RETURN TO NATURAL TIME
Living by the Pulse of the Earth
To live in natural time is to surrender to the intelligence that moves the stars.
It means allowing your life to unfold by resonance, not resistance.
Feel the pulse under your feet —
the vast heartbeat of Gaia beating deep beneath her molten core.
A rhythm so steady it has guided oceans and migrations since the beginning of time.
Let it rise through stones and soil,
through your body,
until your heart begins to beat in the same rhythm.
At first, the beats are separate — yours and the Earth’s.
But then they merge.
A single rhythm emerges.
You are breathing and pulsing together.
You are the same frequency as the planet.
Whenever you feel lost or disconnected, return to this rhythm.
The ground beneath you is ancient, wise, unshakable.
You are safe here.
What is TIME?
Time is not a straight line but a living field of movement — the unfolding of change perceived through consciousness. It is the rhythm through which the universe experiences itself, the measure of transformation between birth and decay. In physics, time is a dimension through which matter moves; in the human heart, it is the felt sense of presence and becomin.
Every cycle — from the orbit of planets to the beating of a heart — is an expression of time revealing itself. Time is not something we pass through; it passes through us, shaping the pulse of existence moment by moment.
What is the difference between artifical and biospheric time?
The difference between artificial time and biospheric time lies in their origin and rhythm.
Artificial time is human-made — linear, mechanical, and based on the clock. It was created to measure productivity and control schedules, often disconnecting us from the body’s natural intelligence.
Biospheric time, on the other hand, is organic and cyclical. It follows the rhythms of the Earth — the lunar phases, the tides, the seasons, and the heartbeat of ecosystems. It moves through pulse, breath, and regeneration rather than deadlines and minutes. Living in biospheric time means returning to the natural coherence between the human nervous system and the living planet.
When Time Was Changed
In 1582, Pope Gregory XIII introduced what we now call the Gregorian Calendar — replacing the Julian calendar that had drifted out of alignment with the solar year.
It was designed to synchronize religious holidays, agricultural cycles, and the economic systems of Europe.
But in doing so, humanity shifted from natural time — cyclical and organic — into mechanical time — linear and industrial.
The 13-moon calendar, which had guided indigenous and ancient civilizations for millennia, was compressed into 12 uneven months, erasing the feminine lunar rhythm from collective awareness.
This shift was more than administrative — it altered our perception of existence.
We began to live by man-made constructs rather than cosmic design.
We learned to measure life by productivity, not presence.
The result: a collective disconnection from nature’s rhythm and from the intuitive intelligence of the body.
Civilizations that Followed Natural Time
Long before the Gregorian reform, cultures across the planet honored the 13-moon cycle — each moon representing a unique phase in nature’s unfolding.
The Maya – Used the Tzolk’in and Haab’ calendars, both integrating lunar and solar cycles, following a 13×28-day rhythm for ceremonial alignment.
The Lakota and Cree Nations – Named each of the 13 moons according to ecological and seasonal changes (e.g., Wolf Moon, Strawberry Moon, Harvest Moon).
The Chinese Lunar Calendar – Follows 12 or 13 moons per year, depending on the appearance of a leap month, aligning festivals with the lunar cycle.
The Celtic Calendar – Aligned with the moon and tree cycles, with 13 months named after sacred trees (Birch, Rowan, Alder, etc.).
The Egyptians – Used a lunar calendar before their solar reform; temple rituals and agricultural seasons were guided by moon phases and the heliacal rising of Sirius.
The Druids – Timed ceremonies to the moon and solstices, understanding each lunar phase as a spiritual teacher.
The Hebrew Calendar – Still lunisolar, with months beginning at the new moon and a 13th month added to realign with the solar year.
The Polynesians – Navigated oceanic migrations by lunar and tidal cycles, naming moons for fishing, planting, and voyaging seasons.
The Inca – Used a lunar calendar tied to agricultural rituals and offerings to Pachamama.
The First Nations of Turtle Island – Saw time reflected on the turtle’s back: 13 larger shell plates for the 13 moons, 28 smaller ones for the days within each cycle.
Across cultures, time was relational — marked not by numbers but by events, growth, and rhythm.
Ten Examples of Natural Time Cycles
The Lunar Cycle (≈29.5 days) — Governs tides, fertility, emotions, and the menstrual rhythm.
Earth’s Rotation (24 hours) — Creates day and night, shaping the circadian rhythm.
Earth’s Orbit (365 days) — The year; regulates seasons, migration, and agricultural cycles.
The Precession of the Equinoxes (≈26,000 years) — A cosmic heartbeat influencing planetary consciousness.
Tidal Rhythms (≈12.4 hours) — Governed by the Moon’s gravity, reflected in the body’s water and emotions.
Solar Cycles (≈11 years) — Affect electromagnetic fields, auroras, and collective energy.
Menstrual Cycle (≈28 days) — Mirrors the moon; linked to hormonal and creative intelligence.
Circadian Rhythm (≈24 hours) — The body’s internal clock for sleep, hormones, and metabolism.
Schumann Resonance (7.83 Hz) — Earth’s electromagnetic heartbeat, synchronizing with human brainwaves.
Plant Growth Cycles (Seed–Blossom–Decay) — The full arc of creation mirrored in every life form.
Inner rhythm has begun to match the rhythm of the Earth.
Stop trying to force life to follow human timing.
Stop fighting the current — let yourself be moved by something vaster.
The Earth is a living pulse — an evolving consciousness that beats in spirals and waves, not seconds and deadlines.
She is breathing, turning, remembering herself through us.
To live in natural time is to feel the pulse beneath your feet and inside your chest,
to remember that your heartbeat has never been separate from hers.
The Psychological and Physiological Impact of Artificial Time
Living in artificial time — dictated by mechanical clocks and digital devices — disrupts the natural biological patterns that evolved over millions of years:
Circadian Disruption: Artificial light desynchronizes our biological clock, impacting sleep, hormones, and mood.
Loss of Intuitive Flow: Overriding the body’s natural peaks and valleys leads to exhaustion and disconnection.
Emotional Dysregulation: Lack of natural light suppresses serotonin and dopamine.
Chronic Stress: The constant push of deadlines keeps the body in fight-or-flight mode.
Temporal Anxiety: Linear time fuels scarcity — “not enough time.”
Loss of Meaning: Productivity replaces purpose.
Fragmented Presence: Awareness splinters into past and future, severing us from the cyclical “now.”
Artificial time pulls us out of coherence.
Natural time restores it.
Synchronicity and Surrender
Synchronicity is the language of natural time.
It is how the universe whispers, “You are in harmony.”
Allow yourself to be guided by signs, dreams, intuition — by the rhythm that doesn’t rush.
Your body is a compass of planetary intelligence.
Your pulse is the metronome of the universe.
When you live in coherence with Earth’s heartbeat, peace is no longer a destination —
it is the frequency you emit.
A Message from the Earth
“I have always been you.
Beneath the thoughts, the hurry, the worry —
I am the rhythm that never rushes,
the pulse that never strives.
Listen to me.
Feel me.
I am your original timekeeper.”
Return
Your life is not behind or ahead.
It is perfectly aligned with the rhythm of your becoming.
There is no need to catch up — only to remember.
Return to natural time.
Breathe with the wind.
Rise with the sun.
Rest with the moon.
And feel the Earth walking herself through you.