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Time Is Not What You Think

    Time is not a straight line — it’s a spiral, a memory, a dream. What happens when we stop following the clock and start following the soul?

    We live by clocks. We plan our days, measure our age, celebrate new years and mourn lost time. We are raised to believe that time is fixed — that it marches forward in one direction, never stopping, never bending.

    But what if that’s not true?

    What if time is not a line… but a spiral?

    What if the past is not “behind” us at all — but layered, existing right here, accessible through memory, frequency, or even feeling?

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    In sacred traditions, time has often been seen as cyclical, not linear. Indigenous cultures track time through the seasons, the stars, the moon. Ancient mystics speak of timelines, parallel selves, dreamtime, and portals through memory and vision.

    And science — quantum physics in particular — is beginning to affirm what many already know deep in their bones:

    Time is relative. Time is flexible. Time is not what we think.

    When you begin to live in sacred time, you notice moments that stretch wide or collapse into stillness. You recognize synchronicity as a message from a parallel version of you. You understand that timelines are not destinations — they are frequencies.

    You don’t need to leave your body to time travel.

    You simply need to pay attention.
    To slow down.
    To remember what your soul already knows.