visited by
aliens from Sirius, from the constellation of the Dog, due to their descriptions of their visitors, but this is fancy. Their visitors hailed not from Sirius, but from the 12th Planet, who even then had advanced knowledge of the stars as they plotted their travels by them so as to know their place out in space just as ancient mariners held to the stars to know what place they occupied on the vast oceans. The dog heads worn as masks by these visitors were a common ploy,
occasionally switched for the heads of birds or snakes. While under the influence of those in the Service-to- Self
orientation, they found these masks aided them in terrifying the diminutive humans they encountered, as their
expressions could not be read.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/worlds/w38.htm[2/5/2012 11:35:04 AM]
ZetaTalk: Roller Coaster Ride
Mail this Pageto a Friend.
Since the passage of the 12th Planet is so devastating to the Earth, what must the ride be like for the giant hominoids who live on the surface of the 12th Planet? Surprisingly gentle, for the following reasons:
The 12th Planet is in the main a water planet, with the land masses that do exist sticking well out of the waters
calm surface. The rifts or friction points between plates thus lie well below the surface of the water. Just as
mankind is barely aware of earthquakes that happen deep under the sea, just so the hominoids on the 12th Planet
do not experience earthquakes.
In a magnetic clash, the lesser of the two bodies adjusts to the larger. All the adjustments of a pole shift occur,
thus, on
The passage through the Solar System is quick, occurring in a few short months [Note: see 2003 date explanation], so the combined warming from the Sun as well as the interior of the 12th Planet scarcely has a chance to begin
before it ends. What warming that does occur simply results in more active winds.
Any tearing away of the atmosphere on the 12th Planet is no more severe during its passage than at other times.
Where some loss is always occurring from a planet's surface, the rate of loss is dictated by the mass of the
planet,
During the passage, the hominoids are using history as a guide, as those who last experienced the passage are long
dead. This history is recorded as astronomical terms, so sighting the Solar System and confirming the orbits of the
planets is reassuring to those who might be nervous about the coming passage. In fact, the passage is viewed not unlike a holiday, where great dramas are played out before the eyes of the rapt audience. They pass by a Sun, as close as the planets bound to the Sun, a new and unique experience for those on a traveling world. When passing the Earth, they
can visually see the pole shift as it occurs, a phenomena which draws rapt crowds just as an eclipse of the Sun by the Moon does on Earth. Lightning storms occur in their upper atmosphere during the passage, fireworks rarely seen on
their calm world.
Thus, the passage is more a holiday than a dreaded situation. However, those with empathy for the human population
of Earth grieve, but there is scarcely anything they can do about what is occurring on Earth. They can no more steer their planet than mankind can.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/worlds/w65.htm[2/5/2012 11:35:05 AM]
Document Outline
zetatalk2.com
ZetaTalk: Worlds
ZetaTalk: Many Greys
ZetaTalk: Green Men
ZetaTalk: Reptilians
ZetaTalk: Orion
ZetaTalk: Praying Mantis
ZetaTalk: Cat People
ZetaTalk: Nordics
ZetaTalk: Pleiadeans
ZetaTalk: Sirians
ZetaTalk: Human Lookalikes
Lou Gentile Show, 10/14/2003
ZetaTalk: Variety of Life Forms
ZetaTalk: Size and Shape
ZetaTalk: The Vedas
ZetaTalk: Skyfish and Rods
ZetaTalk: Galactic Zoos
ZetaTalk: Genetic Contributions
ZetaTalk: Races of Man
ZetaTalk: American Indian
ZetaTalk: Australian Aboriginal
ZetaTalk: Family of Man
ZetaTalk: Moon Cities
ZetaTalk: Ultimate Agenda
ZetaTalk: Ancient Cultures
ZetaTalk: Cultured Aliens
ZetaTalk: Alien Interactions
ZetaTalk: Social Structure
ZetaTalk: Rituals
ZetaTalk: Music
ZetaTalk: Sexual Variations
ZetaTalk: Triads
Zetatalk: Sky Computer
ZetaTalk: Alien Names
ZetaTalk: Ancient Venus