6.) There are 12 Universes

You might be wondering how I could possibly know that the number of universes is indeed 12. After all, we cannot state with complete certainty where even our own universe’s boundaries lie, whether it expands or doesn’t, or what its exact shape is.

Which brings us to mysticism. In the future, the true scale of the “universe” will be measurable fairly accurately. But there being 12 universes will never be possible to detect with any scientific equipment. However, it is possible to “see”, or even to “see and hear” this for a few fleeting seconds by means of extrasensory perception.

Well, why did I emphasize the words see and hear? Because when someone experiences a vision, nobody else in the room is able to see it, even should they be looking in the same direction. If someone hears a voice during their meditation, as in spoken words, no one else around them can hear them even in complete silence. This is extrasensory perception. To see that which others cannot see, hear that which others cannot hear. And in this way, receive answers to the questions that no one could correctly answer with any certainty.

It began with a vision in 1992. It was narrated by a voice:

“This is life, this is existence.”

I did not wish to find out the number of universes. It had never occurred to me that there could be more than one “in existence”. But this was the answer I received, nonetheless. What did I seek to find out?

Is there a limit to the universe? Is it even sensible to think about whether the universe has limits to begin with?

The second question was aimed at the centre of the “discoidal” universe. If there truly was a BIG BANG at the dawn of the universe, why is it not shaped like a sphere? After all, after the explosion in a presumed state of weightlessness, matter should have been sent flying in all directions evenly, creating an increasingly larger sphere. A sphere, not a disc. And there shouldn’t be anything visible to the human eye in the centre of that sphere. There should be no visible matter. Or should there? If so, why?

13.8 billion years have allegedly passed since the Big Bang. If the universe has been expanding for that amount of time, matter should have dispersed from the epicentre in every direction. Matter should only comprise the surface of a hollow ball, so to speak. Nothing inside nor above it. Simple logic tells us that the universe should have the shape of a hollow sphere.

Why then, according to today’s science, is the universe shaped like a disc rather than a sphere? Could it be that this assumption is based on the discoidal shape of galaxies observable via telescopes?

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