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Mayan Calendar Predictions

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People everywhere are talking about the ending of the Mayan long count calendar and the apocalypse it is supposed to usher in. The date is winter solstice, Dec. 21, 2012. People wonder what will happen when this mystical, ancient wonder reaches it’s final day. Will the world come to an end? Will time suddenly come to a halt? These are common questions by common doomsayers. A more important question is: where did these ideas come from?


There is no archaeological proof that the Mayan peoples ever believed that the world would end on Dec. 21, 2012. It was never written down by any Mayan scribe. The only thing that we know for certain is that the Mayan Calendar ends on this date. That’s all, nothing more. The idea that some unthinkable catastrophe is to happen when this now infamous date comes is an idea that came from modern scholars, and some might add very misinformed scholars at that.


Although the Mayan Calendar ends, as all calendars do every year, this does not necessarily mean the end of time. Other modern day scholars, like Ian Lungold and Terrence McKenna have pointed out that the Mayan Calendar coincides with the pyramids, all of which are counting and measuring the progression of the human conscience. Each progressing block gets faster and shorter, until we are thinking at the speed of creation and vice versa. This basically means that very soon we will no sooner think a thought than it becomes reality. This concept is truly mind boggling, but fascinating none the less. Look at the rate of our computer technology and how it advances by leaps and bounds on a daily basis. Not so hard to imagine what Lungold and McKenna were talking about anymore, huh?


Both McKenna and Lungold made predictions for the year 2012 to be a year of renewal or an advancement of the human race into a new era of existence. They also both made predictions that we would master the technology of time travel, and although these predictions have fallen short, this does not discredit the fact that these guys seemed to better understand what was really meant by the Mayan Calendar and its mysterious end date. Sadly they were never to see their predictions come to light. Terrence McKenna died of brain cancer in the year 2000, and he was followed in death by Ian Lungold in 2005, also by cancer.


Mayan Calendar predictions of doomsday are truly a farce made by misinformed, modern day scholars. The fact remains that there were never any written records found actually stating that Dec. 21, 2012 is to be the last day Earth would exist. Study up on the Mayan Calendar and its history and decide for yourself what to believe.

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