The number seven keeps showing up a lot at Chichen Itza’s massive ball court.
As if playing a game of hide-and-seek. Waiting to be discovered by the avid seeker.
Seven is seen in the well known ball court depiction of the beheaded ball player who represents Chicome-Coatl.
Chicome-Coatl is the Mexica or Aztec energy of agriculture and rebirth.
& there is also;
Seven ball players who are held captive here on these walls
Seven is also the number of the snake
Seven is the number of times that an echo flutter is heard when you clap once.
The most important connection is that seven is the union of spirit in matter.
When spirit dives into matter, it manifests spiritual things into our tangible 3D world.
This sacred connection s fitting of one of the 7 wonders of the world.
Notes:
Western alt-researchers suggest that the origin of Chicome Coatl’s creation is linked to other cultures and they label this concept “diffusionism.”
However, attributing these ideas to traveling “culture seeders” who came to Turtle Island to “ civilize” the indigenous people of this continent, is problematic. It wrongly implies that indigenous people of the “Americas” didn’t independently develop their own unique contributions.
I disagree with the notion that Chicome Coatl is associated with the Indian Naga concept. While both cultures have beautiful traditions, there is no historical connection between them.
Mesoamerican traditions had their own energy center systems.
Although this is a Maya site, it has a heavy Toltec influence from which the Aztecs heavily borrowed ideas from.
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