Haunted Locations: Where Memory Sticks to Matter
Bashar explains why certain locations become 'haunted' while others remain neutral, focusing on the interaction between consciousness, emotion, and material structure.
This entry covers:
- the recording surface—certain building materials (stone, particularly limestone and quartz-rich rock) have crystalline structures that retain energetic imprints more effectively than wood or modern synthetic materials; ancient sites, stone circles, and old masonry buildings are therefore more likely to preserve residual consciousness,
- the vortex convergence—haunted locations often sit at geological anomalies, water crossings, or ley line intersections where Earth's energetic field is naturally stronger; these amplified fields both attract intense human activity and preserve its residue,
- the repetition principle—locations where similar emotional events repeat (battlefie lds, hospitals, prisons) build up layered imprints that become increasingly perceptible; each new trauma reinforces the existing energetic pattern,
- the architectural psychology—buildings with confusing layouts, dead-end corridors, and poor natural light create disorientation that makes occupants more susceptible to perceiving residual energy;
design affects consciousness perception,
the clearing process—Bashar supports location clearing through: geological assessment (understanding the site's natural energy), historical acknowledgment (honoring what occurred), energetic intervention (sound, light, prayer, smudging), and conscious re-use (transforming the space through new, positive activity).
The entry emphasizes that haunted locations are not necessarily dangerous but are energetically saturated; sensitive individuals should trust their body's response and avoid or protect themselves accordingly.