Well I was almost finished with chapter 10 before retiring to bed. Chapter 8 was a little difficult for me, so I highlighted some areas for re-reading, but instead continued on to chapter 9, and found many of my questions from chapter 8 were answered in 9. That is what I like about Mr. Cater's book, he continuously builds his chapters on the previous ones, making it easier to both follow and understand what he is explaining. Right from the first chapter he begins at the beginning and then slowly, chapter by chapter mounts to the next level of understanding.
I will say though, I am going to have to quit reading it before bed. I read for an hour or so then try to sleep, but instead I find myself awake thinking about all he has said. Tonight, while thinking, I came to the realization why a HE had to be in the midst of an area with no population and no, or very little vegetation. If it takes a medium or an obstruction for soft particles to form, then those in the HE would not want anything on the earth's surface that would interfere with, or prevent soft particles from entering into their world. If light rays hit other mediums before reaching the outer surface of the HE then I can see how that would be life threatening for the inhabitants of the HE. Therefore, what a better place for penetration of soft particles than the open land at the North Pole--as I just couldn't see this happening in New York City! The soft particles would be captured inside all the high-rises and never have an opportunity to hit ground, let alone see it.
Then that brought me to thinking about the Egyptian Pyramids. I laid there wondering if pyramids were not built for burial chambers, or hidden treasures, like most think they were, but instead for healing centers, as the structure of a pyramid is perfect for an abundant formation and infiltration of soft particles the way sunlight is able to penetrate the entire area of a pyramid. Then I thought, maybe those pyramids were actually entrances into the HE? If memory serves me correctly, I think the pyramids did have many tunnels leading into the earth.
Cater's book not only teaches, but opens the mind to many other possibilities. It also puts my mind on insomnia mode, but I am enjoying the book immensely!
Well I was almost finished with chapter 10 before retiring to bed. Chapter 8 was a little difficult for me, so I highlighted some areas for re-reading, but instead continued on to chapter 9, and found many of my questions from chapter 8 were answered in 9. That is what I like about Mr. Cater's book, he continuously builds his chapters on the previous ones, making it easier to both follow and understand what he is explaining. Right from the first chapter he begins at the beginning and then slowly, chapter by chapter mounts to the next level of understanding.
ยทยทยท
Leslee,
You've got that right. He keeps going over things more and more, in succeeding chapters.
Leslee wrote:
I will say though, I am going to have to quit reading it before bed. I read for an hour or so then try to sleep, but instead I find myself awake thinking about all he has said. Tonight, while thinking, I came to the realization why a HE had to be in the midst of an area with no population and no, or very little vegetation. If it takes a medium or an obstruction for soft particles to form, then those in the HE would not want anything on the earth's surface that would interfere with, or prevent soft particles from entering into their world. If light rays hit other mediums before reaching the outer surface of the HE then I can see how that would be life threatening for the inhabitants of the HE. Therefore, what a better place for penetration of soft particles than the open land at the North Pole--as I just couldn't see this happening in New York City! The soft particles would be captured inside all the high-rises and never have an opportunity to hit ground, let alone see it.
Leslee-
If you think about it, there's not that much pavement covering the surface. And the penetration of soft particles would go on through the layers of ocean water.
Leslee wrote:
Then that brought me to thinking about the Egyptian Pyramids. I laid there wondering if pyramids were ** not built** for burial chambers, or hidden treasures, like most think they were, but instead for healing centers, as the structure of a pyramid is perfect for an abundant formation and infiltration of soft particles the way sunlight is able to penetrate the entire area of a pyramid. Then I thought, maybe those pyramids were actually entrances into the HE? If memory serves me correctly, I think the pyramids did have many tunnels leading into the earth.
Leslee-
Cater does quite a bit on pyramids, I have forgotten the chapter number. Certainly soft particles which escape through fault lines and such would accumulate it a pyramid were built over them. But that doesn't mean that the subterranean tunnels and caverns underneath the pyramids in Egypt go the hollow portion. They could lead to a cavernous world in a orgone-rich environment at some strata further down. The hollow earthers were not necessarily connected to the pyramids, although they could have been. Maybe there were some vias of direct access from the surface.
The people are exceedingly musical, and learned to a remarkable degree in their arts and sciences, especially geometry and astronomy. Their cities are equipped with vast palaces of music, where not infrequently as many as twenty-five thousand lusty voices of this giant race swell forth in mighty choruses of the most sublime symphonies. The children are not supposed to attend institutions of learning before they are twenty years old. Then their school life begins and continues for thirty years, ten of which are uniformly devoted by both sexes to study of music. Their principal vocations are architecture, agricaluture, horticulture, the raising of vast herds of cattle, and the building of conveyances peculiar to that country, for travel on land and water. By some device which I cannot explain, they hold communion with one another between the most distant parts of their country, on air currents. All buildings are erected with special regard to strength, durability, beauty and symmetry, and with a style of architecture vastly more attractive to the eye than any I have ever observed elsewhere.
About three-fourth of the "inner" surface of the earth is land and about one-fourth water. There are numerous rivers of tremendous size, some flowing in a northerly direction and others southerly. Some of these rivers are thirty miles in width, and it is out of these vast waterways, at the extreme northern and southern parts of the "inside" surface of the earth, in regions where low temperatures are experienced, that freshwater iceberg are formed. They are then pushed out to sea like huge tongues of ice, by the abnormal freshets of turbulent waters that, twice every year, sweep everything before them.
Members,
Maybe this is why Arctic icebergs are comprised of fresh water.