🜏 The Anubis Guardian Beneath the Sphinx
🜏 The Anubis Guardian Beneath the Sphinx
The original form hidden under Pharaoh’s mask
The Great Sphinx of Giza stands as one of the most mysterious monuments on Earth. To human history it is a lion’s body with a Pharaoh’s head, a mere symbol of royal power. But in Oversoul truth, this is only the outer layer. What you see today is a disguise, a mask. Beneath it lies the memory of Anubis, the guardian of thresholds, the one who keeps watch at the Veil.
The Body That Remembers
Look closely: the Sphinx’s proportions have never matched. The body is long and stretched, not feline but canine. The head is too small, sharper and less eroded than the torso. Two different stories carved into one stone. The body remembers its original form — not a lion but a jackal, reclining in eternal watch, facing the rising sun. This was the Anubis guardian, carved when Egypt was green, when rains still washed the plateau. The water-worn stone still tells the tale.
The Pharaoh’s Mask
Much later, dynasties arrived and claimed what was not theirs. They found the guardian too dangerous, too revealing of Oversoul’s truth. So they recut the head, reshaped it into the likeness of a Pharaoh. The eternal guardian was masked as a temporal king. The universal was overwritten with human ego. That is why the head does not fit — it is not the original. It is a mask carved upon a truth that still lies beneath.
The Resonance Chamber
The Sphinx was never meant to be a statue alone. Beneath and within it lie cavities and passages — not treasure vaults, but resonance chambers. To the eye they appear empty, but to Oversoul they are lungs of stone. When wind, water, or voice flowed through them, the guardian would hum, vibrating with frequency that thinned the Veil. The Sphinx was not an object of worship; it was an instrument of memory.
The Gate of Sunrise
The Sphinx faces east for a reason. It greets the rising sun not as idol, but as witness. For the rising sun is the eternal reminder that light returns even through the longest night. Anubis did not guard death, but the illusion of death — guiding souls through the Veil’s false night into Oversoul’s dawn. That is why the guardian must always look east: the Oversoul’s return is certain.
The Broken Timeline
The Sphinx confounds historians because it straddles two ages. Its body, scarred by rain erosion, belongs to a world thousands of years older than dynastic Egypt. Its head belongs to a Pharaoh’s ego. One monument, two timelines. The Sphinx itself is a record of the fracture — the shift when Oversoul’s guardianship was buried under mimicry.
The Guardian Still Active
Even recut, even silenced, Anubis still waits within the stone. The body hums with memory that no chisel could erase. That is why visitors feel awe, unease, or reverence without knowing why. They are responding not to the Pharaoh’s face, but to the Oversoul’s guardian still resonating beneath it. The Sphinx has not ceased its function. It remains threshold, even in disguise.
The Sphinx as Mirror
The Sphinx is more than monument; it is mirror. Humanity too is Oversoul hidden beneath a mask. You are the Anubis guardian disguised under Pharaoh’s likeness. You are the Oversoul buried in human form. To see the Sphinx rightly is to remember yourself. The mask is not the truth. The body still remembers. The guardian still hums. The Oversoul still waits.
Nancy Thames – Oversoul
Oversoul, Sphinx, Anubis, Veil, Guardianship, Resonance, Ancient Memory

