У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Sunken Cities & the Ocean's Ancient Memory | Sleep Meditation | 🌙 Midnight Sleep Chronicles или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
The ocean is not a background. It is an archive. And what it holds in its depths — streets, temples, harbors, the ordinary arrangements of human life — has been waiting there for ten thousand years. Tonight's 90-minute sleep meditation descends into one of the most quietly unsettling facts in archaeology: the coastlines where civilization first flourished are now underwater. The cities your ancestors built are on the ocean floor. And the particular calm you feel at the edge of the sea may not be poetry. It may be recognition. The drowned world. The voice it still carries. The body that still listens. --- 🌊 WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER The Yonaguni Monument — a stepped stone structure off the coast of Japan, twenty-five meters tall, lying at the bottom of the Pacific: natural formation, ancient city, or something the answer to which changes everything we think we know about the timeline of human civilization Dwarka and the Gulf of Khambhat — submerged off the coast of India, where marine archaeologists found stone anchors, fortified walls, and wood carbon-dated to seven thousand five hundred years before the present — five thousand years older than the first Mesopotamian cities Doggerland — the vast territory connecting Britain to continental Europe, home to thousands of years of Mesolithic civilization, now the floor of the North Sea — its rivers still visible by satellite, its harpoons still surfacing in fishermen's nets The meltwater pulses — how the ice sheets collapsed between fourteen thousand and six thousand years ago, raising the sea by one hundred and twenty-five feet and drowning the world that the oldest human myths have never stopped mourning Blue Mind theory — the neuroscience of why proximity to water measurably lowers cortisol, slows the heart, activates the brain's resting state: and why this response may be older than memory itself The bells of Ys, Cantre'r Gwaelod, Atlantis, Dwarka — why every civilization that lived near the sea encoded the same story: a world of extraordinary beauty, taken by the water in a single terrible night, still ringing somewhere in the deep Why the fear and the longing arrive together at the ocean's edge — and what the drowned cities say about the part of us that has never entirely left the shore --- 🎧 FOR BEST EXPERIENCE Low volume. Headphones recommended. → If the sound of waves has ever calmed something in you that the present circumstances could not fully explain: this is for you → THE CITIES ARE STILL THERE. THE OCEAN KEPT THEM. SOMEWHERE IN THE BODY, THE TIDE IS STILL EXPECTED. → Just listen. Breathe. Let the deep hold you. --- ⚠️ DISCLAIMER Educational and entertainment purposes only. Archaeological sources include Masaaki Kimura (University of the Ryukyus) on Yonaguni Monument documentation; S.R. Rao and National Institute of Oceanography marine archaeology reports on Dwarka (1983–1990); National Institute of Ocean Technology sonar survey of Gulf of Khambhat (2001). Geological sources include Meltwater Pulse research from Clark et al. (Nature Geoscience) on postglacial sea level rise; University of Bradford Europe's Lost Frontiers Project (Vincent Gaffney) on Doggerland reconstruction; and Storegga Slide tsunami research (Bondevik et al., 2005). Neuroscientific material draws on Wallace J. Nichols (Blue Mind, 2014) and supporting fMRI/EEG studies on water proximity and parasympathetic response. Mythological material — including Plato's Timaeus and Critias on Atlantis, Welsh legend of Cantre'r Gwaelod, Breton legend of the city of Ys, and Vedic flood narratives — presented as cultural tradition and philosophical reflection, not as scientific claim. Philosophical framework draws on Carl Jung (The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious), Simone Weil (The Need for Roots, 1943), and Blaise Pascal (Pensées, 1670). --- 💭 Have you ever felt the ocean calm something in you that you could not name? Tell us in the comments.