In truth, even when sitting at your computer, turning your attention to prayer for a short daily period can energize the surrounding area into a sacred space through the energy vibration of your intention and thought. Any place where worship or religious ritual is conducted spiritualizes that place. Sacred places are also sites of creativity and spiritual renewal.
Religious anthropologist Mircea Eliade suggests that sacred spaces are places where spiritually transformative experiences that have particular meaning for humans take place. A safe place, away from the chaos, for God’s peace and serenity to enter your life can be your desk in the home office or elsewhere. But when you have had an experience with the angels or with divine guidance, regardless of where it happened, that space most likely will be deemed sacred space. Your sacred space will most likely already be in your environment; this means you don’t have to find a cave in the Himalayan mountains or a spot in an isolated village along the fringes of the Sahara Desert.
Moses dropped to his knees on Mount Horeb. The Buddha sat under the Bodhi tree. Jesus often prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane. These places became sacred because of the transformations of those praying there. Your sacred space where you choose to invite your angels might even be at your computer. The point is to find a place, and extend the invitation to your unseen allies.