Planetary Round 4

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Round 4 of the current Planetary Rounds.

Pertinent to our planet now [2008] are four (4) evolutionary rounds of three Planetary Cycles each totaling the 12 dimensional timelines that comprise both the particle and anti-particle Universe. The Tribal Shield accesses the blueprint of the entire 4 round cycle, including the total memory of the 12 dimensional time cycles. (Repeatedly it has been mentioned that the Ascension cycle is about accelerating through a gradual particle/antiparticle merge of these 12 timelines. Hence the importance of the 12 strand DNA as each DNA strand corresponds to one dimension of the entire 12 cycles.) The four rounds within each Age of the 12 dimensional time cycles are approximate 26,000 year cycles. These rounds (Astrological Ages) are also known as the “Precession of the Equinoxes”....

Planetary Cycles

4 Planetary Rounds = 1 Planetary Cycles = 1 Astrological Age = Aeon = 26,000 (26,566) years = precession of Earth’s axis of rotation with respect to inertial space.

At the end of every cycle, we become aligned to the galactic core; Stargate portals open (See Planetary Gates, and we are eligible to proceed with an Ascension timeline.

Refers to the precession of Earth's axis of rotation with respect to inertial space. Inertial space is a coordinate system (or a frame of reference) defined with respect to the distant stars, whose relative positions do not change over reasonably long periods of time. A complete precession cycle (One Astrological Age) covers a period of approximately 25,765 years, the so called Great Platonic Year, during which time the equinox regresses over a full 360°. The precessional movement also is the determining factor in the length of an Astrological Age or Aeon. (Note that there are 12 Zodiac Archetypes that are each of the 12 Astrological Ages. We are moving from the Age of Pisces to the Age of Aquarius.) The precession of the equinoxes is caused by the differential between the gravitational forces of the Sun and Moon on the Earth.


References

August 2008 Newsletter

Wikipedia: Precession of the Equinoxes


Term first found in HGS Manual: Page 109