Today I want to share a story of a time when I saw the Viera peeking out behind the edge of the moon. I was not using a telescope. Before I begin, I do have a telescope. It's inexpensive and fairly weak. A 700 x 65 refractor scope with manual adjustments that goes up to 525x zoom. Enough to enjoy looking at Jupiter, Saturn, Venus, and the Moon. I haven't used it very much, but at the recommendation of a friend I assembled it last Friday. It's sitting in my living room with the 12.5mm, 56x eyepiece installed right now. I have other eyepieces I can use, but this seemed like a good place to start.
I don't know how much the light pollution will affect viewing, but I may go out and give it a try anyway on a clear night at the top of the parking deck. See what I can see of Jupiter, Saturn, and the Moon. Venus is too sleepy right now. She's behind the trees at the horizon. I noticed I was...recommended to look in that direction. Whether or not it's the actual trajectory path of Venus I was meant to look at or its azimuth/altitude position at that time (271 degrees, +11 degrees), I'm not sure. But I know it was so I could maybe see the Taygetan fleet going by. I'd have a window of about 82 minutes to maybe catch it. Seems Mari's video this morning has put the kibosh on that. I asked my soul if we could break the hologram, and she says it's possible if we were to team up with others. Alone, I'm not strong enough, but with a few select others, she believes it is possible. It would, however, be like kicking a hornets nest. Maybe I can see the Lunar Wave instead! For what it's worth, I remember a YouTuber named Honey C Golden mentioning the sky being a hologram a long time ago and the Moon being a visual. I used to be able to sense holes in the sky hologram--sometimes I still do but my focus has been elsewhere for a while. And I have also seen the Moon do very funny things in the sky. Like change positions, turn upside down, wax and wane the wrong direction, rise and set in the incorrect places. You'd think that's alarming, but after a while it just gets to be funny. Anyway, on to our story! This happened in April of 2022. I was camping with my ex and our two dogs at Red Top Mountain State Park. (This is the place I recently showed you in a video.) The night had gotten colder than anticipated, so neither of us slept hardly at all. We got up early, shivering, bones aching, muscles stiff. We were out of something, coffee or firewood I think, and my ex left to drive home to get some things. I was left alone with the dogs at 4 am, shivering uncontrollably, and trying to get a fire going. It was slow to spark up. Our campsite faced SSE and the Moon was waning just past full, the bright edge to the right. The sky was crystal clear and dark. I sat looking at the stars for a long time, staring deep out at them to the point where I could start to see little energetic halos around them. Everything was so quiet, cold, and peaceful. The fire was going enough to start to passively warm me, and I finally stopped shivering. I stared at the Moon while I warmed my hands. Just stared into the edge of it, trying to zoom in with my eyes. Trying to bring it into perfect focus. As I did, I noticed a little bright light slowly moving off the bright edge of the Moon about in line with the Stevinus Crater. It looked like an object about the size of Mars in the sky, only white. Very slowly it moved from behind the Moon, floated several visual millimeters away from the surface, then slowly floated back behind the Moon. I watched this take place over the course of an hour. I knew it wasn't a star, a plane, or even a standard spaceship. At the time, I didn't yet know about the Viera as a vessel. I wasn't reading any of the Swaruu's work yet. I had limited knowledge of ETs, and was only just starting to see my stellar family in dreams. So, I didn't know what it was other than "really big spaceship". But now looking back, I know it was the Viera, because it's the only object large enough to be seen unassisted like that. How did I feel about it? What was I thinking? Mostly, I was shivering and cold. Mostly, I was thinking about how my bones were aching. But the thoughts that did come through were, "Well, you don't see that every day. I wonder who's in that ship and what they're doing? Are they dropping things off on the surface? Is there a space station over there?" And then I played a little movie in my head of a space station getting supplies. Then I went back to feeling cold and really wanting some coffee. I thank you for your time. Adiamas. --Kyriel Comments are closed.
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