The Hayehwatha Institute created a new blog
You will find all the latest news at:
The Hayehwatha Institute created a new blog
You will find all the latest news at:
Posted in Welcome | Tags: Hayehwatha
The Hayehwatha Institute moved to Mount Shasta, California in 2008
Our contact information is PO Box 360, Mt Shasta, CA 96067
website – hayehwathainstitute.org
blog – hayehwathainstitute.org/blog
email – hayehwathainstitute@gmail.com
Posted in Welcome | Tags: Hayehwatha Institute, Mt Shasta
Welcome to the Hayehwatha Institute Blog.
This Blog presents various approaches to understanding the universe and our place in the universe.
Today we are no longer looking to the past 10,000 years to understand our history as humans beings. Now the exploration covers the life of the universe and our role as humans within the vastness of time and space.
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
The most common way to research the universe is through scientific investigation. On this blog we are primarily interested to mention research that utilizes the phenomena of consciousness to explore the universe. Other interesting scientific research items, especially those exploring the human spirit will be added to this section.
ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS
There are many authors today who are researching ancient civilizations and ancient texts in a new way that questions our established thinking regarding the origins of human life on earth.
SPIRITUAL JOURNEYS
The most cutting edge research involves people who are exploring the universe through their own personal perception within the spiritual planes of the universe. The Hayehwatha Institute offers definitive programs to know the universe by direct personal experience.
Enjoy this blog and we encourage you to add comments that further this exploration.
In the Vedas there is reference to human life during each of the four yugas, yet today we only know a small portion of that history.
The Hayehwatha Institute is interested, through specialized programs to expand human awareness, along with the assistance of evolved souls within the spiritual dimensions of the universe, to explore the universe to understand our human origins. In our initial exploratory research we have found it possible that our existance as a human species extends back further in time than the accepted versions found in science and religion today.
Satya Yuga or Krita Yuga – 1,728,000 years
Treta Yuga – 1,296,000 years
Dvapara Yuga – 864,000 years
Kali Yuga – 432,000 years
There is a lot of information on the internet regarding the Yugas as described in the Vedas. The Wikipedia version is a good place to begin. Two charts present the timelines:


Posted in Ancient Civilizations | Tags: Divya-Yuga, Dvapara Yuga, Hayehwatha Institute, Kali Yug, Kalpa, Krita Yuga, Life of Brahma, Manvantara, Satya Yuga, Time, Treta Yuga, Vedas, Yugas
The Institute of HeartMath (IHM) has published two research papers showing compelling electrophysiological evidence that shows, under controlled experimental conditions, that both the brain and the heart process information about the emotionality of a stimulus before this stimulus is presented to research participants.
This is strong evidence for the proposition that intuitive processes involve the body accessing a field of information that is not limited by the constraints of space and time; that it accesses a field of potential energy that exists as a domain apart from space-time reality into which information is spectrally enfolded on “future” events.
Posted in Scientific Research | Tags: future events, heart research, space time
Nassim Haramein for more than two decades has been claiming that black holes are the source of creation, not the result of it.
A study using the very large Array radio telescope in New Mexico and the French Plateau de Bure Interferometer has enabled astronomers to peer within a billion years of the Big Bang and found evidence that black holes were there first.
This may be one of the most exciting confirmations as of yet, as it leads directly to a continuous creation process where our universal black hole produces what we call super-massive black holes, which produce smaller ones we call stars, which in turn produce smaller ones we call atoms.