Mastertech
Chrono Member
- Messages
- 21
Wanted to share this experience with you guys and girls. Every time I use the HDR and as soon as I finish the three minutes with electromagnet over the solar plexes and turn everything off,
I always experience the rocking or earthquake effect that Steven describes right before everything disappears around him. I haven't experienced the loud bang or cracking or the brightness he describes but I just assumed it was because I didn't walk into a natural or artificial grid point so the next thing I would like to do is make the artificial grid in the schematics section with a cross section of copper pipe buried in the ground before the 22nd because that's going to be the first day of a full moon and Steven says using the HDR on the sunrise of a full moon day is the best time to do it. I bought a 2016 Almanac so I could track these days. I even went as far as to purchase an acre of land in Eureka Springs, Arkansas because it was only $1000.00 and it's only two hours from Leslie, Arkansas where two lines of the grid intersect so I will keep everyone posted as I attempt each of these phases. One thing I always keep in mind and you guys should also. The chances of returning to this same time line are not 100% right, so if I succeed I will more than likely return on a different time line which to everyone on this time line I will have just disappeared and not come back. Do any of you have any insight on any of this? How do Steven Gibbs and the others always come back to the same time line? I thought that was impossible. Isn't there always a variance?
I always experience the rocking or earthquake effect that Steven describes right before everything disappears around him. I haven't experienced the loud bang or cracking or the brightness he describes but I just assumed it was because I didn't walk into a natural or artificial grid point so the next thing I would like to do is make the artificial grid in the schematics section with a cross section of copper pipe buried in the ground before the 22nd because that's going to be the first day of a full moon and Steven says using the HDR on the sunrise of a full moon day is the best time to do it. I bought a 2016 Almanac so I could track these days. I even went as far as to purchase an acre of land in Eureka Springs, Arkansas because it was only $1000.00 and it's only two hours from Leslie, Arkansas where two lines of the grid intersect so I will keep everyone posted as I attempt each of these phases. One thing I always keep in mind and you guys should also. The chances of returning to this same time line are not 100% right, so if I succeed I will more than likely return on a different time line which to everyone on this time line I will have just disappeared and not come back. Do any of you have any insight on any of this? How do Steven Gibbs and the others always come back to the same time line? I thought that was impossible. Isn't there always a variance?