Welcome back to the Schapera show where Viv and Neil explore this big adventure called life. This is the part of the show where I, Vivien, talk to and about crystals.
Our crystal guest today is Larimar. Larimar is one of the rarest gem materials on earth. Sounds fantastic, doesn’t it? It’s true in terms of geographic origin. It is found in only one known location, the Barahona region of the Dominican Republic.
Larimar is a pectolite, yes, and pectolites are found elsewhere, yes, but the color of Larimar is unique in the pectolite world, ranging from pale sky blue to deep turquoise, often streaked with white patterns that resemble sunlight moving across shallow water. What a poetic description.
This singular origin is not a marketing claim. It is a geological fact. The blue comes from the presence of copper in a volcanic hydrothermal environment. Sounds like an adventure story, doesn’t it? This volcanic hydrothermal environment yields a specific convergence of fire, water, and mineral chemistry plus time, giving Larimar a distinctive structural identity.
In a nutshell, Larimar is born of volcanic fire and shaped by circulating mineral rich water, or we could say fire contained in water. The result is a stone that does not extinguish intensity, but instead regulates it. Fire alone can flare and scorch. Water alone can stagnate and cool excessively. Fire submerged in water is extinguished. Fire held in water is regulated power. It remains.
When I see this laid out in front of me, it reveals to me how the different ways that I use Larimar in crystal surgery are not disparate, but thematically integrated.
There are four applications of Larimar in crystal surgery. Under the hands as part of a chakra circuit, on the spleen when doing immune boost, on the thymus
More Info : Book for building a client base

No comments:
Post a Comment