Paisley
Chakra 2: I am powerful!
Last week we were moving into a flow of momentum, surrendering, and allowing life to snowball some changes into our lives.
This week we are in a chakra 2 focus, the sacral chakra, which is our power center and gut energy. This is a week to feel your power and take action! Line yourself up with your “yes” energy and take a risk (especially if you have a generator in your human design).
The map this week is the blooming of a crystalline diamond, in the color of manifesting, in a filigree-like blossom. A halo of healing around the energy of “what is going wrong with the world” shines from its apex, with a shadow of grace toward the masculine side of the page.
Paisley* leaves extend off this strange flower in four directions (representing setting a foundation). Paisley embodies themes of resilience, fertility, protection, spiritual growth, harmony, and creativity. The filigree pattern also adds the quality of threads or a weaving into form.
This map holds a rich complexity of meaning.
Extensions on the feminine side are the colors of starbeings and superpowers as a mothering energy below, and wisdom, health, evolution, ancestral and root flowering above.
Extensions on the masculine side bring power, resilience, and fertile seeds. Fatherly love and wisdom wraps down around the seeds, up through the stem, and surrounds the ovum-like bulb on the top left of the page.
I experience the energy of the week as fertile, unusual, and visceral. A seeding of new manifestations—through creativity and beauty.
Looks to be an interesting time. Hope you step into power and bring your creations out to the world.
Thank you for Embodying Our Evolution with us!
*The Paisley pattern is thought to have originated in Kashmir, India~11th century. Although, the boteh (teardrop-shaped motif with curved upper end-symbolic of life, eternity, fertility, and cypress tree) is thought to be Persian (early Iranian). Other scholars think it originated in the ancient near east as a leaf or wing form. Also, some evidence of it from Egyptian textiles dated between the 3rd and 5th centuries.The English name, Paisley, comes from a town of the same name in Scotland where textiles of the pattern were reproduced and popularized into the west as Kashmir shawls in the 19th century.