
On Day 4 of my journey to Kemet, the experience started to shift from solitary reflection to shared discovery. This was the day I finally linked up with some of the beautiful spirits I’d be traveling alongside for the remainder of the trip. While I had already been in Egypt for two days—visiting the Red Pyramid, exploring downtown Cairo, and dining with a view of the Great Pyramid—this day marked the beginning of our group exploration.ion.
The setting was the famed Cairo Museum, a place filled with reverence, mystery, and layers of untold history. I traveled with Kaigwa and his wife Janet, Robyn our tour organizer, and our deeply knowledgeable Egyptologist guide, Ahmed. From the start, the vibe was energetic. There were questions flying in every direction. Spiritual, historical, speculative, ancestral—no topic was off the table. And Ahmed? He was on point. He took his time, embraced the dialogue, and even admitted that our group was pushing him to explore depths he wasn’t usually asked to go into.
We weren’t just tourists looking at things. We were seekers.
Then something happened that I’ll never forget. As we passed by a display, I came across a mummy that stopped me cold. My body reacted before my mind could even process what I was seeing. I felt nauseous, unsettled. Something about this mummy felt… different. Heavy. Painful. I told my travel companions that I couldn’t really look at it. It was too intense.
That’s when Ahmed shared the story: this was the Screaming Mummy, identified as Pentawer, the disgraced son of Ramses III. You can read more about the history and mystery of it here. But I didn’t need a story to feel what I felt. Robyn, our guide, also said she felt something shift energetically near that display. It wasn’t just a visual encounter—it was a vibrational one.
Beyond that moment, the museum experience was filled with insight, awe, and side adventures that I could barely document fast enough. I’d highly recommend that if you ever get the chance to go, hire a guide. Having someone who can translate not just the language, but the meaning behind symbols and architecture, makes the experience infinitely more powerful.
Towards the end of that day, I didn’t capture it on film, but I spent a lot of time back at the hotel planning. One of my goals was to interview every single person I traveled with. I wanted to sit down with them for 20–30 minutes each and talk about our shared moments, insights, meals, meditations, laughter—all of it. Unfortunately, we never got to do those interviews. But I haven’t forgotten.
So to Robyn, Jacqui, Daniel, Kaigwa, Janet, Ahmed, Claire, Rachel, Fabby, Jo, and Mohammed—I owe each of you that sit-down. When the docuseries is fully out (we’re rolling episodes through to September or October), I’d love to schedule a Zoom session. Just us, just reflection, just realness. After seeing what we captured, I think it’ll open the door to even deeper conversations.
Twelve days together. Fourteen for me. But the truth is—it felt like a full life cycle compressed into two weeks. You would’ve had to be there to truly innerstand.
Shout out to the Light Beings Circle (LBC) for walking with me through this, in vibration and in spirit. The inspiration, the insights, the encouragement—you all helped me unlock a part of myself that needed this journey.
Until next entry—Heru out.
🎥 Watch the Docuseries:The Path to Kemet – Full Playlist
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