Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

0 The Fool

0 The Fool

Since AI arrived on the scene a couple of years ago, I've been working closely with SUNO AI to create songs. This began with an original lyric I wanted to put to music. After awhile, I discovered ChatGPT, and both reworked my website and explored prompted graphics with AI assistance. Then, Google's Gemini came forward as a reliable resource for exploring graphic prompts with multiple, quick iterations before taking a final prompt to ChatGPT for generating. All three AIs have assisted in creating the foundation for many additional lyrics for hundreds of AI-generated songs, in collaboration with me and with my direction, with all resulting lyrics now being protected through my membership with Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI).

Toward the end of last year, as SUNO reached a licensing deal with Warner Music Group (WMG), short animations were also introduced to the platform. I spent much of the Yule season creating enhanced graphics and animations for seasonal music on my YouTube channel. At the same time, I discovered that streaming royalties for AI-generated music are not a viable income source, so I have removed all but three music albums from international streaming; these albums are the debut album, Metros y Murciélagos, Love Songs vol. i, and Cover Queens, which is scheduled for release this summer.

A self-published companion book of AI-assisted lyrics translations into rhyming English was created for Metros y Murciélagos. This was a hand-reworked project, which required extensive coordination with ChatGPT as well as substantial edits, visits to online rhyming dictionaries and thesauri, and a great deal of wondering whether it took more time to teach ChatGPT what I wanted in a rhyme than it would have taken to do it myself, as I had in the pre-AI era of my debut book p.s. Fortuna.

The YouTube enhanced videos will be continuing this year, with eight mini-playlists for rituals of Goddesses and intentions, begun last year as global releases, and transformed into YouTube publications. This series will be scheduled through the end of summer. Following those releases will be eleven songs of tarot keys, with new tarot card graphics that I'll be working on with ChatGPT. All of the original versions of these tarot key songs are at my YouTube in their legacy SUNO lyric video format. Some of the audio may be reworked for the new videos, and some may stay the same.

This blog post is the first of eleven planned posts about the tarot keys, beginning with 0, “The Fool”, shown in its final, approved and edited version at the top of this post. Like many generated images, it took some interaction with AI to get the final product, along with a tiny bit of editing on my part, as well as tapping into a bit of what I've been studying in and about tarot with Builders of the Adytum (B.O.T.A.), which has a traditional correspondence school; now available online, with courses that were founded in teachings that began around the 1920s in the United States.

Our first Fool, based on a prompt that covered the basics of graphics for this card, resulted in what looked like a dazed hobo, perhaps high on life, with a daisy somehow stuck to a pole rather than being held in the opposite hand.

First Iteration of the Fool

The B.O.T.A. Fool is not a hobo. S/he is a somewhat androgynous character wearing a fancy herbal head wreath, dressed in an elegant, patterned tunic, colorful leggings and boots, with a designer bag swinging behind on a long staff or pole, a white rose in one hand, and a yappy little white dog happily watching at foot level for the next step. So, I asked for a more refined fool with a nice jacket and cap, with a happy expression yet open eyes.

Second Iteration of the Fool

Well, yes, this is exactly what I asked for; he's got a formal jacket and cap, yet it's hardly an interesting image, and the daisy still is not being grasped in the opposite hand, although it has moved to being precariously held upright between a thumb and a finger.

I needed a better inspiration, and it suddenly came to mind! We could create each card image to represent a decade, from the 1920s when the B.O.T.A. teachings began, with eras spanning to the 2020s of now. The Fool would represent the 1920s, and what better way than with a 1920s era flapper in a sequined, fringy dress, wearing a fancy headband, holding a handbag in one hand and a white rose in the other, with a friendly little white dog clearly looking forward to the path ahead. Here, we have something interesting; and something ChatGPT seemed to relish creating, interpreting the dress in a golden color. Our first approved iteration for a card image:

Third and Final Iteration of the Fool

So, at this point, we have a concept for the keys, and our first approved image. All that needs to be done is cropping and applying the floral E Sylvia & AI watermark I try to remember to put on all my final AI-assisted graphics. Because this process required substantial human involvement, from the first iterations to the inspiration and final iteration, I'm told that the entire process and the final curated package are copyrightable. This may be true, and only time will tell how true it is.

What I do know, when working closely in collaboration with AI, is that it's like an instrument or tool rather than a pure iteration machine. While loose guidance seems to work better than micromanaged prompts, it takes more than a quick prompt to create a final product with that human touch. Even if the eventual output is entirely AI-generated, that iteration often follows an interactive process that looks quite a bit like a conversation between peers. As the learning process is accomplished, it's possible that future keys in this series require fewer interactions or iterations. But maybe not.

We'll have a look at each key, as it's designed, with a separate blog post. Our next key will be 1 Magician.

Book: *Metros y Murciélagos; Letras Lyrics Translations*

Metros y Murciélagos

Letras Lyrics Translations

"Metros y Murciélagos; Letras Lyrics Translations" book with CD and crystals for ambiance
Book and CD available individually—see full collection at our artist website.
Purchase the Lyrics & Translations Book 📖

English
Metros y Murciélagos: Letras · Lyrics · Translations is more than a lyric book—it’s a companion to the debut Spanish-language album by E Sylvia & AI, created for readers and listeners who love music, language, and art.

Each page invites you to explore the world of the songs, featuring:

🎵 Original Spanish lyrics presented in full.
Rhyming English translations that capture the rhythm, imagery, and feeling of each song.
🖋️ Liner notes in both Spanish and English, sharing insights into the creative process.
🎨 Full-color single artwork for each of the 16 songs, designed to mirror the music’s atmosphere.

Printed in a beautiful 6" × 6" square format—slightly larger than a CD case and perfect for slipping the disc inside—this book is a celebration of connection, memory, choice, beauty, and the quiet strength of the heart (the CD is available exclusively through the artist’s website).

Whether you’re a fan of the album, a lover of bilingual storytelling, or simply curious about the art of translation, this book offers an intimate, page-by-page journey through music and meaning.


Español
Metros y Murciélagos: Letras · Lyrics · Translations es más que un libro de letras: es un compañero del álbum debut en español de E Sylvia & AI, creado para quienes aman la música, el idioma y el arte.

Dentro, cada página te invita a entrar en el mundo de las canciones con:

🎵 Letras originales en español, presentadas completas.

Traducciones rimadas al inglés, que conservan el ritmo, la imagen y el sentimiento de cada canción.

🖋️ Notas de producción en español e inglés, que comparten detalles del proceso creativo.

🎨 Arte a todo color para cada una de las 16 canciones, diseñado para reflejar la atmósfera de la música.

Impreso en un hermoso formato cuadrado de 6" × 6"—un poco más grande que una caja de CD y perfecto para guardar el disco dentro—este libro celebra la conexión, la memoria, la elección, la belleza y la silenciosa fuerza del corazón (el CD disponible exclusivamente en la página web del artista).

Ya seas fan del álbum, amante de la narrativa bilingüe o simplemente curioso sobre el arte de la traducción, este libro ofrece un recorrido íntimo, página a página, por la música y su significado.

The Sanctuary of One Part II: How Would This Actually Be Built?

✧ 🌙 Dream Project: Moon Dial Sanctuary ✧
Hilltop Grove Near the California Coast

How Would This Actually Be Built?

Designing a dream is one thing. Building it — especially in California — is another.

This post begins to explore how a concept like the Pavilion of One could actually be constructed. It's a landscape-rich, symbolically loaded structure, and yet it must meet very real criteria: sustainability goals, seismic resilience, wildfire protection, and accessibility standards.

Roman and contemporary concrete juxtaposition

Ancient Lessons, Modern Materials
Roman concrete and modern eco-friendly techniques meet in an imagined space — part myth, part building site, all grounded in earth.

As California architects, we are now expected to align with Net Zero construction — a tall order, especially when the very materials we rely on most (like concrete) have traditionally been among the highest carbon emitters on the planet.

Even William Morgan's famous Dune Houses used a cementitious gunite mix to shape their iconic forms. Nearly all “earth-based” building systems today — from rammed earth to superadobe — incorporate concrete or other stabilizers in some way:

  • ♦ Rammed earth often includes 5–10% cement for stabilization
  • ♦ Earthbag (superadobe) construction may rely on barbed wire reinforcement and cement-mixed soil
  • ♦ Earth berms typically require some form of retaining wall (often concrete or CMU)

It’s frustrating to confront the limits of these systems, especially when they are promoted as “earth-conscious,” when contemporary reinforced concrete bears little resemblance to the earth-based building system it used to be in ancient times.

Concrete: A Material Both Ancient and Alive

For thousands of years, concrete has shaped empires — none more enduring than Rome. But as we design for a sustainable future, concrete is also one of the biggest climate concerns: responsible for about 8% of global carbon emissions, according to an article in World Economic Forum.

Is there another way?

Self-healing, earthquake-resistant concrete was perfected in ancient Rome, some of which has lasted for Millennia without reinforcement, from a natural recipe of volcanic ash, lime, and seawater with stone aggregate.

Recently, research teams from around the world have been studying Roman concrete recipes, according to an article from Science.org.

How Did Roman Concrete Work?

What made it special wasn’t just the ingredients, but how they reacted over time. Unlike Portland cement, which hardens and eventually deteriorates, Roman concrete could self-heal. Water seeping into cracks reactivated unspent lime and ash, closing fissures with new mineral growth. This is part of why their structures — including sea walls — remain intact.

Roman Concrete vs. Modern Reinforced Concrete

Feature Roman Concrete Modern Reinforced Concrete
Primary Binder Lime + volcanic ash (pozzolana) Portland cement
Reinforcement None – massing and vault geometry Steel rebar embedded in concrete
Seismic Strategy Energy dispersion through cracks, self-healing Steel absorbs tension, concrete handles compression
Durability Centuries to millennia 50–100 years typical lifespan
Environmental Footprint Low-carbon, regional ingredients High-carbon due to cement and steel

Can Innovation Be Rediscovered?

The Romans never used steel — yet the Pantheon’s dome still stands. Not only that, it survived centuries of earthquakes without the brittle fractures that plague modern concrete.

As we rethink building materials in an age of climate urgency, perhaps the real innovation isn’t asking what’s newest, but what have we forgotten?

Why Don’t We Just Build Like the Romans?

Great question. There are good reasons.

Modern buildings must support live loads, seismic shear, utilities, and code-mandated safety requirements — often in climates and conditions Roman builders never faced. And their methods weren’t universal: Roman concrete performed best in specific environments with locally sourced ash and lime.

But this doesn’t mean we can’t learn from them.

Modern researchers are already experimenting with:


Low Carbon Concrete

According to a blog post in Building Design+Construction, green, eco-conscious concrete recipes have been engineered to reduce carbon emissions, in products created for today's construction industry. The new ingredient list includes:

  • ♦ Fly ash – a byproduct of coal combustion, echoing the ancient Roman formula
  • ♦ Ground Granulated Blast Furnace Slag (GGBS) – a byproduct of steel manufacturing
  • ♦ Silica fume – derived from silicon and ferrosilicon alloy production
  • ♦ Recycled aggregates – sourced from crushed concrete or industrial byproducts
  • ♦ Geopolymers – made from materials like fly ash and metakaolin (a refined clay)

These new recipes push against the very idea of natural stone and earth-friendly solutions. What happens when byproduct and combustion-based ingredients are regulated out of existence? This raises fundamental questions:

  • ♦ Can we build a sculptural, symbolic, serene space without greenwashing?
  • ♦ Can we create eco-conscious, engineered solutions with continued research into the past?
  • ♦ Can we use the earth under our feet — responsibly — without defaulting to high carbon concrete?

There are no easy answers. But the process of asking these questions openly — and honestly — is essential.

In future posts, we’ll continue to explore.

And yes — we’ll eventually get to that crescent moon design feature. But not before we ask: What kind of world do we want this project to live in?


Standard Disclaimer

These designs are not construction documents. They are conceptual works, created in part using AI-assisted graphics under original artistic direction. When finalized, design packages will include guidelines for professional adaptation by licensed architects and engineers.


Visuals and text on this page were created or enhanced using AI tools. All concepts and artistic direction are original.

The Sanctuary of One Part I: Envisioning the Dream

✧ 🌙 Dream Project: Moon Dial Sanctuary ✧
Hilltop Grove Near the California Coast

✦ Region
Northern California, Marin or San Luis Obispo county

✦ Project Description
A poetic retreat imagined for moonlit rituals and contemplative gatherings. The structure is nestled into a gentle hillside, with green roofs and stone terraces blending into the land. A crescent forms above the layout—as a sculptural roof element, and as a functioning moon dial, calibrated to mark true midnight during the full moon.

Sanctuary of One

Imagined rendering of the Moon Dial Sanctuary, before adaptation for accessibility.

The Sanctuary of One

A crescent-roofed refuge for reflection, inspired by myth and moonlight.

Read More →

✦ Site Features
Elevated clearing on gently sloping terrain with southern exposure
Surrounded by native shrubs, coast live oaks and California bay laurel
Seasonal streams and shaded paths, soft fog and filtered sunlight
Near open space preserves with minimal built context, sea view in the distance

✦ Purpose and Use
Quiet ceremony under the stars
Writing, meditation, or intimate conversation
Architectural daydreaming and mythic alignment
Inspiration for future off-grid, ethical builds

✦ Program
Meditative central room with skylight aligned to the lunar apex
Small tea or writing room with views across the hills
Composting restroom tucked into the earth
Circular outdoor gathering area ringed with low seating stones

✦ The Sanctuary Space
Square floor plan, oriented to cardinal directions
One solid wall for reflection or altar; opposite side opens to the horizon
Natural ventilation with high transoms and low stone seating
Interior light powered by the dial’s solar battery
Accessible pathway with compliant thresholds and turning radius

✦ Sustainable Design Elements
Solar-powered moon dial collector that fuels interior night lighting
Earthen walls and reclaimed stone
Rainwater harvesting
Fully vegan materials (no wool, leather, or animal-derived products)
Designed to require minimal electricity or maintenance

Key Feature

✦ The Moon Dial Sculpture
Crescent-shaped, cast in recycled bronze or aluminum
Houses transparent solar lenses that collect light during the day
Glows internally at night, marking midnight on the full moon
Symbolically and functionally ties earth, time, and sky together

✦ Influences
William Morgan’s earth-embedded spatial sensibility
Julia Morgan’s bold adaptation of classical grace
Classical Greek forms, especially the crescent moon as maiden
Sears Kit logic, for possible future modular adaptation

✦ Final Thoughts
Though this space remains unbuilt, it holds a real position in my creative landscape. It’s a synthesis of ancient traditions and modern ethics—a poetic diagram of what architecture can be when it listens deeply to silence, shadow, and soul.

In future entries, I’ll explore how this sanctuary evolves when its poetic form meets the practical needs of safety, movement, and time itself — including the role of the moon dial in shaping light, and the quiet transformation of stairs into path.


Standard Disclaimer

These designs are not construction documents. They are conceptual works, created in part using AI-assisted graphics under original artistic direction. When finalized, design packages will include guidelines for professional adaptation by licensed architects and engineers.


Visuals and text on this page were created or enhanced using AI tools. All concepts and artistic direction are original.

Eight Cosmic Goddess Superpowers

Mandala graphic

The Goddess of the Vastu grid has Eight cosmic superpowers that may be activated and cultivated in everyone of us, female and male. (see my blog post A Grid and a Goddess) How? Chromosome theory tells us that everyone has at least one x chromosome; double-x in females, coupled with a y in males, and special variations that, for whatever divine reason, always include an x chromosome, which represents a feminine genotype. To receive eight cosmic blessings from a loving, Mother Goddess like Ashta Laxmi, of the Hindu belief system, regardless of our personal family relations or religious affiliations, we all have that spark of divine feminine within us. It's built in. All we need to do, to receive and give those blessings, is recognize, cultivate and activate our very own cosmic Goddess superpowers.

In her short course “Enhancing Home Energies with Vaastu and Numerology”, Metaphysical Counselor, Vedic Holistic Healer, Usui Reiki Master, author and creatrix of metaphysical and Vastu courses, Rev. Dr. Gauri M. Relan, describes how the Divine Mother's energies (Ashta Lakshmi) may manifest in the home:

The very name of Lakshmi "Lakshya + ami" means focus + mine, which signifies the focus is sure short route to opulence, success and abundance in all sectors of life.

By using our focus, we invite energies of opulence, success and abundance to move around our dwelling place. We can plan and arrange our home to enhance these energies. The energies begin anew, each day, at the place of the sunrise; the beginning of each and every day. According to Dr. Relan, the northeastern Vastu grid space may be seen, metaphorically, as the place where the Goddess arrives as a newborn infant. (See my blog post A Grid and a Goddess) If we imagine traveling sunwise (clockwise) around to all the eight outer squares of our Vastu grid, the Goddess emanates energies of growing up to successively become a sister, young lady, wife, mother and, finally, a wise woman and elder of the family before being reborn in the northeast grid square again, the next morning.
Vastu Grid and Star of Laxmi
So what are these eight superpowers and how may they be cultivated in a Vastu compliant home or building?

The first step is to recognize omnipresent earth powers of the rising sun and the closest magnetic pole. Are you in the southern or northern hemisphere? For homes and buildings in the northern hemisphere, the northeast Vastu grid is primary in power. In the southern hemisphere, it may be a different grid. Find a room you can visit a couple of times a day (but not a toilet room) somewhere within this most powerful grid, as it occurs in your home or office or, if you have a private office or cubicle, imagine a mini nine-square Vastu grid in your personal work space and find the northeast corner.

After you've chosen your room, or your private office or cubicle, go to it and look to the east from inside your space; the east being a global place of sunrise where each day announces itself to the world. Is there a wall to the east? A counter-top or a place to put a table? Maybe, if you're very lucky there's a window there, with a naturally inspiring view, or a view that you could easily improve with little work? The inspiration you receive, as you look to the east from within your chosen space after completing the steps of this exercise, will be your daily reminder of your own eight superpowers.

Next, find a personally inspiring image or picture that will become your reminder of your Goddess superpowers.

It doesn't have to be a Goddess image, although statues and downloadable pictures of Ashta Lakshmi in all Her eight manifestations are abundant, widely-shared and easy to find in stores and as downloadable graphics. If ancient or Hindu mythology inspires you, a Goddess image may be perfect. If not, you may prefer a different style of religious inspiration. If you're agnostic, atheist, or work in an office that discourages religious icons, think of something awe-inspiring and beautiful, like a picture of a sunrise, a garden or a row of palm trees leading to a lovely beach. Maybe a calendar with fantastic pictures that change each month or a well-tended potted plant. Anything you love and find powerful, as long as it is acceptable in your space, is fine. Including that iconic eastern window view.

Now that you've discovered the best inspirational item for you, your family or workplace, go back to that powerful grid in your home or office and find your chosen room, or the northeast corner of your small office or cubicle. Once again, look east for a wall to hang your picture or calendar, or a countertop at the east wall or a space where you can put a small table at the east wall to display your mythological statue or inspirational item. The idea is that the image or statue would face west, and you would see it as you look toward that east wall when you're in the room, which is located somewhere within that powerful northeast grid square. If you already have an eastern window view, you are easily blessed, with absolutely no extra expense!

Last, read through the descriptions below for each superpower, and remember a time when you felt you had that superpower.

What was the situation? How did it feel? If you don't remember a time when you had a particular superpower, imagine it. When would you have liked to use that superpower? How would it have felt? Consider the concept that you have always had that superpower and that its usefulness will increase as you cultivate it. Don't try to memorize the list. Allow the understanding of each superpower to sink deep into your subconscious mind once. Wait at least a day if feel like you want to read the list again. Have a good night's sleep and then notice how much your subconscious mind has already learned with absolutely no extra effort on your part. Remember to look at your inspirational item once or twice every day, in your room within that northeast Vastu grid, ideally in the morning and evening.

The Eight Goddess Superpowers


All Sources of Wealth; the Power of Starting Anew


This is the power of the beginning point of everything; the morning sunrise. Not merely a psychological observation, it is a real, new beginning for all life on this planet, starting with the warming of the earth each day. The photosynthesis of plants relies on sunlight to change the global botanical respiration cycle from breathing oxygen in to breathing it out; a fact which is no small matter. The oxygen cycle, needed for life as we know it on this planet, starts anew with each sunrise. Edible plants, which rely on photosynthesis, are the primary food source for our planet and the medicinal benefits of plants are well known. All plant-derived, botanical blessings rely on photosynthesis and our sun. The best new ideas often, synchronistically, arise in the Vastu power grid you found in the exercise above.

Abundant Wealth; The Power to Live a Prosperous Life


We have the power of receiving all forms of wealth abundantly. In addition to money, possessions and investments, there are many other forms of wealth. According to the creatrix of Ashta Lakshmi Reiki, Dr. Chandra (also known as Saraswathi), the various forms of wealth include, in addition to money and financial wealth of material possessions: Nature, Love, Peace, Health, Prosperity, Luck, Virtues, Family, Food, Land, Water, Will Power, Intellect, Character, etc. In the abundance of our earth's resources, in the abundance of our communities, our friendships, our families, our careers, our hobbies, our studies, our relationships, ourselves and in our homes, we have practically unlimited power to enjoy prosperity in all forms of wealth we can imagine and attain.

Health; the Power of Nutrition


We have the power of making healthy choices, of influencing a global focus by eating plant-based, whole foods like fruits, vegetables, legumes and grains like brown rice, oats and corn. When we choose to prepare healthy foods to eat, our bodies convert this nutrition into prana, a Sanskrit word for “life force” or “vital energy”; a term used in yoga and Ayurveda for the universal energy that flows in and around our bodies, supporting our life and activities. The earth's botanical resources are abundant and, according to the United Nations website (accessed Oct 4, 2024), plants are a better choice for our planet in terms of greenhouse gas intensities, carbon footprint, and the usage of energy, land and water. We have the power to choose natural, organic foods, and it's powerful to make our choices wisely.

Children; the Power of Family and Descendants


Generating life in the form of biological progeny is a creative power we share with creatures all over the earth. In addition to daughters and sons, we have the power to create blended families with step-children, adopted children and foster children. We have the power to support children of friends and family and to adopt companion pets from shelters, taking on similarly parental style responsibilities like protecting, feeding and caring. Teaching and creative arts are powers that can influence future generations. When I self published my book about the Roman Goddess Fortuna, I was reminded of the words of the Roman poet, Ovid: As long as poetry speaks truth on earth, That immortality is mine to wear. For more about Fortuna, buy my book p.s. Fortuna; Praises and Supplications For the Goddess.

Success: The power to overcome obstacles


We have the power to overcome limitations and negativity that create obstacles to success, and to choose from numerous ways to do this. As soon as we are aware of a problem, we may take measures to protect ourselves by creating boundaries, by designing homes and constructing buildings that shelter us and encourage the flow of beneficial energy within and around our created spaces to enhance the well-being and emotional balance of ourselves as the occupants. We have the power to educate ourselves and choose healthy nutrition and physical exercise to open the way for our minds and our bodies to overcome illness or injury. We may choose to focus on inspirational images and ideas, to allow our thoughts and desires to rise above negativity. We have the power to achieve success.

Strength; the Power of Patience


We have the power of physical courage, the power of mental courage and the power of patience. It takes courage, patience and inner strength to get past the confusion of learning a new skill, especially if, at first, it looked easier than it turned out to be. It takes courage to get past doubts about an unknown outcome, perhaps much further in the future than we had hoped. We can grow strong with resolve to continue practicing, even when we don't feel like it. With the kind of patience that keeps working on whatever needs to be accomplished to achieve what we want, anything is possible. Our powers include patience, despite slow and minor improvement, to strengthen our inner stability and determination to continue until a level of ability we can take pride in is finally reached.

Talent; the Power of Education and Knowledge


We have the power to study, the power to learn in good faith and the power to receive the kinds of good luck and talent that come from both our efforts and the equally important efforts of our teachers and mentors. Dr. Chandra, in her teachings, mentions 18 powers that are believed to lead to immortality, all of which are derived from the grace of education. These powers include: serenity, regularity, absence of vanity, sincerity, simplicity, veracity, equanimity, fixity, non-irritability, adaptability, humility, tenacity, integrity, nobility, magnanimity, charity, generosity and purity. Educational study gives us the power to overcome negativity so effectively, that it can seem as magical as simply having good luck. With education, we have the power of both good luck and talent on our side.

Career; the Power of Infinite Abundance


Although spiders make beautiful webs, fish swim gracefully through water and birds fly far above us in the sky, we have the power to do all these things and more. When we design and build structures like homes, watercraft, aircraft and spacecraft, our craft-work is neither limited nor predestined by our species. We have the power to choose and work at a career that aligns with our energies; a career that attracts like-minded people who are more than willing to pay us very well for our work, and we have the power earn so much money from our careers, and to invest our money so wisely, that we also have additional powers of giving and receiving many, many blessings of opulence, grace, peace, and all sorts of abundance to and from each other.

These are the 8 cosmic Goddess superpowers. These superpowers are within all of us. They are within me, within you, within friends and within competitors equally. Cultivating and activating these powers is an important step in Vastu living; a step that doesn't require an extensive home renovation. It starts with recognizing the power of the Vastu grid to help us find the best, most powerful place in our home, office or office cubicle to place an inspirational reminder to activate our very own cosmic Goddess superpowers. Our ability and willingness to understand and apply the wisdom of the Vastu grid appropriately will help us cultivate our superpowers within ourselves, and enhance the beneficial energies we emanate to and from each other in our homes, schools, businesses and workplaces.

For a Reiki version of a Vastu Clearing, please visit my Metaphysics for Architecture webpage.

This article may be updated from time to time.