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TriTorch's avatar

Added this video to the article after publishing in case any of you missed it:

The Mesmerizing Healing Frequency of Sound, Cymatic Patterns, Tartarian Stained Glass, Star Fortresses, Hidden Ancient Wisdom: https://substack.com/@tritorch/note/c-106028626

Edit: also added all the moon quotes and poems that didn't make the cut at the end.

Edit 2: My sincere gratitude goes out to denise who, without which, this article would be abysmal and likely not exist.

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Donna's avatar

Imagine trying to get the US government to agree upon the 13-month calendar. We can't even get it to stop switching us back and forth from daylight savings time and standard time! But I'm all for we the people to start on our own recognizing the 13-month calendar! Let's do it!

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denise ward's avatar

We can do it this year and have a world-wide party on the Day Out Of Time which is July 25th in the 13 moon calendar. And we can simply start citing the 13 moon calendar whenever we cite the Roman calendar. The government always lags. We can go on without them.

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Donna's avatar

Our family is already looking forward to the Day Out of Time celebration on July 25th. I always make my own calendar each year at Vista Print using my own photos. I want to make a real calendar now, but have to make it up on my own. Can you imagine Vista Print, or other such companies, providing such a 13-month calendar format?!

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denise ward's avatar

I think they would if there was the demand for it. Though the ones at the top would not be in favor of it because they know how important it is when we get out of the time static that the Roman calendar puts us in. Kudos to you for making your own calendar. I had one made up without the glyphs, tones and seals, just the date and the new and full moons and it was really beautiful because it's so colorful. I also make 13 moon calendar flags that can be placed above door openings, on walls, etc.

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Alan, aka DudeInMinnetonka's avatar

You do you, I began framing time as 5785 last fall but convincing the masses 😜

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Alan, aka DudeInMinnetonka's avatar

I'm 59 and still get triggered when I hear metric, have a military clock on to do the mental math to theoretically keep me sharp but a new calendar is a conundrum for a complicated people

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denise ward's avatar

Is it easy for you to to go a website and look at calendar and match it up to the date on the Roman calendar? It's as simple as that. After a lot of uses, you would become used to it just like you do have some inkling of how much 10 mils are or 10 kilometers, yeah?

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Alan, aka DudeInMinnetonka's avatar

To achieve what?

Every January onward thousands of people write the last year on documents, or at least they did when pens and checks and such were normal but no.

We have an anachronistic system that's functional and unique and ours. I'm all about that unique American culture

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denise ward's avatar

No I'm afraid the calendar is not ours, but the Roman Empire's which we are still under much to their keeping it under wraps. At first people will still acknowledge the current calendar, but it has to start somewhere and what a perfect time for it to start, when the current systems are all crumbling from lack of coherence and consistency.

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Dave aka Geezermann's avatar

Great and interesting article. As Alan did below, I also was intending to comment about the Biblical calendar, aka the Jewish or Hebrew calendar. As you mention in the article, it is determined by the moon, by the new visible crescent moon specifically.

Ancient Israel had watchmen positioned to look for the first visible crescent moon. Once seen by two or more witnesses it was declared as the first day of the new month, beginning at sundown. This was very important, because counting from the new moon day was necessary to determine the commanded Feast days and what day of the month one was commanded to keep them.

In some years, about every fourth, a thirteenth month was necessarily added. This year, 2025, was one of those. The first new moon signaling the first day of the new year must also coincide with the sighting of the new green ears of barley in Israel. This year the new moon of March 1, seen the evening prior, was not accompanied by the green ears of barley.

This made the additional month necessary. So the next new moon of March 31, seen the evening prior, WAS the first day of the first month of the new year, in the Spring as it should be.

That news story and photo of the men who wanted a "fixed" calendar was something I hadn't heard before. The fine print said "church festivals would be fixed to perpetual dates". Yikes

This sounds like what the beast system will impose on the nations in the latter days, when men will presume to "change days and seasons" from that given by the Creator.

The Biblical calendar does require observance of the Sabbath, the Shabbat, on the seventh day, which is still Saturday on the Gregorian calendar. The false "christian" church in 325 AD decided to change the commanded day of rest and worship to Sunday, the first day of the week, rejecting Yahweh.

This year Passover will be observed on April 13. Then at sunset the next day begins, the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, a High Sabbath. The seventh day of Unleavened Bread, April 20, is also a High Sabbath.

The Jewish dates do not always coincide with the dates observed by those who keep the Biblical calendar, but often do. But the observance of "good Friday" and "easter Sunday" are found no where in the Bible, and the Messiah did not change the dates or observances. He died on Passover as our sacrificial lamb.

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Alan, aka DudeInMinnetonka's avatar

Much impressed with your thought out coherent comprehensive and cohesive reply explaining what I'd only brushed on with my AI summation.

What's your job? I'm the moon shomer, I run back to Jerusalem to tell them it's a full moon!

cool!

what do you do?

I wash the blood from the gutters in the temple but I get to eat the leftovers

oh👀

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Savannah Smiles's avatar

I believe they changed it not only so that we couldn’t honor God’s holidays but so that we wouldn’t think of God at all. A 28 day calendar that perfectly syncs with the moon, pregnancy, ocean tides and menstrual cycles, would be proof of intelligent design and creation. There’s absolutely no conceivable way that would happen from a big bang.

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Alan, aka DudeInMinnetonka's avatar

Jews knew this and their calendar operates this way🤷

Yet Jews aren't acknowledged 🙄

Jewish Calendar Overview

The Jewish calendar, also known as the Hebrew calendar, is a lunisolar calendar used for Jewish religious observance and as an official calendar in Israel. It determines the dates of Jewish holidays and other rituals such as yahrzeits and the schedule of public Torah readings. In Israel, it is used for religious purposes, provides a time frame for agriculture, and is an official calendar for civil holidays alongside the Gregorian calendar.

The Jewish calendar consists of months of 29 or 30 days, which begin and end at approximately the time of the new moon. Since 12 such months comprise a total of just 354 days, an extra lunar month is added every 2 or 3 years to closely approximate the length of the solar year. Originally, the beginning of each month was determined by observation, but today it is based on computations rather than visual sightings of the moon.

The calendar is primarily lunar, with each month starting on the new moon. The length of the synodic month used in the Jewish calendar is 29 days 12 hours 44 minutes 3⅓ seconds. The years in the Jewish calendar are counted in cycles of 19 years, with 12 years being common years of 12 months and 7 years being leap years containing 13 months. The 19-year cycle has a total of 235 months.

The Jewish calendar is not the same length as a solar year on the Gregorian calendar used by most of the western world, so the date shifts on the Gregorian calendar each year. To ensure that the Jewish holidays always fall in the proper season, an extra month is added to the Hebrew calendar seven times out of every nineteen years.

The Jewish calendar begins with the epoch for the new Moon on 11:11:20 p.m. at the meridian of Jerusalem on Monday, 7 October 3761 B.C.E. (proleptic Julian calendar).

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TriTorch's avatar

Thank you for your comment and insight into that Jewish calendar, Alan.

As it is, quite a bit of work went into this from both myself and denise, and alas, all the bases cannot be covered and this article was already among the longest ever published here. So again, thank you for bringing this one to light.

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Alan, aka DudeInMinnetonka's avatar

I didn't intend to cast shade but Jewish history is often overlooked and it's at the core of many presumably european/christian traditions and it went unacknowledged here will read and ponder

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denise ward's avatar

It's good to have some kind of "geometry" to creating a calendar. I like the one you state if everyone did it but we must keep in mind that spring starts at a different time in the Southern Hemisphere so a calendar is also a bit arbitrary. The one we use though "throws our rhythm out" because every month has a different amount of days but without reason. Or certainly not a reason I can discern. The main point though is that we can choose the calendar, it is an arbitrary thing. The Roman one that was just there when we were born, puts us out of harmony and into the static because it is random.

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Alan, aka DudeInMinnetonka's avatar

I wish you the best of luck and bringing up the Jewish context my ex-wife who is still religious/observant knows our kids Jewish calendar birthdays as much as she does the Gregorian calendar of modernity / absurdity.

Indian culture reaches back way back not sure how they look at things but 180 Nations have to agree on or had to agree on a calendar and here we are.

Commendations on thinking outside the box I theorize on monthly men's cycles that are on acknowledged that pronounce themselves through me in weeks of feeling chilly versus not in the winter months due to no other factors but me noticing and then I'm warm again and then I'm chilly again with the realization that I'm happiest with the temperature at 75° plus but there's an automatic chill overtime on my body that doesn't occur logically or intuitively but on a cycle, I haven't cared enough to write it down but I noticed and have mentioned it to others and get shrugs.

Biphasic sleep is a term to describe those who don't sleep straight through 8 hours which has been me for 30 plus years some nights up very late all night with a ability to set my own schedule it works and have been scolded by doctors for not sleeping 8 hours but admitting to only six, standardized demands / requirements/expectations proven unrealistic yet again.

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Dave aka Geezermann's avatar

Thank you Alan. I also made a similar comment.

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Todd Lutz US Army 1SG (RET)'s avatar

Wow no wonder I've felt off my whole life. Creation highjacked by evil men then they tried to replace

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Rosemary B's avatar

yep.

Where are we going, and why am I in this hand basket!

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California Girl's avatar

Surely the Daylight Savigs Time is the greatest abomination on daily human rhythms.

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denise ward's avatar

Yes, it's so silly. They wouldn't change their policy on fluoride but they did on daylight savings. Just goes to show it's yet another stunt by these no-gooders.

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Peter Meyer's avatar

As another commenter noted, the calendar consisting of 13 28-day months plus 1 day (365 days), plus 1 day every 4th year, does not stay in sync with the Moon (the lunar cycle). For calendar reform this is a major defect because the phase of the Moon (visible most nights) is much more obvious than the position of the Sun in the sky in the yearly cycle of seasons.

Of course, almost any suggested reform of the calendar (and there have been many) is better and more regular than the Gregorian Calendar. 14 such suggested alternatives are listed at https://www.hermetic.ch/cal_stud/cal_lynx.htm#alternative_calendars

For more details on these and other calendars see https://www.hermetic.ch/

Despite the many logical and well-thought-out alternatives to the current calendar there is zero chance that any of them will be generally adopted in the foreseeable future because the economic cost of doing so would be prohibitive.

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Rosemary B's avatar

thank you for these links. Excellent webpage

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denise ward's avatar

Shouldn't put it out of your mind too much because there are costs to keeping the calendar this way too. Thinking about what may be a better calendar to adopt is something we should discuss as we take more responsibility for our lives and not leave it in the hands of the evil ones.

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TriTorch's avatar

Good to see you buddy! Had to click on one of your links before I realized it was you, thanks for sharing your wealth of content and knowledge here!

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Carolyn's avatar

Read the Book of Enoch for more insight into the natural rhythm and the true time.

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Rosemary B's avatar

Wow. I am completely intrigued - obviously this is something we modern day humans just take for granted, ... run out and buy our yearly calendars, mark those important, to us, dates and thank God for Friday, and live buy our own routines.

Thank you for the *spark* of curiosity.

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paula's avatar

Thank You! Very informative and well done article.

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Special Ted's avatar

Great research and article!

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Donna's avatar

Did you know Eastman Kodak used a 13-month calendar up until 1989? Informative article here if anyone is interested. https://theinternetsaysitstrue.com/2022/03/28/13-months-the-kodak-calendar-experiment/

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Depswah's avatar

For many years now, I have listened to the 432hz. I do not concern myself with the days of the week (some people enforce them with food rituals - IE: "Taco Tuesday"); which I find to be ridiculous. When the time changes, I do not follow it. And the moons are my calendar!

Thank you for such a wonderful article, that others may understand what a strangle hold is over them. You may count me in for the 25th - Party of the forth moon.

Blessings ~

Haha - Thinking this is Saturday, I just returned home from making the hr drive into town to drop off my tax papers. No wonder it looked like a ghost town, today is Sunday!

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Neo's avatar
Apr 5Edited

Great post TT!!

The beaver stops working every SATURNday. All day. The Beaver only rests on SATURNday.

Then the Beaver starts working again on SUNday. It's in their biological clock coinciding with the 4week 7 day months or 13 month calendar.

Oct=8 or month

Nov=9 "

Dec=10 "

Blessings

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david's avatar

great informative article. makes so much sense. i'm guessing what used to be common sense.

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