THE ARCTURIAN HEART
T
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he heart is the most literary organ in the human body — the one that every
culture in every era has chosen to represent love, courage, grief, and the
deepest aspects of selfhood. We speak of broken hearts, open hearts, hard
hearts, brave hearts. We speak of heartache and heartbreak, of wearing our hearts on our
sleeves and guarding them carefully. We say someone died of a broken heart, or that a
person has a big heart, or that they speak from the heart, or that they have lost the heart
for something they once cared about. No other organ carries this weight of metaphor.
And the Arcturian tradition suggests that this is not coincidence — that every culture
that has ever used the heart as the symbol of the deepest human experiences has been,
intuitively and accurately, pointing to a truth that conventional Western medicine spent
centuries dismissing but is now, with considerable scientific evidence, beginning to
confirm.