The Pleiadian Mission - Randolph Winters-pages

Page 157 of 367

Page 157 of 367
The Pleiadian Mission - Randolph Winters-pages

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existence. Perpetual motion, then, is the most natural thing in the universe; our senses of sight, touch, smell, hearing, and taste are just not capable of perceiving it. Moving in Time The pulse energy of time is moving through the three-dimensional world we live in, causing the smooth flow of particles which hold everything together. For instance, the moon is really a mass of particles that stay together because time is controlling it. But what if we disturbed the speed of the particles that comprise the moon—what would happen to it? Would it move out of time? First, remember that at the smallest level, the moon is just a mass of spinning particles. Each particle has three stages of oscillation. The first state is a positive charge, the second is a 0 state that has no charge, and the third state is the negative charge. Billions of times per second the particle is oscillating between these states. The particle is in material form during the positive state. As it moves into the 0 state, it is no longer material matter, but becomes antimatter, or nonmaterial. In the negative state it is once again matter. The speed at which it oscillates through the three states is controlled by time, which is moving in waves of pulsed energy. All of the particles of the moon, then, are oscillating at a constant speed, so they are positive, nonmaterial, and negative at the same time. If all of the particles are doing the same thing at the same time, they can be formed into something which appears as solid. If the particles were all random, they could not form a solid object. Understanding this, let's say we develop a machine that can create time