Page 395

Alexandr Korol
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Page 395

Post by Alexandr Korol »

– Next is the mirror reflection of these two moods. The mirror reflection of these two moods is the underworld. The underworld represents the opposition to the sky and the earth – to the first two moods. So there is a bright world – the spiritual and the material – and there is a dark world of instincts and cruelty. That’s how it is. And these are the four moods. Essentially, as they say, there are two main ones, like black and white, but they also have transitional states. And these are the four seasons, the four moods. This is how the world is structured.

All this time, I have been deciphering this matrix, these cycles. There are some corrections – I rushed a bit, so I need to adjust my understanding of moods and how all of this works. It turns out that moods function slightly differently. So, we have the morning – this is when the Sun emerges from darkness. Then we have the day – this is when the Sun has fully risen. Then we have the Sun preparing to enter darkness – this is the evening, as it transitions into night. These are the four cycles. There is also a larger-scale analogy – spring is when the Sun begins to emerge from darkness, meaning from winter. This transition is spring. In spring, we move toward summer, toward the stage of the Sun’s full presence. Then comes the next cycle, when the Sun continues its path and enters autumn. Autumn is the transition into winter, meaning into darkness.

If we compare this with gods and moods, I see it this way: just as we have life and death, we also have day and night. And if we draw a parallel to what the sky, earth, and underworld represent – why there are three of them, where the fourth is, and how all of this is encoded – then if we align this with the three gods, it turns out that the sky is day, the earth is spring and autumn, the transitional phases, and the underworld is night. The conclusion – Brahma in Hinduism is the creator, Vishnu is the material God – representing spring and autumn, and Shiva is the destroyer. And here again, this cross-like intersection appears: Brahma is at the top, Shiva is at the bottom – this is the vertical axis, while the horizontal axis is Vishnu, the material God, since the material cycle also varies. The same applies to Greek mythology – Zeus is at the top, Hades is at the bottom, and in between is Poseidon, the God of earth or water. This is a more accurate interpretation. Why? Because I drew an analogy with myself and realized that I had been in the underworld. In the fourth volume, I was precisely exploring