Draw it. Gaze at it. Walk its geometry. Let it remind you: from the smallest seed, entire universes grow.
: Each circle is placed by positioning the compass point where the previous two circles intersect, ensuring a perfectly symmetrical pattern often found in nature. 2. Symbolic Significance
During the Renaissance, mathematicians like studied the Flower of Life and its seed form. In the 20th century, Drunvalo Melchizedek popularized the Seed of Life as part of the "MerKaBa" meditation system.
People often ask: Which is more powerful?
It represents the seven days in which God created life. In spiritual practices, it is a tool for meditation and growth.
Skeptics can appreciate it as a beautiful, meaningful mandala without metaphysical assumptions.