Page 475

Alexandr Korol
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Page 475

Post by Alexandr Korol »

you know, they say there are three months per season — but more importantly, I would say that it’s not even about the months. Seasons are more important. I would say that each season is like a separate world, and there are four of them — four worlds, four seasons — and each has three stages, like three sub-levels within that world. For example, when autumn begins, there’s the first month, which is like a fading summer transitioning into autumn. Then there’s the second month, which is the peak of autumn. And then there’s the third month, already transitioning into winter. So, you see, the main one is the central month of the season, and the others are transitional — they’re not as concentrated, I’d say. The peak months are the central ones in each season, while the others are transition periods. And now further. If you continue to break down this whole matrix, how it’s built, and take into account light, cardinal directions, angles, all those degrees, then it’s quite possible that it’s actually one and the same thing which, due to a change in its position, becomes something else. Figuratively speaking, there’s a triangle. Let’s say we look at it and it’s pointing upward. If we flip it upside down, it’s now pointing downward. Something has changed — it’s as if it’s something different now. It could mean something else, even though it’s the same object. It flipped and became something else. And what’s also curious is that if you take into account that there are poles, like plus and minus, then we might be looking at the world from one side. How can I explain this? Imagine the planet is made like a spiral, and on one half of the planet, if we stand there, the spiral goes clockwise, and if we’re on the opposite side of the planet, then the spiral goes counterclockwise. In fact, water really does swirl in different directions depending on which pole you’re near on Earth, and because of that, motion is different. So what? What’s next? It turns out that in the area where the spiral spins to the right, clockwise, that part of the Earth has, figuratively speaking, certain continents and seasons. And on the other side, it’s the same thing, only spinning in the opposite direction and completely as if it’s, let’s say, the opposite. And it turns out that if we count everything, we get a large number of elements, but if we understand that it’s actually one and the same, then the number gets reduced. So this is what I was deciphering and what really struck me when I was working on the first volume of “Alternative History,” especially at the end, when I finished it. That it’s all one and the same thing, just in different states. And then I said that even this “three,” I initially arrived at the