0604 Whale Working Group
WHALE Working Group
Petra said: Felicitas asked me to post this excerpt from her session June 4th 2025 Michael via Troy, because of time constraints on her end.
Felicitas: When was the WHALE working group (35 members; 9 Priests, 7 Sages, 5 Kings, 4 Scholars, 3 Artisans, 3 Servers, 4 Warriors) of which I am a part as (Position 14), with focus on Information, Arts and Archiving, seeded and was it ever activated and if so, when? Also could you please explain/elaborate in more detail the Theme: "Preserving vast emotional intelligence, long-term memory and preservation of wisdom through embodiment, presence and behavior?
MEntity:
This Group was seeded around 3000 BCE as part of a network of Groups focused on preserving what it means to be human, not just in thoughts and ideas, but in the deeper waters of feeling, memory, and embodied knowing.
This Group was specifically inspired by the awareness that emotional intelligence and the capacity to sustain and transmit collective memory are as crucial as technological knowledge or physical structures. This is about the wisdom of how to feel fully and still remain present, which is essential for future civilizations.
WHALE has never fully activated, but is dormant. A Group that continues quietly recording and preserving emotional and relational knowledge of its members across lifetimes.
There was a time during the rise of the Incan civilization in the Andean Region around 1400 CE when the Group's themes of emotional stewardship were vital for holding together the cultural and spiritual weaving of this vast society, but the primary purpose and full activation in the wake of total devastation has not yet been needed. In terms of elaboration:
WHALE is about the capacity to feel fully, to ride the tides of emotion without losing one's center. Members of the Whale Group are carriers of the deep truth that feelings are not obstacles, but are the very waters of connection and meaning. This shows up as innate compassion and magnetic calm, as others may be drawn to Whale members in times of fear or loss.
WHALE members are like living libraries, not only carrying personal memories, but also energetic memories of humanity's emotional journey, looking at patterns regarding how we come together, how we grieve, how we celebrate, how we heal. This does not mean Whale members remember facts from past lives, but rather that they carry an instinctive sense of what is sacred, what is worth-holding onto, and what can be let go.
WHALE members tend to embody a kind of gentle gravity, and though they may not speak the loudest or claim the spotlight, their very presence can shift the energy in a room. They often teach not through argument, but by example, how you sit with discomfort, how you hold boundaries with kindness, and how you listen deeply. This is the behavioral part of the theme, showing wisdom is not just an idea, but is how one shows up in the world, how one cares for the self and others, and how one's stories are carried.
On a personal level, you may feel symptoms of being a member of WHALE as you are able to offer calm, grounding presence in times of turmoil, feel the weight of history, and finding yourself drawn to rituals, healing, artistic expression, all that honors the emotional landscapes of the soul.
Do you find resonance in our response?
Felicitas
Yes I do. Thank you so much.
Where in the Andes was that back then? Petra is part of the Condor WG that was almost activated 600 years ago as well. So did those working groups work together back then in the Andes?
MEntity:
This would have been around the Incan heartland, centered in the region now known as Cusco and the Sacred Valley in modern-day Peru. Specifically, this was the region of Machu Picchu, places that held deep spiritual and architectural significance. These locations were symbolic and literal crossroads for different tribes and lineages.
These Groups were not consciously working together, but they were energetically resonant in that time and place. Members were often attracted to the same ceremonial or sacred spaces such as temples, community gatherings, and hidden knowledge that was being woven to ensure cultural survival and resilience.