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We like to think we are self-made, but every traditional culture knew something we tend to forget: the dead are not simply "gone." They are not abstract memory, but a part of the bigger system. In both Indian and Slavic worlds, ancestors were maintained, fed and acknowledged with specific times for contact. And what's interesting - it wasn't about grief, but rather about maintaining a relationship, because when the lineage is honored, there is a certain settling in the field and things tend to move differently. When it's ignored, something feels off, as if unfinished stories are circulating without being digested. Ancestor work, for me, isn't about looking backward. It's about clearing the channel forward. About asking: what am I carrying that isn't mine? What can finally be laid down? Who in my line never got to rest? Those and so many other questions have helped me to repair my relationship with ancestors... And all of us already belong to a lineage - whether we know the names or not. Whether we like the story/heritage or not. The only real question is whether we're willing to be in conscious relationship with it. If this touches something in you, don't overcomplicate it. Light a candle. Pour a glass of water. Speak one name. Or simply say: I remember. And then listen. #thegreatremembering #lineage #ancestorwork #embodiedwisdom #ritualastechnology #consciouscontinuity #💓 फ़ौजी के दिल की बातें #jai shri krishna #ॐ HARE कृष्णा 🇮🇳 #jai shri ram #🇮🇳मेरा भारत, मेरी शान www.srividyatantram.com

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