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Page 558

Posted: Wed Feb 11, 2026 2:59 pm
by Alexandr Korol
Chapter 33. Cycles

Well, now we are going down the list starting from October 31st, from
Halloween — things I recorded, things that were highlighted to me throughout
this time, specifically for the tenth volume. One of my entries is quite short:
“Under the light of the full moon.” Imagine: I’m watching different movies,
series, shows, and by chance, this comes up over the course of a couple of
days. People in different contexts utter the exact same phrase: “Under the
light of the full moon.” I decided that I absolutely had to record this — that
it means something — and I began to analyze it further. What’s curious
is the full moon itself. I must record this in the tenth volume, but I am giving
a physical example here, using the Moon and its cycles. It’s as if the system
— meaning God, meaning the Spirit — is hinting that we must try this on
ourselves, apply it, and see within ourselves what we haven’t been taking
into account. Look: the full moon is the middle of the lunar month. This is
very important. Most people are mistaken; they think that when the new
moon begins, and as the moon grows and grows until it becomes full, that
this is the entire cycle. But in reality, that is only half of its cycle. This is a
very important point the system highlighted to me, something to reflect on.
What do the texts say? “The full moon is a single moment, half of the
lunar cycle. The entire full lunar month is called the synodic month (from
new moon to new moon).” Do you understand? It turns out that the new moon
is when the moon is completely black. Then it begins to grow, light appears,
it emerges from the shadow, and it becomes a full moon — which is what
everyone pays attention to. But imagine — this is a sphere, after all. And it turns
out we only see how, under the light, only half of the moon has appeared. And
then what does the moon start to do? It starts to decrease again, or rather, go
back into the shadow, until it reaches the next new moon. And that cycle is
considered complete. Do you see? From new moon to new moon, not from
new moon to full moon. This is very curious. I strongly advise all readers who
come across this information in the tenth volume, right now in this moment:
don’t be too lazy to ask various artificial intelligences or Google about this.
Look at the diagrams, read what scientists write about it — it is very useful;
it is necessary. The system showed me that I need to pay attention to this.