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Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2025 7:37 pm
by Alexandr Korol
This must be recorded. First, Gaia – Earth – and Uranus – Sky. Then a whole lot of others appear, but the most essential ones, the ones who matter in the sequence of the matrix, are Chronos and Gaia. Record this. Because later, Chronos and Gaia give birth to the 12 Olympian gods. Let’s go further. Yes, Chronos and Gaia give birth to 12 gods, and their parents are Sky and Earth – Uranus and Gaia. And if you decode this, Chronos is Time, the god of time. That’s why, as I understand it, he is also called the god of agriculture, because thanks to time and cycles, everything ripens. And probably for this reason, in the sacred language, it is said that he always devoured his children – because time is essentially death, it leads to death, do you understand? Oh, and I also noted something – I don’t know if this is correct or not, it’s still a theory, maybe I’ll end up crossing it out later – but I recorded for myself that the sunrise in the great matrix, if we take the entire year, corresponds to the summer solstice, and the sunset corresponds to the winter solstice. It’s the same as how we experience it within a single day, with the two twilights. So these twilights – Erebus and Aether – that happen daily are part of the small matrix, the 24-hour cycle, while in the annual cycle, they also exist, just scaled up. And that’s exactly what the winter and summer solstices represent. I took note of this.
Another thing I recorded for myself is that I always draw different schematic divisions of time, meaning the cycles of the day. You can divide it, for example, from six in the morning to twelve noon – this is morning, from twelve noon to six in the evening – this is day, from six in the evening to twelve midnight – this is evening, and again from twelve midnight to six in the morning – this is night, then from six in the morning to twelve noon again – this is morning. This is the most basic scheme. But then I also decided to divide it exactly into twelve and twelve because on a clock, we never see 24 – we always see 12 hours, understanding that there is one side and another side. And if we just talk about what is day and what is night, then the day we live is not the one that starts at 12 noon and ends at 6 in the evening, but the day that actually begins at a slightly different time. So there is 12 hours of day, and there are also a full 12 hours of night. This division is something to take note of. There is a full cycle of the arrival and completion of the day, and there is an entirely opposite disk of 12 hours, which can be considered all night – an entry into this night and an exit from this night – and this, too, is 12 hours. And in total, this makes 24.