Alphabet of Symbols
Calendar Glyphs
The glyphs used in the Mayan calendar have evolved over time
and use by tribes throughout the Americas as far north as
Canada. The glyphs were stylized for use at various pyramid centers,
while the calendar's mathematical design remained consistent in all
centers. Each glyph has a symbolic meaning that parallels a mathematical
equivalent in the calendar, thus the glyphs as a set are suited for a scientific language that I theorize
ancient astronauts used as a universal language.
Each glyph
has several meanings depending on the context in which it
appears and the specific tradition in which it is used, e.g., Ojibway in Canada
or Mayan in Mexico.
More meaningful than the names of the glyphs for the TimeStar
are the states of energy conveyed as a geometry inherent to
the glyphs. The TimeStar uses the glyphs taken from Chichen Itza in the Yucatan, which are depicted
in the codex now possessed by the Dresden Museum, and commonly called the Dresden glyphs.
Among the several versions of glyphs used in the ancient calendar that survived
conquest, an internal geometry of the Dresden glyphs is most useful
for the TimeStar. The glyphs are interpreted as states of energy for the TimeStar, and the divinatory meanings briefly summarized.
In its most elemental form the process of energy is the same for planets
as for humans symbolized for both as an archetype by the
calendar glyphs. A tetrahedron, or three-sided pyramid, is the
most basic form in nature, and the TimeStar is comprised of
five tetrahedra. Each tetrahedron has four tips, and the five tetrahedra
create a star-like form with 20 stellated tips arrayed around 12
five-pointed stars, or pentagons, mathematically tied to the center of the TimeStar. Together,
the 12 pentagonal centers with the center of the TimeStar total 13 pentagonal
centers with 20 stellated tips. The ancient calendar system used the numbers 13 and 20 simultaneously, with 20
glyphs with a 13-day count, thus paralleling the TimeStar geometry.
One glyph is placed on
each tip of a TimeStar tetrahedron. (Each tetrahedron in the TimeStar is
color coded, so that the structure of each tetrahedron is visible
in the geometry.) The four glyphs placed on each tetrahedron form a statement about
the relationship of energy on that tetrahedron.
To transfer the meaning of glyphs in other versions of the calendar
to the TimeStar requires only a shift of context to a planetary scale.
Virtually all modern interpretations of glyphs are framed in human terms, while
the TimeStar embraces planetary functions.
Wilhelm Reich's experiments demonstrated that the
bioelectric human field charges even inanimate objects with
life responses. Together the life fields of humans with the
bioelectric fields of other life forms and the atmospheric
orgone charge the planet with life responses. She is a
living Goddess. Planetary and human life are inextricable partners
in a whole system, each with its unique form of expression
from the same archetypal process of energy.
Predictions are forecast in 13-day window from lunar eclipses,
reflecting a 1 : 13 differential between personal and planetary
spheres. The 13 days of a TimeStar window represent a
process in the planetary sphere characterized by one glyph. Thus
a continual processing of energy simultaneously occurs on
numerous parallel levels -- personal and planetary -- to unfold as the illusion of time.
The Maya of illusion taught in the Hindu temples was counted
as the movement and measure of intelligent energy by the Maya
in the Americas.
Coordinates for TimeStar Sites
The longitudes and latitudes for sites in the TimeStar grid are arithmetically
derived with the angles of the TimeStar relative to the Great Pyramid in Egypt as
prime meridian, or 0 longitude. Again, the TimeStar structure defines the
application in-hand with designs of ancient pyramid centers. Additional sites are
identified by extending golden mean ratios for each of the 20 sites associated with glyphs.
The names of places associated with each TimeStar glyph are laid over a crop
circle suggesting a rotating tetrahedron made at East Kennett (England) in June, 2001. This
method identified numerous ancient sacred sites by name after first locating the associated
location mathematically with this method.
These latitudes and longitudes were first published on the TimeStar Crystal Earth Grid on February 14, 1995. That
the sites were first mathematically identified then found to be named with
ancient sacred sites is a measure of the TimeStar's significance in the ancient world.
Plato spoke about a geometry that was so powerful that it could not be revealed and also
asserted that if the world could be seen from above it would look like a ball with 12
faces. The TimeStar's 12 five-pointed star centers form a 12-faced ball, or sphere.