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meditation, Mount Shasta

Sission Meadow

Dianne Aucello
Dianne Aucello

The morning began with a heart-opening cacao ceremony, lovingly prepared with hemp milk and cacao by myself alongside a fellow spiritual warrior. As we shared the drink, we also shared our stories — reflecting on our journeys, lessons, and the experiences that continue to shape our paths.

From there, we hiked into Sisson Meadow, where we encountered what felt like a powerful energetic portal known as the “Star of David.” Together, we shifted and restored the energy of the space. As a group, we entered meditation with intention, unity, and reverence. By the end of the experience, the portal had been renamed Eternal Us — a symbol of connection, balance, and shared consciousness.

As I sank into the earth during meditation, I felt myself dissolving into the soil beneath me. My awareness expanded outward, becoming rich and rooted like darkened earth after rainfall. In that stillness, I no longer felt separate from nature. I became the roots reaching toward the surrounding trees, growing deeper and wider in harmony with the forest around us.

In that moment, a truth settled deeply within me:
The trees with the deepest roots grow the tallest branches.

Later, we arrived at a structure unlike anything I had experienced before — a pyramid-shaped space with copper-lined tubing that was divinely inspired. It carried the energy of sacred architecture, as it was built through guidance, intuition, and spirit rather than blueprints alone. Inside, we entered another meditation, one that left me longing to return and deepen my connection to the space and its energy.

By the end of the day, there was a quiet understanding among us that something meaningful had been completed. The journey felt aligned, purposeful, and deeply transformative — as though each step had fulfilled a mission far greater than ourselves.

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