2 The seven chakras of the Earth

The ancient cultures of India developed deep knowledge of the subtlest aspects of human nature. One of them is the one related to the chakras, that is, the “nervofluidic” centers that maintain a close relation with the glands of internal secretion and whose progressive reactivation is marking the level of internal development of a person. There are seven main chakras and each of them has specific functions and features. Each chakra consists of several thousand small points where energy is perceived, concentrated and transformed. There are also countless nadis or channels that connect the points to each other, this intercommunication being the one that allows the functioning of the chakra as a whole.
Similar to what happens in the human, in the organism of the Earth there are seven particularly important chakras for what makes the abundance of receptor points and transformers of energy. Its location is extremely simple, it is enough to observe what have been throughout history the areas of the planet where they have flourished the cultures whose existence has allowed the progress of humanity. Based on these observations we find that the chakras of the Earth are the following:
1. Europe: covers virtually the same boundaries as the continent has designated with the same name.
2. Sumeria: it includes everything that is known as Near and Middle East.
3. China: includes not only the nation of the same name, but also Manchuria, Mongolia, Korea and Japan.
4. Egypt: even if its most important nadis are concentrated along the Nile River, in fact imprecise limits of this chakra cover a large area of northern and central Africa.
5. Indo-Tibetan: This chakra includes much of central and southeast Asia.
6. Peru: not only covers the region where the nation of that name, but virtually the entire southern portion of the American continent
7. Mexico: the Nadis that make up this chakra are distributed in North and Central America.