Hello Explorers!
🌍 Why Study Ancient Emotions?
As a medical intuitive and remote viewer, I often see that our health, behaviors, and cultural patterns are deeply tied to the emotional lives of those who came before us. Emotions are not just “personal”—they ripple through time, passed down through memory, energy fields, and even DNA.
DNA is influenced by both collective and personal emotional states. Epigenetics provides scientific evidence of this connection.
This is why we need to study emotions and the energy fields they create, because we are shaping the DNA of future generations.
By remote viewing the emotional landscapes of beings long gone, we can:
– Understand the roots of human feeling.
– Recognize how collective emotional states shaped evolution.
– Heal patterns still carried in our bodies and societies today.
Before humans walked the Earth, the world was ruled by the giants we call dinosaurs…
🦖 Stage One: Dinosaurs — The Raw Pulse of Emotion
Dinosaurs likely lived in a field of instinctive emotions.
Remote viewing often reveals:
Fear: constant alertness to predators.
Maternal care: protective energy around nests.
Aggression: territorial and survival-driven.
Play/curiosity: in smaller, bird-like dinosaurs.
➡️ Exercise: Sit quietly, set the intention: “I connect with the emotional field of the late Cretaceous period.” Write down impressions. Do you feel fear, calm grazing, or bursts of aggression?
🧬 Stage Two: Early Humans (Neanderthals & Denisovans)
Neanderthals lived in small tribes, facing extreme cold, scarcity, and constant survival stress.
Their emotional field shows:
Strong bonding within family groups.
Grief and loss, as lifespans were short.
Courage and endurance, facing harsh environments.
Connection to nature, deep awareness of earth and sky cycles.
➡️ Exercise: View a Neanderthal family sitting by a fire. What emotions come through? Is there warmth, fear of predators, or closeness among them?
🏛️ Stage Three: Ancient Civilizations
As societies grew (Egypt, Greece, China, Rome), emotions evolved:
Pride & ambition in builders and rulers.
Collective fear during wars or plagues.
Devotion & awe toward gods and mysteries.
➡️ Exercise: Choose a site—Roman ruins, a Greek temple, or a Chinese village. Set intention: “I connect with the emotional atmosphere of this place in its prime.” Write what you sense.
🔮 Lessons Through Time
Dinosaurs show us raw instinctual emotions.
Neanderthals show us bonding, grief, and survival courage.
Ancient peoples show us collective emotional patterns—faith, fear, and ambition.
We inherit these layers, and by remote viewing them, we bring awareness to how they live in us today.
✨ Practice Assignment
– Pick three time periods (dinosaurs, Neanderthals, Rome).
– Remote view the emotional field of each.
– Write your impressions in three words (e.g., “fear – hunger – bonding”).
– Reflect: Which of these emotions do you still see in human life today?
