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days
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Now we find out that the dots represent the numbers 1, 6 and 14. When we mirror the numbering (while the sum always equals 20), we find the numbers 6, 14 and 19. Both refer to 6/14 or 14/6, which refers to the 14th of June, while the sum equals 14 + 6 = 20, the number of dots! To understand what the numbers 1 and 19 of the dot at the head of the bee represent, we must understand the 18 Vinals of the Mayan calendar. A Vinal is a period of 20 days and a year counts 18 Vinals (+ 5 days left over to complete the 365 days of the year). Maya-researchers argue about the starting date of this Mayan calendar year. I found out that this differs from the starting date of the so called 13-moon-calendar. The 13-moon-calendar starts on the 26th of July, while the calendar of 18 Vinals nowadays starts on the 26th of May (0 “Pop”). Then it turns out that new age starts in the first Vinal and that the 14th June equals day number 19 of the first Vinal (19 “Pop”). This explains the numbers 1 (first Vinal) and 19 (day number) of the dot at the head! However there turns out to be also a relationship with the formation of the dragon-fly that arose on the 3rd June 2009! This is found when comparing the ratio of the dots:
This ratio equals 5 to 8, with a total of 13. This refers to the number of orbital periods of Venus between both formations on the one hand and the recreation of the world on the other hand:
Note that the number 13 is the Mayan number of creation (the 13 galactic tones of creation). Although there are slight deviations, we should bear in mind, that the orbital period is the period from the viewpoint of the sun and we should also include the position of the earth. Then it turns out that for an observer on the sun, the midpoint of Venus and the earth in the zodiac on the 3rd June 2009 – the date of the dragon-fly – is practically the same as on the other two days and aligned with the centre of the galaxy, which is considered as the centre from which new life is brought forth:
Note that the average midpoint precisely equals the midpoint on the date of the dragon-fly! © Marc Smulders
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