09-29-2016, 05:14 PM
(09-29-2016, 04:16 PM)IndigoGeminiWolf Wrote: Ra said that 7th density was timelessness of an unimaginable nature. Is this because it is too long or too big to imagine?
Or is it like an eternity?
Or is it so long that at the end you won't even remember the beginning of it?
Will it be longer than the Universe will exist?
Personally, I actually think they were referring to the octave density when they said that. Though 7th density certainly comprises the process of 'turning towards' that timelessness that precedes the next octave of densities.
I think its because you essentially move into pure time/space. Space contracts to an infinitesimal state, and time increases infinitely, without bound. You approach supraluminal velocity and build up an infinite amount of spiritual mass. And then right before we are willingly absorbed into that timeless intelligent infinity we, in the seventh density, come to know our current self, or octave, in full -- every last iota -- every shade and frame of the entire continuum of space/time and time/space.
I also don't think we can really properly imagine it. Basically all notions of the passage of time go out the window in that framework -- the concept has no use or function at that level. It's not about "how long something will last" or "how much time I have left" or "how long this will take me", it is simply a matter of self knowing, and when that self knowing is completed to total satisfaction, we enter into the timelessness of the octave density. In the octave we will dwell in blissful, but unknowing, union with undistorted intelligent infinity for a completely unmeasurable amount of duration, since there is no change there, and thus no way to measure this imaginary thing called time. And eventually, after a couple eternities, or instantaneously, depending on how you look at it, we will, by the distortion of free will, deliberately choose to become focused as an organized Self, or Logos, once again, and form another octave of densities out of our own infinite substance.