THE PYRAMIDS of the COLD • Chapter 56 The 'wall mounted' Tibetan prayer wheels are nothing other than the reinterpretation of the drive shaft of the Grand Gallery
Publié par Bruno Coursol dans The Pyramids of the Cold Le
21/09/2025 à 06:29
The 'wall mounted' Tibetan prayer wheels are nothing else than a reinterpretation of the Great Pyramid's drive shaft: these prayer wheels should be fixed on the floor, not on the wall. [illustration] "Copper wall mounted prayer wheel with Om mane peme hum mantra in Newari (Ranjana) lipi. The Buddhist stupa in the top of the prayer wheel makes this as nice religious home décor. This handmade prayer wheel can be placed on the wall in your prayer room, meditation room or in the living room. The prayer wheel is filled with a mantra roll printed with the compassion mantra of Chenrezig, Om Mani Padme Hum. This prayer wheel is handmade in Nepal. The prayer wheel has 2 lines Om Mani Mantra Tibetan Mantra and 1 line Auspicious Symbol in the center. Worshippers turn prayer wheels to accumulate merit, to help all beings in the world and to purify their karma (intentional actions). They are part of a meditation."
THE PYRAMIDS of the COLD • Study written by Bruno COURSOL (January 2021 to September 2025)
Section I • The tremendous impact the Great Pyramid had on the whole ancient World
Even though it has been very satisfying to decipher the true purpose of the Great Pyramid and the true scientific and technological nature of the Pharaonic era of ancient Egypt, the most fantastic and breathtaking discovery of the Pyramids of Cold is much more important than that, and that is the fact that everything that had been glorified by the Egyptians in the so-called Egyptian religion, was also reinterpreted throughout the ancient world: Greeks, Hebrews, Hindus, Tibetans, they all did this work of reinterpretation to create their own new mythology and religion throughout the ancient world.
Chapter 56 • The Tibetan prayer wheels and the drive shaft of the Grand Gallery
In summary: for a very long time, there was two main problems I couldn't figure out, but crucial for the global understanding of the religious glorification of the operation of the Great Pyramid; it was about what Osiris is really about and what metaphor had been used to represent the weight that was inserted inside the wooden part of the impactor. I searched for months in vain the response for these two major individual problems, and I never thought that they were each other's solution: that is Osiris himself who is the metaphoric glorification of the weight that was inserted inside the wooden part of the impactor.
Osiris actually, really is a weight, the most important of all; and like the endless pounding of the waters of the inclined well had been the origin of the Churning of the Ocean Hindu myth, the Osiris weight also had been the origin of another mythology of its own: the Osiris weight probably is the weight of the Tibetan prayer wheels.
There are two very different kinds of prayer wheels, the hand held wheels with a chain and a little weight at the end of the chain, and the wheels designed to be mounted onto walls, and they are both directly referring to the operation of the Osiris weight, through the hauling ropes and axle beam drive shaft of the Grand Gallery. In short, the Great Pyramid of Egypt is what the Tibetan prayer wheels are all about.
Diagram of the operating Great Pyramid of Egypt for flash-evaporative cold production (hypothetically for cooling down chemical manufacturing of 100% pure sodium carbonate 'natron', the salt used for the mummification of pharaohs). When in operation, the elevation of the Great Pyramid was not finished, and it is only after the shutdown procedure and the draining of the inclined well, that the three granite plugs finally took the position they still have today.
The central wooden Djed caisson of the Great Pyramid was set inside the central gutter of the Grand Gallery which kept the caisson in place at all times, even under high pressure. The markings on the floor of the gutter have been made by the individual wooden cases that formed the caisson. Original image of the Grand Gallery of the Great Pyramid of Egypt at Giza, built by pharaoh Khufu, from page 52 of "The call of the stars; a popular introduction to a knowledge of the starry skies with their romance and legend" (1919) by Kippax, John R. (John Robert), 1849-1922: https://www.flickr.com/photos/internetarchivebookimages/14597229618/
Operating diagram of the Grand Gallery in the Great Pyramid of Giza, showing the axle beam drive shaft.
56.01 Tibetan prayer wheels and the Churning of the Ocean myth are both about the Great Pyramid's operation
We've seen in previous Chapters that the Churning of the Ocean Hindu myth is a complete reinterpretation of the operating of the inclined well of the Great Pyramid of Egypt: the endless pounding of the waters of the well being described as the churning of these waters to create pressurized water. In this Chapter we'll see that the Tibetan prayer wheels are all about the functioning of the counterpart of the well: the Grand Gallery, where a hauling gantry 'beetle' was constantly pulling back the impactor up from its initial floating position inside the well to the upper part of the Gallery, ready to be released one more time into the steep slope and pressurize the well.
We'll see that the most important part of the Prayer wheels is its weight and that it is all about the Osiris weight.
56.02 Egyptian god Ptah was known as 'the god that listen to prayers'
The prayer wheels' design and the Too Lazy Naga snakes myth are crucial for their understanding, but mantras or prayers are also very important, and if the origin of prayer wheels is all about ancient Egypt and the Great Pyramid, then these prayers would also refer to that same origin.
The fact is that they do: there is one particular ancient Egyptian god who was known as "the god who listen to prayers", and that is Ptah, the creator god who "crafted the world in the design of his heart". We've already seen that every time ancient Egyptians were talking about the heart, they were referring to the heart of the Great Pyramid: the Bastet and Sekhmet check valve supplied with pressurized air and pressurized water by the inclined well; so Ptah creating everything from the design of his heart, means that the process of creation (of the cold), started in the well.
In short, creator god Ptah is the glorification of the well of the Great Pyramid, and he was listening to the prayers that came from the drive shaft of the Grand Gallery. Probably this driving shaft was making a lot of noise.
Vertical section, looking West, of the Great Pyramid of Giza, in the plane of its passages, by Manly Palmer Hall : https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Secret_Teaching_of_All_Ages_-_Chapter_6_-_Pyramid.jpg
56.03 The impact of the Great Pyramid on the ancient World
At this point, I really need to emphasize one more time how puzzled I am about discovering bit by bit that everything I've wrote on ancient Egypt, has actually been "reused" in other civilizations like the Māori indigenous Polynesian people of mainland New Zealand (Aotearoa) in Bes' Section (the glorification of the wedging block of the Great Pyramid) as well as in the Churning of the Ocean Hindu myth.
What really needs to be pointed out is that ancient Egyptians had over time acquired a very high knowledge of what we call today Low Tech; but they accomplished this tour de force, surrounded by other civilizations who didn't and who were still pretty much living in the stone age.
No civilization other than the ancient Egyptians would have ever been able to impress the rest of the world that way. The imprint of the operating of the Great Pyramid of Egypt on the ancient World was so strong that many myths were born because of it; and it happened all over the world.
The Hauling of the impactor in the Grand Gallery (the "Secret Hauling Cavern of the Underworld"), the pressurization of the waters of the inclined well (snakes with weight upon them) and the fog of microdroplets (the Dendera Light) that created the cold by simply evaporating, everything had been glorified and worshiped in Egypt, but also all over the ancient world.
It happened in New Zealand, in India, in Cambodia and it also happened in Tibet with the Prayer Wheels and the Lazy Naga snakes, and it always concerned the most important part of the pyramid : the inclined well. Many myths that appeared in the ancient World outside Egypt are about the inclined well. Maybe most of them are.
Many people trying to decipher ancient Egypt outside the box, are playing with the idea that electricity is the key, but it is not: the key is pressurized water.
And the Tibetan prayer Wheels are all about that : the lazy Naga snakes that need to get 'merit', should I say 'energy', is all about pressurization of water. Like in ancient Egypt, snakes were metaphoric representations of water, and lazy snakes were just plain still water.
Tibetan Prayer Wheels are about how was pressurized the water of the well.
"The prayer wheel should be turned clockwise with a single-pointed concentration of body, speech, and mind. It is easy and fast to turn the prayer wheel and it does not require great physical strength or many repetitions." https://vajracrafts.com/products/buddhist-copper-prayer-wheel-with-wall-mount
56.04 The Tibetan prayer wheels are operated to endlessly give small amounts of 'merit' to lazy 'snakes' (the ropes)
The function of the Tibetan prayer wheels is not just about saying prayers or mantras, but about giving "small amounts of merit to lazy Naga spirits"; Nagas referring to snakes.
The fact is we've already seen that in the ancient Egyptian religion, snakes were not only metaphors of the water used to power up the Great Pyramid, but that they were also metaphors of the ropes which were used in the Grand Gallery; so if the prayer wheels are somehow giving small amounts of merit to lazy snakes, it means that these small amounts of 'merit' are actually given to lazy ropes. Of course, these small amounts of merits, or small amounts of energy to the ropes of the Gallery, are referring to the sequential hauling process, using the latch bolts in the walls.
Tibetan prayer wheels, just like the Churning of the Ocean Hindu myth, are referring to the operating of the inclined well, but the prayer wheels are focusing on the impactor and how it was operated: their design with a weighed chain or rope is a perfect match of the entire apparatus of the Grand Gallery where the act of hauling the impactor was performed.
Diagram of the operating Great Pyramid of Egypt for flash-evaporative cold production (hypothetically for cooling down chemical manufacturing of 100% pure sodium carbonate 'natron', the salt used for the mummification of pharaohs). When in operation, the elevation of the Great Pyramid was not finished, and it is only after the shutdown procedure and the draining of the inclined well, that the three granite plugs finally took the position they still have today.
The "wall mounted" Tibetan prayer wheels were of course supposed to be fixed on the floor, not on the wall.
56.05 Tibetan prayer wheels are actually intended to constantly give small amounts of merit to "too lazy Naga snakes": it is about the sequential hauling rope process
The real function of the Tibetan prayer wheels is not just about saying prayers or mantras, but really about giving "small amounts of merit to lazy Naga spirits"; Nagas referring to snakes.
The fact is we've already seen that in the ancient Egyptian religion, snakes were not only metaphors of the water used to power up the Great Pyramid, but also metaphors of the ropes which were used in the Grand Gallery (Section about the central wooden caisson and Sekhmeth); so if the prayer wheels are somehow giving small amounts of merit to lazy snakes, it means that these small amounts of merit are actually given to lazy ropes.
Of course, these small amounts of merits, or small amounts of energy to the ropes of the Gallery, are referring to the sequential Hauling, using the latch bolts in the walls.
"The prayer wheel, a popular device in Tibet and across the Himalayas, was originally intended for the Naga world, where the serpent-like creatures were too lazy to engage in meritorious acts.
"According to one story of their origin, the philosopher Nagarjuna obtained the prayer wheel from the king of the serpentine beings known as Nagas, who in turn received them from the Buddha Dipamkara. The Naga king described the prayer wheel as the “profound Dharma wheel that can liberate sentient beings from all the suffering of the 3 lower realms by merely seeing, hearing, remembering, or touching.” https://rubinmuseum.org/collection/artwork/wind-powered-prayer-wheel-20.406
Original draw of the platform by Stefan A. H. Holmgren: https://khufupyramid.dk/inside-dimensions/grand-gallery
Tibetan prayer wheel, at the MAAS Museum of Applied Arts & Sciences, from the Powerhouse Collection: https://collection.maas.museum/object/185526
56.06 Prayer wheels are all about the Grand Gallery and the operation of the impactor
We've seen with the Churning of the Ocean Hindu myth, that both the artistic representations and the myth itself, were indicating that the origin of the myth was the Great Pyramid and mostly the inclined well. Here for the prayer wheels deciphering, we have the same dual thing: both the design of the wheels and the myth about them are indicating their origin, and it is still about the pyramid, but this time it is all about the Grand Gallery and the operation of the impactor.
56.07 The cord/chain and the weight are about the central ropes that operated the impactor's weight
It looks like modern interpretations of prayer wheels only see in the weighed chain of the handled models, a simple accessory that facilitates the use of the wheel, but it is a profound mistake: everything about the prayer wheels indicates that the chain (or the cord) is referring to the central ropes of the Grand Gallery; the ropes that connected the axle beam drive shaft of the upper platform to the impactor and ensured its sequential hauling from the well.
56.08 Prayer wheels are only meant to be spinned clockwise
This information about the prayer wheels, hence the Tree of Life having to be spinned clockwise could be of some interest: it could indicate that when the impactor was hauled up to the top part of the gallery, the drive shaft would also have rotated clockwise. Knowing the tremendous impact that the Great Pyramid had on ancient Egypt and all over the ancient World, it is possible it could be the origin of the definition of the clockwise direction of rotation itself.
"A common narrative for the origins of the prayer wheel credit Shakyamuni Buddha for teaching a system of religious practice that would allow the very lazy and uneducated Naga Spirits to acquire some small amount of merit by turning in a clockwise direction a cylinder of mantras, dharanis and auspicious verses". https://www.himalayanart.org/search/set.cfm?setID=562
Operating diagram of the Grand Gallery, showing the drive shaft that is at the origin of the Tibetan prayer wheels.
Buddhist prayer wheel, Wellcome Collection at the Science Museum: https://wellcomecollection.org/works/ewt83spb
56.09 The coiled mantras of a hand held prayer wheel is all about ropes winding up upon a drive shaft
This probably is one of the most beautiful part of the prayer wheels' design: everything is made so that the mantras are coiled just like they were ropes winding up upon a drive shaft. Of course, the coiled mantras are directly referring to the coiled ropes on the drive shaft.
Dendera Light relief in the Hathor temple at Denderah, Egypt, photographed by kairoinfo4u and posted on flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/manna4u/14525094039/in/photostream/
Lotus seed head, by Dinkum: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nelumbo_nucifera_%28fruit%29.JPG
56.10 The 'Om mani padme hum' mantra, literally 'the Jewel in the Lotus' is the glorification of the fog nozzle of the Great Pyramid: the 'Jewel in the Lotus' isn't about the flower of the plant, but the seed head that resemble to a shower head
"Om mani padme hum" is most probably the most important mantra of all, and everybody has already heard it about dozens of times; its meaning is: “the jewel in the lotus”.
We've already seen in the Dendera Light Chapter, that the lotus flower from which the light bulb is 'getting out' is a representation of the fog nozzle that was set at the entry of the flash-evaporative cooling passage: the representations of the lotus flower in the Dendera Light reliefs, isn't about the flower itself, but about the lotus seed head that resembles to a shower head.
The meaning of the lotus flower is about running water passing through the jewel of the Lotus: the fog nozzle of the pyramid. In other words, the Tibetan "Jewel in the Lotus" mantra is the glorification of the fog nozzle of the Great Pyramid of Egypt.
"Prayer wheels larger than human size are to be seen in separate rooms in Tibetan Buddhist temples and can be set in motion by pilgrims. With the help of a small bell the number of revolutions can be counted. The cylinders of fixed prayer wheels are often inscribed with the formula “Om mani padme hum” (meaning “jewel in the lotus”) in ornamental Lantsa (Ranjana) letters." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayer_wheel