Some
crystals cannot be owned. Sometimes, the Earth wants to hold on to her
treasures or at least make sure that the spiritual nature of the frequency
stays in a spiritual location. Perhaps when we go back to the very beginning of the origins of the
Hope Diamond we begin to get a clue as to why
the stone appears to be cursed.
What
if no stone is cursed and all stones are merely a function of frequency? If you
are not at the correct frequency level, you cannot own the stone. But there is
more to it than that. What if the stone starts out in a gloriously high
frequency simply by its very nature and how it is handled and by whom determine what happens to those who seek to own that
which probably should not be owned by mortal people.
There
all kinds of stories about the Hope Diamond. Some say that it was stolen from
the forehead of a statue of the Hindu goddess Sita. If the stone was used for
religious purposes, the positive energy of the stone would have been magnified
by the energy of the prayers around it. So if a stone that is vibrating with
the powerful energy of prayer is stolen, what would that karma be for the
thief?
If
someone purchases the stone from the thief, they are then buying into the karma
of the situation, which is not going to be a happy thing. When you purchase
anything used, you buy into the attached karma of the object.
Imagine
if you bought a gorgeous dagger set with fabulous gem stones, but the dagger as
used to murder people, what is the karma attached to the dagger?
Perhaps
there is no such thing as a curse for any object. Perhaps there is only the
karma attached to the object based on how and where it was originally used or
abused. This is the Russian Roulette of buying any piece of antique jewelry. Powerful
stones come with powerful energy and these stones will magnify the karma of what happened to them.
Some
objects carry so much powerful karma that you cannot readily clear them with
traditional methods of washing, simple prayer, or charging them. Karma cannot
be cleared that easily. Sometimes, it is wiser to step away than to own
something that will rocket your own personal karma to the surface. Perhaps that is what
Harry Winston did when he eventually purchased the Hope Diamond. He wisely donated it
to the Smithsonian Institution in 1958 to be the main attraction of a new gem
collection. There it currently resides.
Perhaps that is also the case with the Bahia emerald, it will never be
owned by anyone because the frequency is too high for anyone to
personally own it.
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