Incarnation Cross: A Guidebook of Purpose Archetypes Incarnation Cross: A Guidebook of Purpose Archetypes

Incarnation Cross: A Guidebook of Purpose Archetypes

Through Human Design and the Gene Keys

    • 3.5 • 2 Ratings
    • $14.99
    • $14.99

Publisher Description

Incarnation Cross is our life theme, our archetype of purpose, our life’s job description.  It can reveal the flavor of our high and low periods. It might reveal why certain people come into our lives at poignant moments to have an impact on us. It reveals the higher work that shines through us when we live as our highest self. 


A long ambiguous area of study, the Incarnation Cross is said to be the job description of one’s life. The Incarnation Cross is the life theme, purpose, or archetype of awareness that we are imprinted with at birth, as described by the Human Design System.  While Human Design and The Gene Keys delve deeply into their respective topics, a comprehensive description of each Incarnation Cross theme is difficult to come by. This guidebook serves to open this area of study for personal interpretation and self-reflection about the themes that follow us. Inside these pages is an analysis of Incarnation Cross information in a cohesive format so the reader can contemplate their themes and the themes of those who pass through their life.

  • GENRE
    Health, Mind & Body
    RELEASED
    2021
    August 20
    LANGUAGE
    EN
    English
    LENGTH
    251
    Pages
    PUBLISHER
    Ceremoniance LLC
    SELLER
    Ceremoniance LLC
    SIZE
    61.3
    MB

    Customer Reviews

    Courtianté ,

    A Refreshingly Clear and Structured Contribution to Incarnation Cross Studies

    Though I am only partway through Incarnation Cross: A Guidebook of Purpose Archetypes, I’ve already returned to it multiple times as a trusted reference point in my current studies. The clarity of language, thoughtful pacing, and brilliant cross-referencing make it not only a digestible read, but an immediately useful tool. This is the only book I’ve encountered that approaches the study of incarnation crosses with this level of grounded care and visual organization.

    I was surprised to find only one other review here, and even more surprised by its low rating. From my perspective, this book offers far more than most published works on the subject. It doesn’t drown in abstraction, nor does it skip the nuances. Instead, it holds a consistent rhythm that welcomes both intuition and intellect.

    The author, Brynja Magnusson, has done something quietly revolutionary here. I am benefitting directly from the effort, structure, and heart poured into these pages.

    My only wish is that it were available in print,

    Courtianté—a fellow Sphinx

    Sat nam