Earthquakes

The Willow File

Consider an earthquake. It took many years for certain rock formations to develop.

When such a formation is suddenly ruptured, there is a kind of time distortion that can somehow be related to the time it takes for the impulse within the Earth to reach the source on the other side. It may be possible to prevent earthquakes by treating the fault line with sound before the earthquake occurs.

The reasoning behind this is that, as long as we do not understand the Earth's neurological pathways, we should try to reach the source of an impulse by sending a signal backward along the pathways to the source, by injecting the signal at the fault line (in the original: “Terminus”).

(This may only be a way to trace these neurological lines, rather than a method of direct prevention.)

However, it would allow earthquakes to be displaced, so that the impulse from the source is directed to occur in a different region where it does not have such a destructive effect. It may be that animals pick up sound waves associated with earthquakes. That may be partly normal sound, but outside the frequency range perceivable by humans, and partly a “black” sound, which is qualitatively different.

(This may be the same “sound” Seth referred to in an earlier reading with W. H. Kautz.)

This black sound can build up and, figuratively speaking, explode into normal sound. Humans and other creatures are sensitive to this black sound. There are connections here to light. Black sound can also appear as light. Sound can accompany light, and light can accompany sound. It may or may not be visible light, but it is the same type of light that would be emitted as electrical impulses along a nerve—if one could see it.

Before a minor tremor occurs, an explosion of electromagnetic energy would take place, accompanied by black sound and a corresponding light. This light can travel through the Earth at a much greater speed than normal sound. These tiny explosions could be detected if the light emissions could be captured—or if the black sound could be measured for that purpose. Black sound is picked up by the roots of trees, even by rocks, though animals may not be able to sense it. It also affects cellular structure. Perhaps one day the roots of trees (not the trunk) could be monitored with a measurement system, but that seems difficult.

There is also a temperature change that precedes an earthquake—either a gradual drop followed by a sudden rise, or the reverse.

(Rob: There was a recent report about a guy who built an infrasound generator that turned out to be very deadly. Some animals (or people?) were accidentally killed, and during autopsy it was found that some of their internal organs had completely dissolved.)

The Earth is alive, like the human body, and it has its own nerve network to transmit harmony or disharmony from one part to all others. A fault zone sensitive to an earthquake is comparable to a wound or a bruise. It is, figuratively, a focal point. It may be healed through the use of “black sound,” as explained above.

You can expect to find a bulge in the Earth’s surface near such focal points. There are nerve-like connections between the various regions with fault lines. These focal points cause local warming in the ocean water (or underground water?), resulting in currents of warm water. If an earthquake manifests as a tidal wave (tsunami), there is a kind of reflection or echo (perhaps non-physical?) from the opposite shore back to the focal point where the earthquake occurred.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Tom-Willow File - Index

Pyramids