<<Contents -1.0 - 2.0 - 3.0 >>

1.0 / 1.1 / 1.2

1.2

The Meridian light Code

The Colours X

The three primary colours ; red, yellow and blue have an unusual association with the spectrum. There are two red colours , red and orange. Three blue colours, blue, indigo and violet, and curiously only one yellow colours onto itself. Of all these, yellow is the most mysterious. It creates a 'stand alone' green (via a mix of blue). Also, all of the primary colours themselves seem to have an invisible source or reason to be there. All colours are of course a mixture of these three, and are all sourced from the natural flow of light (violet to red). But the actual cause of colours is hidden. If we follow the actual numerical order of this pattern we find blue =three associates, red =two associates and yellow = one associate .Yellow being visibly on it's own, can only create one unique colours that of green. So we have two sets of one unique colours As The spectrum itself is clearly divided into three , the suggestion is to look for a set of three 'ones'. This means the only place the colours x could be, is adjacent to yellow.

Looking at the reflective nature of yellow, this means that 'x' is the connection to another meridian spectrum, a continuation through reflection. This second meridian is like the one above, but mirrored so that both x's join, and both connect to there respective yellow counterparts. This means they reflect each other, yellow to yellow. The colours X meanwhile connects to another pair related to one another but only distantly related to the first pair. So to is x joined to yet another meridian pair, and so on. This relationship of paired meridians is called the meridian helix because of the way it connects all meridians together, directly and indirectly in pairs.

Through this connection of X to all, it becomes apparent how it is a colours, and also why it is we cannot see it. The colours X, quite literally, is the one unifying of ALL colours in the universe at once. X carries all source of colours along the light wave invisibly from source to destination, or from the object we see, to the eye we see it with. It passes specific colours through many other meridians of intersecting light and colours, but retains it's integrity.Because it is in fact central to all universal colours, it remains un effected by other meridian influences.

 

 

1.0 / 1.1 / 1.2

<<Contents -1.0 - 2.0 - 3.0 >>

`:)(:~