Megalithic Marvels - Ancient Energy & Lost Tech of Egypt (Roundtable)
Episode Date: June 8, 2023Derek Olson here to reconstruct the prehistoric past and journey deep into history’s marvels and mysteries with you. I have just returned from our Egypt tour, so in this episode I am excited to be j...oined by several special guests who joined me on our tour, and together are going to do a round table discussion regarding the many ancient technological mysteries that we witnessed as well as the energies we experienced. Among my six special guests, we have a geologist, stone-cutter and a doctor who specializes in neurology. Each will contrast their modern day practice with what they saw and learned regarding how the ancient Egyptians did it. SHOW NOTES OCTOBER 2023 PERU TOUR MAY 2024 EGYPT TOUR
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Hey everyone, Derek here to reconstruct the prehistoric past and journey deep into history's marvels and mysteries with you.
So I am fresh off our Egypt tour.
And in this episode, I am super excited to be joined by several special guests who joined me on our Egypt tour, each of whom I now consider a friend.
And we are going to kind of do a roundtable discussion regarding all these mysteries of Egypt and so many things that we experience.
together on the tour.
And I know I speak for all of us when I say I wish all 30 plus of us could be on this podcast that won on the tour.
But that would be a nightmare to manage on a podcast.
So I've got seven of you here or six of you.
And I'm going to quickly introduce you.
And for those that are going to be watching this by video, just wave at the screen when I mention you.
So first up we got Dr. Carla from Texas.
I believe you're in the Austin area and really excited, Carla, to talk to you kind of about some of these modern-day medical technological breakthrough therapies that you're seeing that are being used to heal the body holistically and what you learned about the ancient Egyptians basically doing the same thing in these ancient temples.
It's going to be cool to ask you about.
Next, we got Alan from Montana.
Alan, thanks for being here.
Alan is a geologist and I'm excited to ask you your thoughts as a geologist on why these
prediluvian, we'll call them, ancient Egyptians were using certain types of stones
to build these pyramids and these other structures. Next we got Dave and Becky from the
UK. It was really cool to have Europe represented on the tour and excited to ask you
guys about Dave you're a stone cutter so you cut stone for a living with machines and i think like
3d printing machines so super excited to ask you about how your takeaways seeing how these ancient
pre-deluvian egyptians seem to have been crafting these pyramids and these blocks some that are
over a thousand tons with precision.
Some of these statues featuring muscle tone.
I want you to tell us how they did it.
Next, we've got Tim from Ohio.
And Tim is a military serviceman.
He served our country.
And it was kind of cool to hear your story.
You've read all kinds of books on these topics.
And we had some great discussions.
So super excited to ask you.
want to get your take specifically, Tim, on the prediluvian ancient Egyptians versus the dynastic
ancient Egyptians and see what you got to say. Then we've got Jason from California. You had a
crazy experience in one of these ancient temples that I can't wait to ask you about and have everybody
here. So I think we got everybody. Thanks again for taking your time out to be with me today, guys.
and it was so cool to be with you in Egypt.
It was crazy, right?
By the end of that tour, we were literally like kids at a kids camp.
We were best friends.
It was the coolest group of people I think I've ever hung out with.
Everybody got along and there was no fights.
There was no drama.
And none of us really seemed like we wanted to leave.
We were having so much fun.
So let's dive into this.
Dr. Carla, you are from Texas.
You work in the medical field.
Tell us a little bit about some of these modern day medical technological therapies breakthroughs that we were talking about that are being used to heal the body holistically, maybe through like resonance.
And then your takeaways learning from Muhammad Ibrahim, our tour guide and Egyptologist, about how these ancient Egyptians were doing some of the same things in these ancient Egyptians.
temples, your thoughts? Yeah, and I work in functional neurology, so what does that look like? There's so
many inputs that go into the body that create a certain output. So I already use things like
electric stimulation, laser, resonance, hydrated oxygen, frequency, sound to send different signals
into the nervous system to help regulate the nervous system. So when I learned from Muhammad that
this was, these were created basically to enhance the energy frequencies of humans. I was just
like, how did they know all of this back then? And instead of looking at necessarily like blood work
and labs, it's so much, we are electrical creatures and so much of our, our bodies respond to
the electricity from Earth. And so this is the ways that we're trying to discover now currently to
how can we input into the nervous system without it necessarily being like a
drug or surgery. So there are, a friend of mine has this resonance bed, which I brought up to you,
where it's this chamber you lay on. And it emits a vibration, which is similar to Earth's vibration.
It also releases molecular hydrogen. It has sound and voice. It has red light. It has,
you know, goes through different, different waveform patterns to basically reset your nervous
system, kind of like when you're sitting at a beach and you get that reset and that there's so much
more than just like, oh, I'm, you know, why is it actually resetting your nervous system? So I was
fascinated by each temple and pyramid had its own purpose. You know, some of them were more for
the fertility like he was mentioning and some were more for healing. So it was just so fascinating to
me to see like that they were already thinking on this level and we're only just like
scratching the surface now in our modern education of getting to this point.
And technology now has gotten so advanced, but we're still not even near what they already
had created then.
So it was super amazing for me.
And I know Jason felt it, but I was literally like vibrating the whole time.
Like, what is going on?
Tell us a little bit of more about that, what you experienced because.
Yeah, a lot of the energy that these pyramids were producing, you know, as Mahmah would say, it's been shut off.
But you can still feel some of this energy at certain places.
Tell us where you might have felt energy the most, Carla.
Which site was it?
Do you remember?
It started at the steps pyramid, even on walking around the outside of it.
and I had to like actually walk away because I thought like am I crazy and I just like
kept feeling my arms particularly vibrating especially my hands like and it was so intense
and then when we would go away it would kind of dissipate I remember John and I were also like
am I crazy do you feel this too and he's like I feel it too and then we went to the Hawthor one
and that one I was just like my whole body I was just like whoa it just felt so
true. I think that's the only way I can describe it. Like you can, like what is truth actually,
but truth is like a feeling. And it just felt so true to me. And even if it wasn't as active as
Mohammed says it is normally, it was, it felt active to me. I can't possibly imagine how active it
felt back then. Thanks for sharing. That is so incredible. You mentioned Jason's experience.
So Jason will jump to you. I think we were visiting, wasn't it, um, ISIS temple?
And we were entering what's considered the Holy of Holies, the inner part of this structure where you enter this, you know, basically this square room.
And inside this square room, obviously the walls are lined with just ancient Egyptian depictions and hieroglyphs.
And on the center, the floor is covered with wood.
And Muhammad had a theory for that.
You can share that why that was, Jason.
but protruding out of this wooden floor deck is what looks like an ancient energy charging device.
Tell us what you experienced in there, Jason, and how long it lasted and your experience.
You're right. It was at the Isis temple, so Phila in Aswan.
And we walked into this Holy of Holies.
I wasn't even really thinking intentionally about it, but I just placed my left hand just a few fingers on this.
this granite block.
And I felt this like rush of energy just like maybe a second, second and a half.
Unrestakable from my feet all the way up to my head.
Kind of like an adrenaline rush, but it wasn't, it was a different feeling.
It was a different sensation.
Very, very positive feeling like this like empowering like, you know, jolt.
And I was just sitting there with my hand on the block kind of looking around.
I'm like, you know, is anyone else feeling? Oh, my gosh. And it's interesting because
Nohammed had been talking and explaining to us how like all of these temples, the small or
the large, had some sort of a healing component or some sort of a healing center. And they are all,
you know, based on their their location and the materials that were used to construct them and
the design of them, different, right? So they, it would make sense that they kind of emit different
slightly different frequencies or at least they might, right? So he explained after the fact that,
you know, we're all getting vast in these energies and like Carla was explaining like that Carla
and a few other folks on on the tour had been expressing this that like, oh my gosh, you're like
walking through these temples. Like this feels pretty like it's wild. But I hadn't felt anything
to that point. So it seems that something with the specific frequency, like the resident frequency
or whatever it is of my body and that particular location, you know, touching that.
stone, which, you know, granted is has different chemical and, you know, resonant or electrical
properties than obviously the wood that were walking around on these planks. And like, it was almost like
a conductive sort of mechanism by making that contact. I got like this, you know, a friend of mine
called it like an energy transfusion, which totally resonated. And that lasted. I mean, I was
honestly having a hard time putting words together for about an hour there. I was just so like,
Oh, yeah.
It was really, it was like this magical feeling.
Until I went to sleep that night, it was probably like nine or ten hours later.
I was feeling this full body, like my arms or legs and my chest.
It's sort of like resonant feeling like an adrenaline rush, but different.
And yeah, that was to me very eye-opening and mind-blowing.
We could talk so much just about, yeah, some of what we were experiencing and feeling.
Alan, I want to jump to you, the geologist, because Jason just,
mentioned, you know, the properties of some of these stones. Talk to us a little bit about
your thoughts, Alan. You're a geologist. You've spent a lifetime studying the properties of stones
and rocks. And what was your takeaways going to Egypt? And you might have already known a lot
about this, but just hearing from Muhammad and others myself about all these different, how
these the structures were built with specific materials for specific purposes, whether it was the limestone
on the outside of the Great Pyramid or the Rose Grant inside the King's Chamber of the Great Pyramid.
What are your thoughts?
Yeah, I purposely went on the trip, not reading much and just wanted to go with an open mind.
King's tunnels of Sakara were just so impressive to me.
The mountain ranges here in the west are typically cored by old.
granitic like rocks and you know I'm a Neanderthal I don't I don't feel much in terms of
energies and but when you're on solid old pre-Cambrian igneous rocks you know
you're on solid ground and to be in those rooms consisted of these huge
megalithic blocks of of that granite in the in the sarcophagi that are
made of diarite even more dense than the granite itself.
It's just a very steady, solid feeling.
And to be in the presence of those little alcoes with those huge boxes had a tremendous impact on me.
And I'll be wondering about that for a lifetime, I bet.
Alan, wasn't it fascinating that, so you've got the Giza pyramids.
and inside, so the outside is limestone, right?
The blocks, yet inside the intricate precision chambers, the so-called Kings chamber, for example,
it's made of this rose granite that you referenced.
Inside the Giza pyramid, you know, obviously they had chopped a tunnel in at the level that we entered,
but then it intersected the original tunnels that they had built.
And it's just a huge contrast in terms of the architecture and planning and execution of it.
It was just a beautiful experience to travel through those chambers or the tunnels leading to the chambers.
And to spend time in that one room was just a tremendous experience.
And you can see that whatever the reason was, they had clear intentions of what they were doing.
Let's jump to Dave and Becky here from the UK.
Dave, you are a stone cutter by trade, and you were shown me some photos and videos of the amazing
things you cut with these giant machines.
And even, it's like 3D print machines, right?
So tell us about what you do a little bit and the stone that you, you're shaping and cutting,
and then your takeaways of seeing, again, these stones, some that weigh 70,
tons in the King's Chamber or you saw the unfinished obelisk which is over 1,200 tons.
How in the world were they doing this?
So yeah, we cut limestone, which is quarried on the island.
The machines I use are five-axis CNC machines and you use computers to 3D draw things.
It's like the slab we've seen outside the pyramid, which had like 12 sides.
we'd use a computer to draw that
and then we'd use the file
put it on our saw
and then use a camera
to take a picture
and then you put the file
where you need it on the slab
but with the 70 ton blocks
the biggest
blocks of stone we use in our factory
are up to 18 ton
and even that is a struggle for us
really because our forklifts
the 16 ton
so I don't know how they'd move a 70
ton block without
a 70 ton forklift
that's the easiest where I could describe it
but and something about
like the frequencies that people were feeling
because Mohammed said that some people don't feel them
if they're near coasts or live on
like live near limestone
and because that's what we said wasn't it
because we didn't really
feel anything, but then he said that if you live near the sea, which we do, that you would
already be experiencing it, especially if you live near limestone. But yeah, because I was kind of
upset that I didn't feel anything, but then he said that. And it was kind of like, oh, okay, kind of,
maybe we are experiencing it on a daily basis anyway. But I did feel something in the red pyramid,
but I can't tell if it was like a, um, a mixture of, like exertment.
because I was quite excited,
but I felt like a bond towards everybody,
like immediately when we were in the little chamber.
Especially, like, it was just like a friendship kind of thing,
like, for people I've only met for two days.
But, yeah, it was great.
And in the Dendera Temple,
where I felt like a calming feeling.
Like, it was really,
especially when he mentioned the female,
what was he said?
Muhammad was talking about the female energy there
and it was kind of like a calming energy
and I could feel that for sure.
I felt a peace almost.
Becky, I know you were amazed by
the absolute massive colossal statues at Luxor Temple.
These things are
I don't even know how tall they are,
but they're larger than life, right?
Yet they feature muscle tone
and tell us what you were amazed by that was on the backs of these massive statues.
So on the back of them, they had hyroglyphs that I can't imagine them being cut by hand at all.
They were so precise.
And so even that I feel like if I were to touch them, I would like damage myself.
The edges were just so crisp.
I just couldn't like get over how clean it all was.
I agree with you.
That was one of my favorite things I saw.
I was telling you before we hit record that I saw that site last year, but it was at night.
And so it was really hard to get quality video and photo, let alone see these intricate 3D printed symbols on the backs of these statues.
We saw those at other sites as well, but there was something special about.
those. So I was blown away by that. Tim, let's jump to you and then we'll go back to Carla.
Tim, you and I had some great conversations on the trip. You seem very well read on the subject of
prediluvian verse dynastic Egyptian. And for people who, you know, might be new to all this,
mainstream
Egyptology and history
tells us
that these
dynastic
Egyptians of
3,000 BC
built all of this
in Egypt,
built the pyramids
tombs,
built these
ancient temples,
and the
dynastic
Egyptians were an
amazing
civilization.
We don't want
to discount that.
Just looking at
the archaeological
record from what
we know what
tools and materials
they had,
unless they
had secret
lost technology,
they could
not craft, right, Tim, rose granite, that's a seven on the moz scale with their softer copper
tools. So tell us a little bit about your thoughts on all that and what amazed you most.
First off, when we talk about the moss scale, when you go through all these different rocks,
you know, you get granite, diorite, basalt, these are all eight or nine on the moss scale.
Then, you know, usually you get this neat little ordered history in the museums where they have
these nice little placards and things that read to you that all of this was made with,
you know, very basic hand tools made of copper, right? And copper was pretty plentiful,
but it's very weak in terms of just bashing up against a rock, right? And what I found the most
interesting of all the places that we went was the serapium, right? Where you go down into this
tunnel system, right, where these corridors are, you know,
relatively narrow. And you have to walk downstairs into them, and the corridor that you go into
is rounded, and it's maybe only three or four arm breaths, you know, wingspans across. And when you
go in there, there are these 25 massive boxes made out of, like I said earlier, granite,
beryte, basalt. And we're made to believe that they made perfect 90-degree angles and smoothed
all of these things and rounded curves on the boxes with just copper. And I just found that absolutely
absurd to say the least. But with these boxes, right, you have to think of the logistics of one,
just getting these boxes down there because these boxes are two meters tall, two meters wide,
and more than likely, you know, like four meters in length, right? And so you weigh this and this is a
40 ton box and then you remember oh wait there's a lid on these two and that's another 20 ton so we're talking
about moving 60 tons of material through these narrow corridors downstairs i don't know if you've ever
moved furniture into a new house but you know just moving these giant boxes around quarters is
a logistical nightmare i mean to say the very least and in the fact that they lowered them down
another set of stairs to be perfectly centered in each chamber, right? And so my thought was,
okay, we have the form. You know, these boxes have a certain form on the lids. They're made to seal,
right? They have these unique little lips on the bottom side of the lid so that they shut and that
they stay sealed. They're not opening anytime soon, right? And so we have that form. So what function
did it serve? What was its purpose of being down there? I mean,
We're told that it was some kind of sarcophagus or that they were used to store.
What's the main story?
It was a golden calf that the one that got blown up.
The guy found a whole bunch of idols and things like that, but we don't know where they are.
So pretty convenient.
My thought on those boxes were that for the purpose of sealing them, that they could have been used as storage units because we know, I mean,
it's just so obvious anything made out of granite basalt or diarite had to have been made pre-dynastic because the dynastic Egyptians were using mainly limestone and we've seen that we have plenty of examples of that and their tooling would be indicative of that's like their limitation is using limestone and so my thought on the serapium boxes are that they were for storage for possible like grain silos if you will
for maybe the next cataclysm and that they can preserve their agricultural heritage, if you will.
Carla, any other epiphanies you had on this trip, or did you have a favorite site,
or was there anything else that just took you back that you weren't expecting on this trip?
I mean, I didn't have a lot of pre-education, so all of it was mind-blowing to me.
I think my favorite, and I think it's Dantara is the technical name, but the one that was like the Hawthor Temple.
I mean, just I think the quality of the images that are still on the rocks was unable to see that even the colors and the zodiac signs and the different portals and universes.
And I was just like, and Muhammad is so amazing that he can actually read that and showing things, you know, like the symbolism of the snake and the genie and all this.
mythology that we've been told but kind of in a different way, it was all right there. And I'm
like, that was just so fascinating for me that we've been talking about these things forever. And
you know, you can say astrology's woo-woo, but it was like they were using it in such
precise ways. And still to this day, we kind of use those same ways of thinking about it. But
even down to like, you know, the Blue Lotus and the papaya or papyrus and like,
how they combine that to elicit a different state of mind.
And it was all just like written there, very similar to what we do now with different
plants and ways that we try and say, how can I, how can we enhance our ability and our
energy?
I think that, that just like looking in that room, I was just so blown away and in awe
the whole time.
But honestly, I also agree with Tim that, I don't remember the exact name of that place,
but it, Muhammad,
describing it like an energy grid, like they were preparing for the next time that they had to go
underground and how can they still preserve energy from earth and above? I mean, the whole thing just
blew my mind. And I've also been to Peru and I know you're doing a trip. The similarities of that,
I was like, this looks exactly like it did in Peru. It's so, but, and like, exactly. I'm like,
that also I was just like how is this how are we just like letting and go of the concept that this wasn't all connected um so yeah I mean literally like Jason was saying or maybe it was Dave like from from day one and I for me it just kept building and building and building and every place we went even the Isis temple as well I was just like it just keeps getting more and more like well there this is like an undeniable truth that they had this knowledge that
that we are even trying to scratch the surface to get back to at this point.
And like I said, I work with the nervous system and everything that they talk about is what we're trying to create with technology right now, right?
We're trying to create electric stem and laser and how can we input the nervous system with technology.
But they were already doing it with tools from the earth and stone and the stars.
and I was just like, this is just true to me.
It just felt so right and what we're trying to kind of go back to in our elementary version.
I like how you said that what we're trying to go back to.
I mean, that's it right there.
I'm glad you brought up Dendera Temple, or that's the Dendera Temple complex, which has the Hathor Temple.
That, Timi was one of my favorite sites.
these last two years I've gone, it's literally larger than life.
Again, if you're new to this, our tour guide is Muhammad Ibrahim,
who's also an Egyptologist, brilliant mind,
and one of the few Egyptologists on the planet that has broken with mainstream
and believes that a earlier civilization actually built the pyramids
in a lot of these megalithic temples.
He refers to them as the pre-deluvian ancient Egyptian.
Egyptians. So they would have predated the dynastic Egyptians who came along in 3,000 BC
and repurposed everything and built on top of the ruins, right? Maybe similar to how we see what
the Inca did in Peru. They came along in the 1400s and built on top of these megalithic
foundations. But I'm glad you bring up that Hathor Temple, the color is beyond belief, the blue
color. And these ancient prediluvian Egyptians, they had this high order of astronomical knowledge,
right? They had profound knowledge regarding the principles responsible for the created universe
when you start learning about their creation mythos. They had this precise and profound
universal knowledge of harmonics, proportional laws, and mathematics and scientific knowledge. And you just
see it embedded in these temples, specifically the Hathor temple. But it's not written like in the
temples and texts, but you see it depicted, right, in a harmony proportion and the symbols.
And I just left actually in this trip with more questions than answers. Like, I was truly
more amazed about who these pre-deluvian ancient Egyptians were. And they seemed to be
so at harmony, in a sense, with the earth.
Everything was holistic, simple yet high tech.
And again, the pyramids are one thing.
These ancient temples are another.
And then you've got the statues.
And I even believe we have their pottery like we saw in the Egyptian Museum.
Does anybody want to talk about?
any of those topics, the pottery you saw, or these prediluvian statues with muscle tone and the 3D symbols?
I felt like I got to the point where I was even like, I can tell a difference.
Like, this one is clearly perfectly smooth, and this one is like, you know, I could have done that.
And you can really like see it very clearly.
You're like, this one was very advanced and this is like it was chipped by copper limestone like you were saying.
And the portals and the stargates, like seeing how they were trying to create ways for us to see the universe differently.
And even his conversation about how our aliens are potentially our ancestors that were able to elevate out and that they check on us.
And there's just so many different conversations that I'm like, whoa, I've never thought about it like that.
And it feels true to me.
Jason, did you have a favorite site or something that just really surprised you that you saw on this trip?
Well, definitely the Phila Temple stands out, but the Osirion as well, like stands out in my mind that is next to like the temple in Abidos, but it's, it's much lower in the ground.
And for whatever reason, that just felt so much older to me.
Like, it kind of, the construction there,
remind me of some of the construction and the, like, the teplenex of the sphinx and, like,
what you see in Peru and, like, all these sites around the world.
You can kind of Google some of those similarities.
And it's mind-blowing.
But that just felt older and just somehow more, there was, like, more weight to it.
Like, it kind of confirmed as if nothing else had, but, like, so many things on the
strip did that there was, like, this older kind of,
remnants of an older civilization.
And to me, some things that stood out, like, you know, the precision at scale of all of these
sites is mind blowing.
Like some of the things that we saw, like, you know, precision or saw cuts and drill marks
and all that stuff, like you could, you know, go for years and just continue to like study
all that.
But my mind goes to why and so what, right?
Like, there was clearly so much.
much intention behind building and constructing these these monuments and these sites that had some
specific function like you wouldn't go to that effort to build something that would be indestructible
and last through you know the millennia without a clear plan in mind and you know the idea of
healing centers really resonates the idea that these temples were like academies of teaching
is a term that Muhammad used, like, Dendera, where they have this massive, beautiful drawings
and all these stories that they're depicting. But also this idea of, like, their understanding,
these ancient Egyptians understanding of consciousness and, like, trying to, like, make a,
like, a timeless teaching of, like, their understanding of the cosmos and how to elevate consciousness
and, like, the different symbols of the blue lotus all over these different temples. Like,
they clearly had some way of connecting to a higher level of a plane of knowing or existence or whatever that was.
And that was something that, you know, I heard about or learned about, but it's just very,
something you can't miss once you start to see that sort of understanding of their place in the world
and the fact that they made such precise monuments, temples, pyramids to either enhance or elevate that.
A lot of work has been done throughout the desert of Egypt and, you know, my, I think about being a kid and tunneling down and making forts.
And these people really knew what they were doing.
And whether it was just plain habitation, survival, in a desert extreme climate, or they had intentions of escaping and being protected,
Muhammad would always talk about how every site was insulated by all the mud-brick complexes.
And it's just astounding how much work went into doing all that insulation work.
You know, timing is always an issue in terms of when were things built in relationship to all that.
But just the sheer volume of work that was produced is overwhelming.
And you just don't do that on a whim.
You have clear intentions of doing something that's going to be productive for you in your life and beyond.
I'm glad you bring up these mud walls that were found encasing all these ancient temples.
And according to Muhammad and many others, mud is an insulator.
And so it's like the dynastic Egyptians, when they came along and found these megalithic marvels, they, it's almost like at one point in time, eons ago it was, you know, free energy for all, right?
Or free healing at this temple.
The dynastics show up, surround it with mud, insulating these healing properties, this energy, and keeping it for themselves, right?
or keeping it or to make you pay to get it.
Or isn't that kind of like human nature?
I found it fascinating when we went to the bent pyramid,
how these rock crystals are all over on the ground surrounding it, right?
And they're not found at the red pyramid next door.
It was just at that bent pyramid.
And when you look at the bent pyramid, you see,
and I hate that name because it gives it a connotation
that there's something wrong with it.
There clearly is, and it was created like that, right?
Because I can't remember how many feet up, but the wall tilts in at a 45,
or the roof tilts in a 45 degree angle.
But you can see like these markings on the roof of this pyramid,
where it's like the material was leaking out.
And I think Muhammad's theory is it was creating, I'm blinking.
what was it called?
Oh, ammonia.
Amonia.
Thank you.
Yeah.
It was producing ammonia and you can see, Jason saves the day.
You can see it leaking out literally on the roof, those spots.
And the theory is that those rock crystals on top were an insulator.
So stuff like that, I'm bragging, I guess, on our tour.
Your average tour is not going to know anything about any of that.
but I just love that we were learning about that stuff.
Dave, Becky, Tim, anything else that just blew you away, jumped out at you that you feel like we've got to talk about on this episode?
The granite vases in the museum.
I found it bizarre that they were hidden away, almost, behind, like, pillars compared to the other work.
Like, the most perfect stuff was hidden, like behind cases.
but also that big block that was the granite box that had the imperfect cut in it.
Because to me it looks like someone has gone in too fast of a blade
and that's caused a wobble which would cause the bend.
And like my friend at work thinks that Kevin,
that it looks as if someone who's found this technology
don't know how to use it and they've used it incorrectly
which has caused the strange cut.
But it also looks like,
because Mohammed was saying,
that two blades were used.
But in my eyes,
it looks like one was used
and it was flipped
and then they'd cut the other half.
But it doesn't really explain
why there was a bit left at the edge.
Just the bent pyramid as well,
like you say.
I can't see how,
whoever made these
clearly found it very easy.
And in my eyes,
if it was a mistake,
They wouldn't have finished it the way they had.
Fascinating.
Dave,
I'm glad you brought up in that Egyptian museum.
I mean,
we could have spent three days there.
Yeah,
easily.
There was so much,
so much to uncover.
And like you said,
some of the greatest artifacts in the entire museum
are just hidden behind a pillar.
It doesn't even get its own case.
It's just out in the open,
sitting on top of this thing.
We could go put our hand in it.
And then the box,
to me is the greatest thing in that entire museum
because it shows the evidence of lost ancient tech.
They had a giant machine with some kind of blade
that was cutting that.
You can see it from the top, the bottom, every angle,
the other sides hollowed out.
That is literally, I did a video.
I kind of walked away from our group
after we left that block.
And you see all these other tour groups
looking at dynastic stuff around it.
And it's just dark off on the corner.
And it's just like forgotten, you know, nothing to see here.
But one of the greatest things you could see.
So I'm glad you brought that up.
Tim, what about you, man?
What was your other takeaways?
Yeah.
So going back again to the bent pyramid,
I think we all just kind of overlooked the gypsum or calcite
that we found these shards, you know,
surrounding the entire base or parameter of the pyramid.
And I loved when Muhammad brought up that this gypsum or calcite uniformly covered the entire pyramid.
And you think, okay, like maybe, oh, a mosaic or something like they were just kind of gluing these pieces on.
No, calcite and gypsum and things like that, they percolate from limestone when it's exposed to groundwater.
When we found these shards all over the place, I mean, they were uniform in depth.
I mean, any part that you picked up, it was all about a quarter or a half an inch.
So my thought was how in the world would they have uniformly covered this, where the entire thing was one solid piece all the way around the limestone, right?
And so my thought was the Egyptians or the pre-dynastic or anti-deluvian Egyptians, they had some sort of DIY, grow your own geodes at home kind of kid.
And so they would have known how to manipulate,
they would have known how to manipulate these stones
and actually to bleed or sweat this material out of the limestone.
And I mean, to me, like, I grabbed so many of those pieces.
Like, I loved looking at them.
And just the fact that they were all like the same thickness, too,
just blew my mind, which means that they were probably polishing it too,
which, again, like, where are they getting all these tools?
Where are these tools?
who was doing this kind of stuff.
It just blew my mind.
Okay, so this was the first time all of you were in a pyramid or the Great Pyramid, correct?
Yes.
Nod.
Okay.
So you might have heard me talk about this before.
This was one of my big revelations last year.
And I had been to Egypt back in 2008 and been in a pyramid.
But I did know back then, you know, what I've learned these last few years.
So I want to set this up and I want to then open the floor.
for any of you guys to talk about this.
But so you're in the Great Pyramid.
If you guys went down to the subterrining chamber,
which is the, you know, the lowest chamber under the bedrock,
that is at least a 300 foot steep descent, right?
You're bent over because you can't stand upright.
And even if you have minimal gear on, a small backpack,
you're holding these railings.
you're on these little wooden step planks modern day.
It's a rough haul, right?
And then just to get in some of these chambers,
you know, you have to bend over on the subterranean chamber.
You literally have to do a belly crawl almost to get in.
And so I want to hear your takeaways.
Do you guys really think if these were built as tombs
by the dynastic Egyptians of 3,000 BC,
if you remove these railings and wooden stairplanks,
can you really picture the dynastic Egyptians with hundreds or thousands of people
traversing up and down on their way to a funeral with massive sarcophaguses and statues?
Not able to stand upright?
Do you think that was possible?
Particularly when we went into the valley of the kings,
you know, some of those tunnels were obviously blasted over, and the hieroglyphic paintings are gorgeous.
But to me, it's like when you go down to where the actual sarcophagi are, the boxes, the boxes screened to me that this was done by other people long before the tomb occupiers came along.
Great insight. Becky, did you have any other insights, favorite moments to share?
I couldn't get my head around how, like, obviously you grow up, you see pictures of everything
and like you learn about it in school, but just being there just, it's so much bigger
and they just don't do it justice. And I feel like everywhere we went, I was just blown away
by the size and how they decorated everything and how everything's been preserved.
Still can't think of anything that I could now that I could compare it to.
And this is coming from somebody who you guys live in the UK and you get to see all these
castles and you get to see Stonehenge.
But this was even greater than that, wasn't it?
Carl, I got to go back to you.
So when we were first starting off with you, you rambled off super fast.
Some of the stuff you're actually using to treat people to heal them.
Can you just spend a few more minutes on that for slow people like me?
Just say it a little slower so I can take this in.
Because that's so intriguing to me.
Because I love that, again, you're a doctor and you basically say we're trying to get bad.
to what they were doing way better in the ancient days.
Tell us more about that.
When I lecture about the nervous system,
I always start by like, let's back up and like what is the purpose of the nervous system?
Why do we even have a nervous system?
Why are we different than plants and trees?
Because chemically we're pretty similar in a lot of ways.
But the difference is because we move.
And that's because we have to defy gravity.
and so when we look at how can we integrate the nervous system we look at the way that we move reflexively
the way that we move with gross motor the way that we move with fine motor and the electrical input
of that frequency of firing just like in electricity when you're looking at you know the way
electricity works it's it's a it's a resonance and our body literally develops based off of that
resonance. And so we can use that in medicine to say, okay, we're going to, you know, a really
basic example is you injure a muscle and you put an electric stimulation pad on it to alter
that frequency of firing so that it makes that muscle feel better. We can also use laser and light.
And this has been done for almost decades now. It's still relatively, you know, the biohacking
world is is doing this and talking about it now more than we ever have been but it's we're still
only scratching the surface of having these conversations of like what else can we do besides a
drug to alter that frequency of firing and there's where there's so many possibilities and it
just felt to me like they already had it figured out and and we
are trying to find different ways to regulate ourselves and heal ourselves using what can we do
besides just a drug and we only have such a limited amount of technology at this point and
great technology I think we're only getting there and now we have frequency chambers and
you know, even, like I said,
ozoneated oxygen and sound and resonance.
And going back to my initial comment on gravity,
most of our nervous system is responding to a low level frequency.
And those frequencies base everything off of like how when we,
can I fall asleep right now?
Is it going too high?
And our ability to heal on a cellular level.
So to me it was just like,
they already did it all.
They just knew.
And I was actually blown away by that there was 127 pyramids.
And each of them all throughout Egypt and each of them has a different healing purpose.
All with Muhammad's theory that they all were with a purpose of different frequency to heal or bring humans up to a different frequency of firing in our nervous system.
that we maybe weren't capable of anymore.
No, that's so fascinating.
Thanks for sharing that.
I would say that if you're curious about Egypt and the pyramids and everything that we've been discussing,
don't hesitate to go with Derek and Mohammed and Salvadorers.
From the moment you land to the moment you leave Egypt,
you are handled with people who are looking out for you
and they make everything so easy to focus and enjoy the sites that we all came to see.
So A-plus, Derek.
Thanks so much, Alan.
I did not pay him to say that either.
It was an amazing tour.
Seriously, thanks to each of you for coming.
And again, I consider each of you friends and just exciting to get to follow up and do something like this.
and thanks for your time today and for sharing your experiences.
And man, I just hope that maybe we will all meet again.
I know the rumor is some of you want to come to Peru in 2024.
So that would be epic.
Yes.
Honestly, best trip.
I have traveled a lot, but that was like top trip for me.
And Mohammed is truly like the best tour guide I've ever been with.
And you, Derek, for organizing it and putting together such an amazing group of
people. Well, I hope everybody enjoyed this episode. Make sure to subscribe to this podcast. And
like Alan and some of the others said, Carla, consider joining us on our Egypt tour next year in
2024 in May. You can visit megalithic marvels.com slash tours or just click the link in the show
notes below. And until next time, keep exploring.
