Sacred Geometry: Instruments of Energy — Pyramids, Prisms, and Pentagrams
How form receives, refracts, and transmits energy
I’m trained to look at learning as a system. I hold a doctoral degree in Education, and that training has made me attentive to patterns, structure, and how small shifts create measurable change over time.
So when these images arrived during meditation, I didn’t file them under “pretty symbolism.” I treated them like instruments, tools that show how energy moves.
In this post, I’m using energy in a grounded way. Think attention, intention, and coherence. What you carry, how it moves through you, and how it shows up in your words and choices.
I encourage you to experiment with one or more of these concepts and in your own life and see what changes. This is where sacred geometry stops being an idea and starts becoming abundant living in everyday life.
Before we begin, here is the map so you always know where we are going. We will look at the pyramid as flow, the prism as refraction, the pentagram as redirection, then return to the pyramid as concentration and projection.
1) The Pyramid: Flow Through Structure
When I first saw the three triangles locked together, my mind did what it always does. It tried to name the thing and immediately jumped to function.
Is this a pyramid? If it is, what is it doing?
A pyramid is one of those rare forms that works beautifully in two worlds at once. It is an engineered structure you can build and test, and it is also a spiritual symbol people have contemplated for centuries.
In sacred geometry, that overlap matters. It tells me I’m not being asked to choose between science and spirituality here. I’m being asked to let them speak to each other.
What struck me most in the drawing were the arrows. Down. Up. Across. That detail makes the pyramid feel less like a static icon and more like an instrument. A receiver and transmitter. Something that organizes movement.

Working interpretation:
The pyramid suggests directed flow. Energy enters, travels along a pathway, and exits with intention.
Triangles matter because they’re stable in engineering for a reason. Joined together, they don’t just symbolize stability, they perform it.
The arrows imply routing, not randomness. Form is shaping direction.
Takeaway: The pyramid reads as a functional instrument, a structure that receives, organizes, and transmits flow.
Try it now: When my day feels messy, I pick one thing and let the rest fall behind it.
If you have a small pyramid (if you don’t, you can imagine one):
Hold it or set it in front of you.
Touch the apex and take one slow breath.
On the exhale, imagine the noise in your mind funneling down into one clear next step.
Name that step in one sentence.
Notice: You’re not forcing clarity, you’re giving it a structure to land in.
Once I had that outer structure in mind, the transmission shifted to a more intimate question: What happens when I become the instrument?
2) Prism of the Self: Refraction and Service
This is where the message started to feel more personal.
A prism is a simple physical tool. Light enters, changes direction, and spreads. While contemplating this, the thought came, I am like that.
If I’m a prism, then I’m not here to hold light like a possession. I’m here to let it pass through in a way that redistributes it.
That idea blends science and spirituality in a way that feels refreshingly clear. Refraction is a real phenomenon. It has rules. It’s predictable.
Related to spiritually, it becomes a model for what happens when life moves through us and comes out changed in a way that provides new perspectives.
Working interpretation:
The prism shows transmission through transformation. Light remains light, but spreads into more space.
The spiritual posture is service through clarity, not accumulation through effort.
The self becomes the instrument: receive, translate, transmit.
Takeaway: Abundant living is not hoarding clarity. It is becoming clear enough to transmit what you receive.
Try it now: Use the prism to help you receive life as it is, clarify it, then choose what you radiate.
If you have a prism, crystal, or any piece of glass that catches light (if you don’t, you can imagine one), set it where you can see it.
Inhale and name what you’re receiving right now (a feeling, a situation, a thought).
Exhale and imagine that experience passing through the prism, becoming clearer with more purpose as it spreads.
On the next breath, choose what you want to transmit from that clarity: calm, honesty, encouragement, steadiness, or a positive outcome.
Notice: Does your energy feel more directed, even before anything “out there” changes?
And that’s what the vision did next. It zoomed in from flow as a whole to the exact moments where flow turns, splits, and changes course depending on our intentions.
3) The Pentagram: Energy Points and Redirection
A quick definition helps here. A pentagram is the mathematical name for a five pointed star, specifically a five pointed polygonal star.
What interests me about the pentagram in this sequence is how much it emphasizes points and intersections. It models geometry’s “decision moments” at its corners and crossings. There are many places where a line can’t continue without choosing a direction, yet all points are still connected.
That’s why my attention kept getting pulled to the nodes.
In network language, nodes are where information routes.
In lived experience, nodes are where you decide what you’re going to do with what you’re feeling or how you will act upon your intentions.
The pentagram can be used as an instrument for redirection. Not to block or deplete energy, but to give it intelligent pathways.
Working interpretation:
The pentagram highlights junctions, where flow concentrates, splits, and reroutes.
Intersections function like decision points, intention changes direction at contact points.
Refraction here is re-patterning the same energy. Energy can following a different route, getting a different result.
Takeaway: Transformation often happens at the angles, where one line meets another and the path turns.
Try it now: If you have a pentagram symbol (if you don’t, you can imagine one), use it as a pause point before you react to a situation or act on an intention.
Look at one of the star’s points and ask, “What’s the best route from here?”
Choose one small redirection you can make in the next minute.
a definitive step
a clearer boundary
waiting before you respond
Notice: You didn’t suppress the energy; you just gave it a better path.
Once energy can change course cleanly, it can also gather, sharpen, and project.
4) The Pyramid Revisited: Concentration and Projection
The final pyramid felt like the conclusion of an experiment. First we saw flow. Then refraction. Then redirection. Now we see what happens when energy concentrates.
Before I say anything symbolic, I want the geometry to be correct, because correctness is part of the respect here. It also supports the point.
A square based pyramid has:
5 vertices: 4 at the base and 1 apex
8 edges: 4 base edges and 4 side edges
5 faces: 1 base and 4 triangular sides
So, the clean summary is 5 corners, 8 edges, 5 faces.

Now, here’s what that did in my mind.
The corners are convergence points. Places where something gathers before it moves outward. And the faces are planes of expression, the surfaces that carry what’s been gathered into the world.
It’s a very practical model when you think about attention. When attention is scattered, nothing transmits cleanly. When attention coheres, it projects.
Working interpretation:
Corners act like concentration points. Coherence gathers at convergence.
Faces act like planes of projection. What’s gathered expresses outward.
The pyramid behaves like an instrument that receives, concentrates, then transmits.
Takeaway: Focus concentrates, then transmits. Coherence becomes projection.
Try it now: If you have a pyramid (if you don’t, you can imagine one), set it in front of you for thirty seconds before you start a task or conversation.
Touch or point to the apex and let it represent your aim. Name it in one sentence.
Then trace one edge down to the base, like you’re guiding that intention into a grounded next step.
Finally, rest your gaze on one face of the pyramid and take one slow exhale, imagining your intention spreading across that surface and outward into what you’re about to do.
Notice: When your aim is clear and grounded, your energy projects with less effort.
The Geometry of Energy as a Bridge
Taken as a sequence, this transmission reads like one unified model to help you clarify and direct your intentions.
Pyramid: stable structure and directed flow
Prism: refraction and redistribution
Pentagram: nodes and redirection
Pyramid again: concentration and projection
This is why I call these forms instruments. They behave like receiver and transmitter models, not only as symbols, but as a way to think about how attention and intention move through structured systems.
In the Lemurian teachings as I have received them, science and spirituality are not separate disciplines. They are the same study approached from different angles.
In future posts, I’ll explore how these principles show up in the engineering of spacecrafts, both human and Lemurian. I will also discuss how these principles may be applied to live more abundantly.
Coming next: A Practice for Clearer Interdimensional Connection and What Lemurian Technology Can Teach Us About Conscious Living.
And if that sounds intriguing but a little abstract, this is where I like to bring it back down to the human scale, a simple experiment you can run in your own body in under a minute.
The Prism Method: Receive, Refract, Transmit
If you want to experiment with this today, try this in your body for sixty seconds.
Choose one point in your body that feels the most “awake” right now: forehead, throat, heart, belly, hands.
Name what you’re receiving. Keep it simple, one phrase is enough: a feeling, a situation, a thought.
Choose one intention to transmit. Keep it simple, one sentence or less. For example:
I transmit clarity.
I transmit a positive outcome for this conversation.
I transmit the highest good for everyone involved.
I transmit focus for the next step.
I transmit encouragement.
Optional: choose a shape as your instrument (if you have one, you can hold it or rest your gaze on it, if not, imagine it):
Pyramid for structure, focus, and steady projection
Prism for clarity, translation, and gentle spreading
Pentagram for redirection, decision points, and rerouting energy cleanly
Breathe the sequence:
Inhale silently: Receive.
Exhale silently: Refract. (or Translate)
Next exhale: Transmit your intention. For example: Transmit clarity. Transmit abundance. Transmit an outcome.
What to notice afterward: Do you feel a little less scattered and more coherent about your desired outcomes?
Micro experiment: Try this before you send an important message, start a hard task, walk into a tense conversation, or hit publish on something you care about.
Sacred Geometry as Everyday Abundance
Here is what I take from this transmission when I bring it down to the level of an ordinary day.
A pyramid reminds me that structure can carry flow. A prism reminds me that I do not have to clutch what I receive, I can let it move through me and become useful. A pentagram reminds me that the turning points matter, the corners and crossings where intention redirects.
This is abundant living as I mean it. Not more effort, not more striving, not more pressure to be perfect. Just clear and focused transmission. Less hoarding, less leaking, more steadiness.
If you experiment with these instruments, even briefly, you may notice something subtle. The day does not necessarily change, but how you move through it does.
Join the Conversation
When you think about energy as flow through form, what shifts for you?
Do you relate more to the pyramid, the prism, or the pentagram?
In Love and Light,
Merdhin




