A lot of buildings don’t sell because the money asked is too high, and the clarity of mind, spirit, that’s part of the buildings moving history is withheld by the seller; spirituality in business is taboo in this way.
Cultural knowledge, experience, and the consequent respect come first. Some people are simply more grounded psychospiritually than the majority few who enjoyed a relatively brief age of ignorance while the most powerful at mind and heart were chilling.
London is a wonderful space for multi-million real estate, the money spins as it should in a well-working slot machine, almost as fast as it’s printed and typed. So all that really remains is a bridge that removes the doubts of sellers and buyers in that the psychospiritual essence; spinning money in high-value buildings remains an integral financial activity with respect to a regenerative approach to global wildlife.
The psychospiritual space of a building by it had been interacted with by visitors is ignored during most sales processes. All craftwork is sentimental, be it part of the building’s foundation, or a remote one like furniture, or ornaments, name it. It is all significant.
This conversation connects building sales and other relatively high-value sales by virtue of sensitivity to energetic history, and with a new-minded approach it allows for the creation of connections with such essence that might even allow for better future cultures to be born from such stews of a city as London.
Marko