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 Post subject: The sweetest part of time
PostPosted: Sat Feb 13, 2010 6:57 pm 
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We humans descend from the root of the time travelers from Atlantis, who are entirely human and walk the same streets as we. Bill Birnes described conversations with “visitors” as human as we while filming “UFO Hunters.” I too have met the time travelers on beaches, parking lots, and public gatherings and have written about these in the past.

Last fall (2009) my contacts asked me to scan a photo I had taken of a UFO at Giant Rock, California, in 1989. They said the photo I have is one of the last to be taken at Giant Rock. They are no longer active at that location. The photo was posted on October 22, 2009,about a week after they asked me to scan it. viewtopic.php?f=45&t=87 Some of the time travelers Ida and I worked with are no longer in this time-space nexus. They have moved on but continue to pull us towards them in time. What seems like years to us may be a matter of minutes to them, but the minutes they select work like acupuncture points in time. After making their contact they continue with their own work, leaving us to make the discoveries essential to our evolution.

Ida Kannenberg and I simultaneously communicated with one of the time travelers, Hweig. Ida would get one part of a conversation with Hweig, while I got the other part with him. Hweig's biography is told in "A Son Of Old Atlantis."

Hweig was my mentor with the TimeStar, who assisted me to correlate coordinates for the TimeStar with the world map and several other maps. After an intense week of working with Hweig on a map in 1994, during which I had no sleep on some days, the map was finally complete. I was exhausted and had lost track of time. When I sat down to finally relax with the job done, Hweig asked me what the date was. I had no idea. I ran to get a newspaper that had the date.

It was February 14, 1994. Hweig told me to sign and date the map. I call it the Sweetheart Map.

Now we're coming up on February 14, 2010 and I have used the TimeStar that Hweig and I put together to accurately predict key dates and events for the solar maximum that has puzzled solar physicists for several years. On December 16, 2009, TimeStar forecast a window for large solar flares and high activity from the end of January through February 12. The first M-class solar flares on the rapidly heating solar maximum erupted in that window PLUS sunspots made a sudden leap to nearly double on February 10.

Hweig explained how to calculate TimeStar forecasts in 1996 and assisted me with the first forecast in April 1996. I don't mind saying that I was so exasperated at the idea of forecasting earth and solar events that one day I laid down on the floor spread eagle and told Hweig, in essence, to put me out of my misery, shoot me or something. Hweig quietly waited while I rolled around on the floor proclaiming my extreme frustration. After a while he asked if I was ready to get up and finish the forecast.

I counted out the cycles and wrote what I thought they might mean. When I had done all that made sense to me, Hweig pointed out how several glyphs came together and asked me if I should say something about Hawaii for July 16. We had been talking about and working on the first TimeStar forecast for several days, and I was still completely frustrated about what seemed like an impossible task, forecasting earth changes. Hweig was right, so I wrote a few lines about events in Hawaii. Then I sent the forecast to several people to document it had been made in April. I had NO idea what the outcome of events would be when I made the forecast.

On July 17, 1996 the Loihi Seamount near Hawaii collapsed and gave scientists the first chance in history to observe a collapsing seamount. It was big news in the world of science, and I had pinpointed both the location and date in the first TimeStar forecast because Hweig kept pointing out things for me to consider. Several other events in the months between April and July had validated the TimeStar’s pinpointed areas in the first forecast. I was thoroughly astounded and began to work with TimeStar forecasts as a test for the theories Hweig had explained. I knew that if I could figure out how the cycles worked, we would have a predictive tool to forecast events. Virtually all TimeStar forecasts since the first one with Hweig have been based on empirical observations. That's the way the time travelers work.

The time travelers point to an area of inquiry and let us make our own discoveries. That's the way the time travelers learned from their mentors who assisted them to discover time travel.

When all's said and done the Sweetheart Map is my favorite piece of work with Hweig. It was an intense learning curve with a sweet ending. TimeStar forecasts are immensely more important as a predictive tool, but the Sweetheart Map was the sweetest part.

Happy Valentine's Day,
Krsanna


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