I need to grasp the fifth. It turns out there is a Sun God on four horses in the light, and also a God on four horses in the darkness. This imagery is used so that we understand there is a presence on both sides — there’s the lunar chariot and the solar chariot, so to speak. The lunar one means without the sun. When I started looking further into all the illustrations and what I found and where to go next, I saw that I discovered what looks like an eight- pointed star — everything seems great — and the four animals, and inside, the Lamb — that I found, inside this sphere, and everything is great. But next, there should be around it a ring of the 12 zodiac signs. I understand that now I need to keep building the matrix further, to study what the number 12 really means, because I haven’t deeply worked with twelve yet. Yes, I have grouped the twelve zodiac signs into three worlds, into four worlds — into groups — and this already serves as a kind of hint. But again, all this can be played with and reinterpreted however one wishes and however it turns out. And right now, that’s what I’m working on.
So it’s like the next stage I need to understand is the number 12 and these 12 elements: to figure out how they are formed, how from three worlds plus the fourth — the otherworldly one — I get seven, but then from seven I somehow get not 14, but 12, and why — that’s what I need to unravel. Also, the meaning of this 12: why 12, where it appears at all. From the hints I see today, if you look closely at the oldest calendars, often depicted — and this is again part of the interesting matrix unfolding — there is the Sun, the opposite Moon, and then mirrored to them are something else, like four more elements. But what’s curious, and why one of these lower elements, with two on top and two below, why the fourth element is like this — or rather, why it’s missing — this is very intriguing too. Because it’s Aether — that explains it. I’ll find the right words later to decode it more precisely — this explains why there are seven days in a week. My hypothesis is that these seven days are kind of split as three days plus a fourth, then again three days plus a fourth, because the fourth is Aether, the dead world, which is why it’s everywhere like a “corridor” — that’s how I see it. So the week should be divided into sky, earth, underworld, then death; then again sky, earth, underworld. And death is both there and there. So there’s one day in the week that belongs to both groups of four, you see? It acts as the fourth in both groups.