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it more like this: if you picture not a ball, but a disk in the form of a spiral, as if a serpent coiled in a spiral, then when I look at this spiral from one side, it goes as if clockwise, but if I turn it over — it goes in the opposite direction. And so the question arises: from which side are you looking at it. By this principle works the swirling, so to speak, of water in the toilet. And therefore, time itself flows in the opposite direction, in the literal sense of the word. And this is precisely what further explains, as I hinted earlier in other books, that it is not that there is only one time, but that time is also different everywhere. Not that it runs faster somewhere and slower somewhere else — if you explore the entire matrix of the system we live in, then this time flows simultaneously both forward and backward. Both forward and backward. And also, as Wikipedia writes, the inhabitants of the Southern Hemisphere see the Moon upside down. And accordingly, in the Southern Hemisphere the Moon waxes from the left and wanes to the right, whereas in the Northern Hemisphere it is the opposite. You see, it turns out that you are literally as if standing on a little sphere: some people live on top of the sphere, above the sphere, and others live beneath the sphere and walk, as it were, upside down. Consequently, they perceive the starry sky differently. And since time flows in the opposite direction, then likewise the waning Moon after the full moon, and when it waxes — the waning and waxing of the Moon — goes in the reverse order. Further, Wikipedia says that the Southern Hemisphere consists mostly of oceans and seas, while in the Northern Hemisphere there are vast landmasses. The population of the Southern Hemisphere makes up one tenth of Earth’s population. And there are located Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro — that is Brazil in South America, Argentina. It is written that the Southern Hemisphere includes the continents: Antarctica, Australia, most of South America, part of Africa, a significant part of Oceania, as well as fully or partially four oceans — the southern part of the Atlantic, Indian, Pacific, and the entire Southern Ocean. And it also says about the starry sky, that the sky of the middle latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere differs greatly from that of the middle latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, in terms of the constellations visible — they are reversed. Moreover, there is no bright equivalent to the North Star: Sigma Octantis, which is close to the South Celestial Pole,