The Great Shift of Consciousness
The life’s work of archaeoastronomer John Major Jenkins was to mathematically prove the Great Shift of the Mayan calendar. Jenkins demonstrated that the Maya based their entire calendrical system on an extremely rare cosmic event: The Galactic Alignment. He revealed that this alignment, which culminated around the winter solstice of 2012, signified the final synchronization of the path of the sun with the galactic equator. He (and others with him) saw this alignment as a gateway with the potential to transmit profound cosmic energy, making humanity uniquely receptive to a fundamental transformation.
Jenkins bridged the Mayan calendar with the Aztec cosmic system, which divides human history into five great eras, or "Suns." According to this view, we are currently navigating the fourth great shift in human history: the transition into the Fifth Sun—the Age of Movement, sometimes depicted as an eye enclosed within a sun. In Jenkins' interpretation, this became the Age of Awakening. He proposed that as we align with the source of the galaxy, the "filters" of previous eras dissolve, allowing humanity to finally see reality exactly as it is.
After December 21, 2012, the attention surrounding the Great Shift quickly faded. Nothing remarkable seemed to have happened. Many likely raised their eyebrows at Jenkins' calculations; many likely felt a sense of triumph. What they didn't know was that a process was already underway in the shadows—a process with the potential to realize John Major Jenkins' vision.
According to Jenkins' calculations, the critical mass of conscious individuals would be reached by 2030. This website is intended to serve as a compass during the process of transformation. It demonstrates that Jenkins was right in his claims, reveals the patterns that currently shape human thought, and provides the tools to shift into a new way of seeing—one with the potential to unlock possibilities far beyond what we can imagine.
This website is dedicated to the memory of John Major Jenkins (1964–2017)

Comments
Post a Comment