Graveyards: It's Not Just Bodies They've Buried
What if the church graveyards scattered across Europe and the Americas aren’t what they seem? What if their placement isn’t about piety or tradition but concealment?
In Tesla & The Cabbage Patch Kids, I proposed that churches—especially the grand, old-world cathedrals and parish churches—are actually remnants of Tartarian megastructures, built with advanced engineering techniques long forgotten.
These original buildings may have had multiple subterranean levels, vast lower halls, energetic healing chambers, and even networked tunnel systems linking cities. But what hides them now?
Enter the Graveyard
What better way to discourage digging or renovation than by filling the surrounding land with human remains? No one questions the sanctity of a graveyard. No one excavates them. And so, beneath the grassy plots and headstones, the original lower half of these buildings lies sealed in mud and mystery.
This ties directly into the mud-flood theory: a cataclysmic event or series of resets in which thick layers of mud buried the lower floors of many structures across the world.
Windows at ground level look suspiciously like they were once doors. Sunken entrances. Stairs leading below ground. Why build like that unless those weren’t the original “ground floors”?
Then there’s the strange consistency that most gravestones don’t date earlier than the late 1700s. Why? This could be linked to the Great Reset in 1776, when history was rewritten, old technology suppressed, and Tartarian architecture repurposed.
Before this time, I believe that churches were not religious sites at all but healing centers, powered by sacred geometry, organ resonance, and etheric energy—places of health, not hierarchy.
The addition of graveyards was symbolic and practical: not only did it repurpose these energy centres into places of mourning and control, but it also effectively sealed the past, in both memory and mud.
Guy Anderson

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