Meteor Showers – Starlight Food for Your Light Body Meteor Showers – Starlight Food for Your Light Body Meteor Showers are a night sky phenomenon that sparks the human soul with awe and wonder. To catch a glimpse of the fleeting light streak across the dark sky – takes your breath away, brings a squeal of delight and opens your heart to playful joy. Part of that sparkle of joy from a “shooting star” is your human reaction to the influx of light nourishment your light body is receiving. Every particle of light you encounter interfaces with you and your light body. The rare special treat of seeing a meteor/shooting star is like a delicious treat, a morsel of yummy star light! We have to thank mom & pop comet for the brilliant gifts of the meteor showers. Comets give birth to meteors. Comets are dirty snowballs, a bundle of ice and dust left over from the formation of our solar system. They spend most of their time in icy cold deep space, where they exist in solid state. When they get closer to the sun, they begin to melt and change and break apart. As they propel through space, they leave a particle stream in their wake. That debris stream lingers long after the comet has moved on, in fact, the comet adds to it each time it visits the inner solar system. Our planet is also orbiting around the sun – and at certain points in our earth orbit we intersect comet debris trails. When the earth atmosphere grazes these chunks some of the rocks get enough friction to ignite and burn up. We see this as “shooting stars”, as a meteor shower. These meteors are light codes being delivered from the comet to us on earth. The light that is given off from this exchange showers us with photons, little bundles of light. These photons act as messengers, as information bundles. They deliver Light Codes. Right into your pineal gland, and your crystalline body, your DNA, your bones. How To Receive This Starlight Nourishment You are doing this right now. Opening your awareness to this phenomenon and energy flow is like opening a massive doorway, saying you are ready to receive. This light nourishment happens at a cellular and atomic level, within your physical body and your energy field. It is a quantum activation of your light body. Yes, catching a glimpse of a shooting star is a direct transmission. AND this process is still happening to everyone on earth, sightings unseen too. We are within the orbital debris field of the comet, so this particle grazing and light activation is happening during the daylight, and while you are asleep in your bed too. Your eye is not the only receiver. You have many. They are always operational. And they respond to your attention and will strengthen and expand as your turn your attention to receiving the flow of meteoric light. Perseid Meteor Showers - All Week – with Peak August 12 & 13
The Perseid meteors happen around this time every year, as Earth crosses the orbital path of Comet Swift-Tuttle. You can catch your best glimpse looking Northeast, after midnight, best in the few hours before dawn. All week, with peaks expected the nights and pre-dawns of Aug 12 & 13. Swift-Tuttle is about 16 miles in diameter. It orbits the sun once every 133 years and comes within 84,000 miles of Earth (closer than the moon). I also pay attention to the outer reaches of a comet orbit, as the comet acts like a “delivery system” of content from that part of space. Swift-Tuttle travels in a large oval shaped path from beyond Pluto, likely from the Oort Cloud (a theorized cloud of icy matter/space stuff surrounding our solar system) - spanning a path of connection between the Oort cloud and us here on earth! It brings with it codes and information from the outer reaches of the Solar System – from the Oort Cloud, and all the space along the way through the solar system, gathering particles and energy from the orbits all of the 6 closest planets to the sun, and codes of the dwarf planets too. Swift-Tuttle’s most recent visit to our neighborhood was in 1992, and as a result, the 1993 Perseids had a peak rate of 500 meteors per hour. The year 1992 was also then the last time its orbit was replenished with debris—the more recently a comet has passed through the inner solar system, the more dust particles it leaves in its wake (more dust particles results in a higher peak meteor rate). Swift-Tuttle was discovered way back in 1862. “This is one of the first comets that really convinced people that there was a direct link between certain comets and meteor showers,” says James Zimbelman, a planetary geologist at Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum. Sources & Resources: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/perseid-meteor-shower-looks-even-more-beautiful-if-you-know-where-it-comes-180960082/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oort_cloud https://www.rocketstem.org/2020/11/28/ice-and-stone-comet-of-week-49/ https://www.innerspacevoyages.com/blog/mercury-new-moon-meteors-oh-my
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