NaturalPhilosopher
Senior Member
When humans die they go to a future 5d astral afterlife. Like a parallel dimensional earth.
Since we know the 3rd dimensional earth has an astral body(can see it when projecting), after the sun dies taking with it the earth does the earth astral body have an afterlife it travels to?
Where and when would it be?
Does the same apply to the sun and galaxy itself? It's well known that the andromedan galaxy and milkyway will collide in 5 billion years around the same time the sun also runs out of hydrogen fuel and blows up.
So is it possible the earth dies and then is reincarnated repeatedly?



Would the presence of an earth astral body in the sun exploded aftermath of the solar system help to accumulate material and reform an Earth 2.0?
Since the Earth is approx 4 billion years old, how long did it take for the Earth to accumulate material in the forming solar system? How many more billions of years? then we know when the Earth is gonna die, in about 5 billion years when the sun runs out of fuel. So would the Earth at that point from the initial accumulation process be about 14 billion years or so?
Makes ya go hmm.
Since we know the 3rd dimensional earth has an astral body(can see it when projecting), after the sun dies taking with it the earth does the earth astral body have an afterlife it travels to?
Where and when would it be?
Does the same apply to the sun and galaxy itself? It's well known that the andromedan galaxy and milkyway will collide in 5 billion years around the same time the sun also runs out of hydrogen fuel and blows up.
So is it possible the earth dies and then is reincarnated repeatedly?



Would the presence of an earth astral body in the sun exploded aftermath of the solar system help to accumulate material and reform an Earth 2.0?
Since the Earth is approx 4 billion years old, how long did it take for the Earth to accumulate material in the forming solar system? How many more billions of years? then we know when the Earth is gonna die, in about 5 billion years when the sun runs out of fuel. So would the Earth at that point from the initial accumulation process be about 14 billion years or so?
Makes ya go hmm.
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