Amazonas

The healing traveled to South America today.

As I get a little faster and better at understanding where I'm being directed to send the healing, I am able to locate more quickly. This was a site in the northern part of Brazil. I had a good felt sense for the general area, but not a geographical location until after the healing, when once more I was able to use my sensing training and Google Maps to pinpoint a smaller area northeast of Manaus, between the Amazon river and a controversial dam reservoir called Represa de Balbina, in the state of Amazonas. I immediately felt and saw a large swathe of devastated rainforest, that seemed to be due to illegal logging. It was this huge gash in the rainforest and I got the strong sense that it had happened very recently. It felt like an open wound, with all of creation in that place and its surroundings still in shock.

Once again the healing light began to radiate from my hands in Temples through the soil to the site, working swiftly to restore, regenerate, soothe and heal the land, helping the entire ecosystem in immediate recovery. As the healing flowed, I could feel it also tap into the healthy trees still standing around the open wound, supporting them and also calling on them to help in the recovery process while healthy and standing. There was a strong energetic sense, not quite of grief as such, but of lack and loss emanating from the healthy trees and rainforest. 

The healing light worked in filling the wounded space, supporting, soothing, healing, and restoring until that part was complete, and the process shifted. It was time to reach the people directly involved in the devastation. Similar to the healing on the industrial site in Fort Bragg, California, the healing light went to those who were easiest to reach first. In this particular healing everyone linked to the rainforest wound, all of the planners, perpetrators, and post-extraction people were men.

The healing light started with the local inhabitants who had contributed or in some way enabled the process of stripping the rainforest. As this was happening I had a very strong felt sense of one specific man. Short, stocky, middle-aged. A father and a husband trying to provide for his family in whatever ways he knew how, however deeply misguided. The light found him and all those like him involved, then rose out of the earth up through the soles of their feet and deep into their beings. As this happened I felt this one man in particular, standing on the edge of the clearing and looking out at the devastation. He was suddenly being flooded for the very first time with a sense of shock and horror as he looked out on that terrible wound to mother earth, seeing his own home destroyed. His heart and soul were filled with grief and remorse. I felt a deep sense of his anguish and heard the words “My god, what have I done?”. There was a profound healing shift and I knew his attitude and his actions moving forward had changed forever. He had become a protector and caretaker of mother earth. I had a clear felt sense that the same or very similar was happening among his fellow locals, I just did not get a sense of them individually. 

When that part was complete the healing light shifted to the next ring outwards - the men who had come in from further afield and had been brought in with the chain saws, and the guns, and the big heavy-duty machines. The healing traveled through all of them, working to wake them up, to help them realize, to see, to come back into true conscious awareness and connection.

From there, it started traveling as if backward, out into the cities, into the corporate offices, the many shell companies and the harder to reach places. The energy among the far removed decision-makers and shadow operatives was much denser and darker. They were a lot harder to reach, but still the healing light kept flowing, never slowing or stopping, no matter what it found in its way. After what felt like a long time, it was done. 

Further Information

Ilegal Operations Shutdowns

The criminal ring linked to Tuesday's raids has cut down some 9,000 trees that were each over 100 years old in the span of 10 months, according to police.

Deforestation hit an 11-year high in 2019 and has continued to climb in 2020, rising 55% between January and April as compared to a year ago.

About 99% of deforestation in Brazil last year was illegal, according to deforestation mapping initiative Mapbiomas.

Illegal sawmills near Manaus shut down - Yahoo News

Shell Companies and Raids - “A Drop in the Ocean”

The operation conducted by the main federal environmental enforcement agency Ibama provides a rare glimpse into how illegally cut Amazon wood is inserted into legal timber supply chains, using shell companies and faking shipments.

The enforcement operation is one of the most complete ever conducted by the environmental agency because it caught so many of the people hiding behind or doing business with the shell companies, one Ibama agent told Reuters.

Ibama identified more than 220 companies and 21 logging concessions involved in various schemes disguising the origin of illegal wood, according to the documents seen by Reuters. - Late 2020 Reuters exclusive

Ways to Help if Called

Rainforest Foundation - Brazil

Tribals Homes Ground - Waimiri-Atrocari - Balbina Dam

The dam was established to provide a renewable electricity supply to the city of Manaus but was considered by locals a controversial project from the start, due to the loss of forest and displacement of tribal homes grounds. About 2,928.5 square kilometres (1,130.7 sq mi) of land formerly occupied by the Waimiri-Atroari was removed from the Waimiri Atroari Indigenous Territory and flooded. The dam was also criticized for its expensive construction and maintenance costs. As a result of the methane released from its vast reservoir, proportional to its output, the Balbina Dam emits ten times more greenhouse gases than a coal plant. The dam is the least efficient in Brazil in terms of the area flooded for each megawatt generated.

Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balbina_Dam

Image credit - Tommaso Protti in The Intercept

Image - Geology.com

Amazonas landscape thumbnail credit - Sébastien Goldberg on Unsplash

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