Are The Recent Northern Lights Fulfilling Ancient Prophecy?
On the nights of November 11 and 12, 2025, Earth experienced a G4-level geomagnetic storm triggered by an X5.1-class coronal mass ejection (CME) from the Sun. This event pushed the northern lights as far south as southern Texas and Florida, displaying deep reds, greens, and other vivid colors rarely seen at such low latitudes. These displays signal that the solar blast impacted Earth's magnetic field intensely.
For younger readers, this isn't the norm. Growing up in Minnesota, even that far north, auroras appeared only a handful of times. In the past 100 years, the northern lights have reached Florida about nine times, including this event—with five occurrences in the last 25 years. In 2024, displays extended to the Florida Keys in May and as far as Cuba and Puerto Rico in October, both from G4- and G5-level storms with multiple X-class flares similar to 2025's.
Yet these relatively moderate CMEs shouldn't produce auroras this far south. Something has shifted. The 1859 Carrington Event—an estimated X50-class CME—disrupted telegraphs and sparked auroras visible in the southern Caribbean, including Colombia. Today's smaller X4- and X5-class events reach similar low latitudes, offering clear evidence that Earth's magnetic field is weakening.
As Solar Cycle 25 nears its maximum's end, the next cycle arrives in about a decade. Many experts warn of escalating risks.
If you're unfamiliar with Ben Davidson from Space Weather News (formerly Suspicious0bservers), his videos are worth watching. He pioneered research on these changes by tracking the Sun and Earth, explaining the science and potential impacts over coming decades.
The evidence unfolds before us: increasingly common low-latitude auroras, collapsing ocean currents like the Mid-Atlantic Gyre and Gulf Stream, record storms and disasters, global famines, droughts, floods, and shifts in human behavior—shorter tempers, reduced empathy, declining mental health, falling IQs, sperm counts, and physical strength.
Davidson's work shows that continued magnetic weakening could allow a solar storm to penetrate deeply, devastating the power grid irreversibly. Ancient prophecies align with this, pointing to cyclical solar changes affecting the entire system. Davidson and growing researchers believe a solar micronova could trigger a full magnetic reversal and crustal shift, causing catastrophic earthquakes and tsunamis—echoing the Younger Dryas and global flood myths. He estimates this in the 2040s, preceded by grid failure.
Ancient myths worldwide describe the Sun influencing human cycles and unleashing wrath every ~12,000 years. Seers interpreted the same events through cultural lenses.
The Lakota Prophecy of the White Buffalo
Black Elk's vision, recorded in 1930s texts, describes a sacred tree of life encircled by a floral hoop representing all nations. Sins—war, violence, forgotten ceremonies, disrespect for elders, ancestors, and Earth—break the hoop. When people forget prayer, the Sun Grandfather (Wí) turns away. The White Buffalo Woman returns, marked by a perfect white calf's birth. She walks the four colors: white, black, red, yellow—signaling the old age's end and a new sun of unity, understanding, and peace.
The White Buffalo Woman messengers the Sun. Color shifts may reflect solar changes: from remembered yellow to today's brighter white, then black (prolonged eclipse), red (micronova), and restored yellow peace. One elder linked her return to the Mississippi River becoming undrinkable—a modern reality.
Aztec Ages of the Sun
Aztec history divides into five Suns. We live in the Fifth, ruled by Tonatiuh, sustained by human sacrifice. Earthquakes precede its end, with the Sun halting. Solar energy charges the crust, building tension—explaining rising earthquakes, volcanoes (like 2022's Tonga eruption), hurricanes, and dormant activity. Low-latitude auroras warn of escalating energy influx due to weakening protection.
Many traditions echo earthquakes as the end's first sign:
Biblical Revelation → great earthquake, black sun, blood moon, falling stars, shifted mountains.
Ezekiel → quake before Gog and Magog war.
Norse Ragnarok → Yggdrasil shakes.
Cherokee → Earth splits Gulf to Arctic.
Dogon → Earth trembles.
Navajo → Earth shakes four times.
Egyptian → Earth shakes at Ra's wrath.
Hindu → quake levels cities, heralding seven suns and Kalki's return.
These precede greater events.
Solar Changes in Myth
Native American stories describe the Sun shifting colors: yellow to white (observed change), black (darkness), red (micronova, possibly blue), then restored yellow. Hopi legends feature a blue star for the new age.
Many myths depict solar fury eradicating the unworthy:
Hindu Vedas → Kali Yuga ends with black Surya, seven suns boiling oceans, incinerating Earth; Kalki on white horse restores golden age.
Egyptian → Aged Ra descends, scorching Apophis and wicked; merges with Osiris for Zep Tepi renewal.
Norse → Sköll catches Sól, darkening world; new brighter sun rises post-Ragnarok (after Fimbulwinter, possibly Gulf Stream collapse).
Greek → Phaethon loses Helios' chariot, scorching/freezing Earth; Zeus ends age with fire/flood, new golden age.
Inca → Weak Inti hides five days; Inkarri flips world, brighter sun rises.
Zoroastrian → Molten metal river purifies.
Bön, Yoruba, Maori, Cherokee, Dogon, Baltic, Slavic, Hopi, Sami, Yakut, Ainu, Navajo → Similar purifying solar fire, new sun for survivors.
Abrahamic texts align:
Biblical Luke/Revelation → Signs in Sun/moon/stars, roaring seas, great earthquake, black sun, blood moon.
Islamic Hadiths → Smoke (possibly auroras/volcanic), earthquakes, sinkholes, stars scattering, Sun rising west (pole flip).
Jewish Talmud/Midrash/Zohar → Darkened/eclipsed Sun/moon, earthquakes, falling fire stones, Sun from sheath healing righteous/burning wicked.
Cultures worldwide—unconnected by mainstream history—describe identical solar/Earth cataclysms: weakening field (low auroras), earthquakes/storms, darkness, micronova fire, purification, pole shift, renewed peaceful Sun and world.
These alignments with modern observations—field weakening, extreme auroras, ramping disasters—demand attention. The ancients warned us; science now echoes them.

