Gate 38 anyone? :) - Mark Germain
“Well, when one sits at a place long enough, there might be a need to fulfill, hence my second post from a number received here today, lol..
Gate 38 - The Gate of Opposition, The Fighter
This gate is found in the Root Center - which is a pressure center - the adrenal pressure to do and provides the fuel to potentially actualize what is needed.
The specific pressure here is to find, or struggle or not, for one’s purpose, their individual truth of what is for them to be in this world. There is this fuel to fight for it.
It is part of Individual Circuitry - which has a keynote of Empowerment… through one’s struggle and fight to find one’s purpose, their truth, it can empower others to do the same.
Also, being individual, and one of the three Gates of Deafness, it is not necessarily open to be swayed by what others tell them. There is an inherent “stubbornness” built-in, which keeps one on the individual pursuit of their purpose/truth.
It is part of the Stream of Intuition - the fuel to fight for one’s survival (without purpose, one’s truth, survival seems very base level and leads to, “what’s the point?”).
And not knowing what to fight for brings the potential for melancholy or worse.
This gate is one of 15 that are rooted in the long ago past of 5-centered beings, as well as mammals today, and is part of the DreamRave matrix - it is keynoted by “Aggression” or “Fierceness” in mammals, like a dog, for example. With this activation, one can experience very aggressive dreams, which can also be experienced in the waking life. [I have this gate a my P-Earth, and in my DreamRave - this has been my experience]
It is part of the Quarter of Mutation - Purpose fulfilled through Transformation (2nd Part = Fulfillment). The godhead is Vishnu - and as a not-self Personality Propaganda agent, it is the supreme godhead that blames suffering on being in Form… often as a sacrifice or a punishment - which through this kind of Deity, it will be alright - As it represents the godhead of monotheism - which propagates this “suffering/sacrifice” mentality. The deeper the suffering, the tighter the hold it has, and the more profound the religion in its capacity to reinforce this thematic.
The pressure to find purpose is found through “Me!”
One’s true purpose emerges… from within, not from the outside … and these mechanics demonstrate the how and why.
To fight or not to fight, there is no choice; just the potential to see it for what it is (including what is not).”