The darkest hour is always just before the dawn and sometimes we wallow in the gloom of our slumbering state, only to be jolted back into life when struck by the light. In my case it was after a long run of misfortune, a time when the light of day seemed barely perceptible, when I staggered out of my tunnel of despair and into the Sun. To some people who know me it seems odd that a pale skinned indoor type like myself could come to form such a strong connection to the Sun, but when that solar orb reaches out to you from the sky and grabs you, embraces and enchants you, then you know your life has just taken a quantum leap and there’s no going back. 

    It’s strange how so many people these days have come to be afraid of the Sun. Only two generations ago, our beaches in the summertime were jam-packed with Sun-worshippers, all competing for the best tan. Now the warnings from authorities have scared the heck out of the general population, to the point where we have a generation deficient in vitamin D. What ever happened to all things in moderation? The Earth, like all the other planets in our solar system, was formed out of the Sun and we owe our very life to its warmth and light. The expression Mother Earth is often used and I would like to add the concept of our Father Sun. They really are our parents, astronomically speaking. 

    My initial attraction to our star came in the form of a new appreciation for brightness after the long period of emotional and mental darkness. Yet it was something more than just a metaphor. It felt like a long overdue return home. My interest was really piqued when meeting up with an old childhood friend who, I discovered, was practicing what is known as Sun gazing. The only time I had heard about this before was in reference to the ancient Egyptians, but he quickly armed me with videos and links to You Tube that demonstrated the modern day resurgence of the practice. I now know that there are certain techniques for doing this, for limited periods at specific times of day and, whenever I refer to these methods later in this book, it will always be with a caveat about the risks of doing it without correct training. The reader will appreciate the potential hazard of staring straight into the golden disc when it is high in the sky, known to result in damage to the retina. 

    The warnings about skin cancer are not to be ignored either. I personally had a stage one melanoma removed from my right arm in 1996, followed by the excision of several less serious skin cancers since then, one of which required cosmetic surgery on my head. It has been suggested to me that the melanoma could have been due to the fact I would go for long drives in outback Australia when I was younger, with the window down and my right arm resting on the car’s doorframe under the blazing Sun. While unsure if that was the cause, I am now familiar with the risks and understand the slip-slop-slap campaign which has been pitched to the public over recent decades. Again, the advice should be: nothing in excess

    As my fascination with the Sun took root from about 2012 onwards, my thoughts were continually drawn to the ancient stories, common to cultures on all continents, about solar deities. No matter how many gods were revered in archaic times, it was always the ‘Sun god’ who was in charge and imparted great teachings to humanity. Then there was one particular pharaoh in Egypt who tried to introduce monotheism, with the Sun as the only god. What was behind all the myths and legends? Although historians and archaeologists prefer us to think that ancient monuments dating from the fourth millennium BC to the first millennium AD were built by hard-labouring, superstitious simpletons, one only has to look at the Pyramids, the Nazca Lines, Pumapunku or Baalbeck to conclude that the ancients possessed knowledge and technology that we moderns still cannot fathom.

    Some of those megaliths were constructed especially to track and record the movement of the Sun. Some were temples, such as in South America, and others like the ones at Stonehenge and Glastonbury seemed more like observatories. Naturally there was the practical demand for calendars to record the seasons and know when to plant and when to harvest, but a number of them went to great length to include doorways or apertures that allowed events such as the midsummer sunrise or midwinter sunset to cast their light on a special spot. This continued even in Roman times, with the erection of the Pantheon and similar buildings that virtually served as gigantic Sun-dials. Great rulers with solar connections were behind the very beginnings of human civilization, with one in particular who was supposed to have established Western Civilization in Ancient Greece. 

    While still only at the stage of musing about all these concepts, there came a day in early 2014 when it felt as though a great ‘solar wave’ hit me, knocked me over, then flooded me with an irresistible impulse to align myself with its power. After the initial feeling of being overwhelmed, I was somewhat light-headed and, thinking that perhaps I had caught the flu, I cancelled an appointment I had that morning and stayed indoors. For the remainder of that day, and all the next, I did not leave my apartment and spent all my waking time at my desk, being in what I can best describe as a trance. On the morning of the third day I found myself back in the left-brained reality that most of us live in, and looked at what I had done. In those two days I had registered two domain names and built a website, as well as a corresponding blog site, from scratch – something I didn’t realize I knew how to do, as I am not a high-tech person. Additionally, I had written some articles and news items to post, all solar-themed, without clear recollection of having done so. It was almost as if somebody else was responsible for the work.

    From that point on, I began researching the Sun with renewed zeal, at first scouring the internet and then book stores. As is often the case, books can seemingly leap into your hands at the right place and time, and it also dawned on me that there were already publications sitting on my own bookshelf on the topic, the significance of which I had failed to appreciate before. The most glaringly obvious issue was that the Earth is inextricably linked to the Sun by way of electromagnetism and radiation. As I came across works by Maurice Cotterell and others, I discerned a matter that is perhaps more obscure to most of us, in that the human body is intimately connected with solar rotations, vibrations and rhythms. Other authors spoke of spiritual associations with the non-physical side of the Sun, and suddenly I began joining the dots between that and the religions of ancient Egypt and the philosophies of the Greeks. 

    Over the course of the past year I have become increasingly aware of the spread of this phenomenon around the world. It is not just me, but thousands seem to be simultaneously embracing the ‘solar sciences’. In 2015 I became an associate of an American organisation which is dedicated to the teachings about, and the reverence of, the Sun. Throughout this book I will be taking great pains to avoid revealing any of their private teachings, but will provide their contact details to interested readers in the conclusion chapter. I am convinced that there is much to be gained by synchronising ourselves with the Sun’s energy, physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually. 

    Most of my writings are categorised by others as belonging to ‘New Age’ – a movement which has been prophesying since the sixties that the time of a ‘brave new world’ will soon be upon us. I am suggesting that the change is happening right now. The coming decades will see a giant leap, possibly a transmutation of human beings, and I propose that the survival of humankind will be well-served by harmonising with the star of our solar system.

    Part I

    Energy Streams Connecting Us to the Sun

    The Eye Of The Sun-Runner

    Planet Earth’s habitat lies in the Sun’s ‘bubble’, known as the heliosphere, and it is reasonable to suppose that all the matter in our solar system, from planets and asteroids to earthly life-forms, owes its origin to our very own star[1]. In a material sense then, the Sun is our god, our source and provider. Ancient Egyptians and Greeks believed the Sun we see is just the physical form of a higher ‘Intelligible or Spiritual Sun’. Philo of Alexandria called it: The Sun of the sun, the Intelligible object behind the object comprehensible by sense, and from invisible fountains he supplies the visible beams which our eyes behold.[2] In addition to the light, heat and solar winds the Sun sends our way, the Greeks taught that our Psyche receives a more subtle, invisible life-force called Pneuma, which, along with rays of the light spectrum, enters the human being via the eyes.

    Why is it important to be aware of this force? Simply put, tapping directly into the generator increases your energy supply and intensifies the light. Once linked by a powerful, unobstructed path of current, the circuit becomes complete. The output of the Sun is the vivifying stream of life itself. And for the spiritually inclined seeker, illumination advances exponentially as you increase your exposure to the source and the intake of its light rays. The term ‘Sun-Runner’ is taken from the seventh degree of the initiates of Mithraism in ancient Rome and denotes a higher state that one may aspire to.  

    Why is the eye the principle organ of absorption and how does the intake of light parallel the reception of Pneuma? In Plato’s ‘Republic’ he asserts, Of all sense-organs the eye is most sun-like.[3] Moreover he tabulates the ‘Simile of the Sun,’ demonstrating that in the Visible World the Sun is the source of growth and light, granting us the faculty of sight and visibility to objects of sense, while in the Intelligible World the Sun-behind-the-sun is the source of reality and truth, granting us the faculty of knowledge and intelligibility to objects of the mind and thought. 

    A number of points attract further enquiry into the optic-solar connection:

    Our world & its inhabitants have their origins & sustenance in the Sun;

    Just as the Sun’s light nourishes the body, its Pneuma enlivens the Psyche;

    Both light & Pneuma are absorbed by the eyes, our most sun-like organs;

    The Pneuma then enters the Psyche via the invisible, intelligible heart;

    This energy flow is a 2-way current and includes Ocular Transmission;

    Today we are reconnecting to our solar heritage, visibly & intelligibly.

    How We Receive the Sun’s Energy

    We know that millions of little photoreceptors in our eye’s retina convert light into signals that stimulate biological processes in the body’s cells. Most of these receptors take the form of cones or rods, but there is a third type, discovered in the 1990’s, called intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs), which support our circadian rhythms via the pineal gland[4]. The pineal is the gland in the center of the brain, often spoken of as the ‘third eye’. While it appears to be dormant in most of us, it is the primary receptor of the Pneuma that nourishes our Psyche and its related psychic senses. Blind people are able to receive the Sun’s radiation from these ipRGCs via the pineal gland[5]. As noted by the thirteenth century poet Rumi, Close both eyes, To see with the other eye.[6]

    Once the Pneuma has entered our being, how does it go about infusing us with its life-supporting properties? Just as

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1