Wisdom from a Distant Galaxy, The Ascendant Intelligence by M.G. Hawking
English | 2016 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B01M0C67HG | 170 pages | EPUB | 0.24 Mb
English | 2016 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B01M0C67HG | 170 pages | EPUB | 0.24 Mb
The author, M.G. Hawking, spent sixty-two months deep in the Great Range of the Himalaya, during which time he and his companions experienced three encounters with individuals they believe to have been the true extraterrestrials goddesses of ancient Tibetan and Himalayan legends. Experience these extraordinary encounters and the ascendant intelligence they conveyed.
Throughout the Himalayan regions of Asia, there have endured remarkable accounts of “extraterrestrial beings” who, having arrived in an antediluvian era of prehistory, still dwell in a concealed inner region of the immense frozen fortress of the Great Range.
Are these ubiquitous legends merely myths? Or are they representative of some vaguely remembered reality passed down through generations beyond count? Absent an ember, there can be no smoke; there is a kernel of truth in all such ancient legends and, in light of today’s astronomical knowledge, they cannot be easily, or wisely, dismissed.
Data from the Kepler Space Observatory. has revealed that, rather than the previously estimated 200 billion galaxies in the observable universe, there are more than ten trillion galaxies (JPL, Oct 2016).
To put this in perspective, if you hold a single grain of sand at arm’s length against the night sky, the tiny patch of sky it hides contains more than 100,000 galaxies—not 100,000 stars, 100,000 galaxies. These range in size from dwarf galaxies with a few billion stars to giant galaxies with 100 trillion stars.
The incomprehensible immensity of our universe inspires a deep sense of awe—and inspires as well many questions. What’s really out there? Is there life anywhere else? Clearly, the number of stars in our universe is beyond the mind of man to number, but what about planets?
As of mid-2017, NASA had verified the existence of over 3750 exoplanets, that is, planets orbiting other stars in our Milky Way galaxy. “It’s very exciting,” said NASA’s Dr. William Kinney. “It opens up the universe. Now we know that we’re just one of billions and billions of small worlds that are very much like ours. If you extrapolate that to our galaxy as a whole, the calculation based on the Kepler data is that there are around 40 billion planets like earth.”
The 40 billion planets “like earth” is the number calculated to be in our galaxy alone, and the Milky Way is only one of the estimated two trillion or so galaxies. This makes a rough estimate of the number of planets in the known universe to be 80 sextillion (an 8 with 22 zeros behind it) (JPL/Caltech, 2016). To offer a frame of reference for that number, picture all the grains of sand on every beach on earth, multiply that picture by 16, and you may get an impression of how many planets are out there.
Transcribed directly from the journals of explorer M.G. Hawking’s five years in the Himalayan regions of Nepal and Tibet, this book contains detailed narratives of the encounters and conversations the author and his companions had with the actual legendary Himalayan extraterrestrials, or “celestial goddesses,” as the Tibetan term translates. During their second and third encounters, the celestials disclosed profound intelligence about our universe, our planet, and our true nature, wisdom that can greatly assist in understanding ourselves, our world, and our role and power in creating precisely the life we desire.
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