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I project scenery on my wall before I go to sleep, the meditation on interesting things helps clear my mind. For several days, I have been studying this screencap from a youtube video called "Starscapes 4K". As far as I know, this is a real image. While staring, I noticed curious groups of stars everywhere in non-random curved formations... this seemed a little odd at first, but the more I studied them, the more I realized they coincided with similar dark areas in their immediate vicinity. At some point, I had a eureeka moment and saw the first helix, connecting a series of these groups. Then I spotted another. And another. This morning I realized almost ALL the stars are members of helixes! WTF? Why is this not a major talking point in astronomy or even MENTIONED? Surely I can't be the first person to notice our galaxy is saturated with springs?

mind=blown

Somebody pinch me.

The longer you look at this picture, the more helixes you find. It is almost ALL helixes.

Once you see it, you can't unsee it. You will ask yourself how in the hell have you not seen it before. It's in all the images of the milky way from any source.

~90% of the stars in the image are in these helix patterns.

Study the image. See the pattern. Say "Wow."

Then ask "How?"

The answer will be a game-changer.

Edit: another illustrated image with dotted lines roughly indicating helix centers

Edit again: Another image, color adjusted, look between the lines at the curvy parts, compare to the other images

Edit again: you may have trouble seeing them. I understand, I stared at this picture for HOURS before going "holy shit, a coil" and after you can see the first one, they all kind of magically appear at once, and you realize after that the whole damn thing is just criss-crossed coils of stars. No, I am not on mushrooms. Yes, they are there. The hardest part is seeing the first one. Start with looking at 5-10 stars closely lined up together in a slight curve. Then follow off the side of the line to a nearby group that has similar size and orientation. These two groups are part of one "side" of the helix. Look for a mirrored group nearby, with opposite curves and you find the other side. Now extend those groups outward and you find that the "rope" forms. This is kindof like those "magic-eye" posters in that the first time you try it is reaaally hard to see the picture but once you learn the methodology, it gets very easy.

I project scenery on my wall before I go to sleep, the meditation on interesting things helps clear my mind. For several days, I have been studying this screencap from a youtube video called "Starscapes 4K". As far as I know, this is a real image. While staring, I noticed curious groups of stars everywhere in non-random curved formations... this seemed a little odd at first, but the more I studied them, the more I realized they coincided with similar dark areas in their immediate vicinity. At some point, I had a eureeka moment and saw the first helix, connecting a series of these groups. Then I spotted another. And another. This morning I realized almost ALL the stars are members of helixes! WTF? Why is this not a major talking point in astronomy or even MENTIONED? Surely I can't be the first person to notice our galaxy is saturated with springs? mind=blown Somebody pinch me. The longer you look at this picture, the more helixes you find. It is almost ALL helixes. Once you see it, you can't unsee it. You will ask yourself how in the hell have you not seen it before. It's in all the images of the milky way from any source. ~90% of the stars in the image are in these helix patterns. Study the image. See the pattern. Say "Wow." Then ask "How?" The answer will be a game-changer. Edit: another illustrated image with dotted lines roughly indicating helix centers [Image](https://pic8.co/sh/CWtopi.jpg) Edit again: Another image, color adjusted, look between the lines at the curvy parts, compare to the other images [Link Title](https://pic8.co/sh/UKEZq1.jpg) Edit again: you may have trouble seeing them. I understand, I stared at this picture for HOURS before going "holy shit, a coil" and after you can see the first one, they all kind of magically appear at once, and you realize after that the whole damn thing is just criss-crossed coils of stars. No, I am not on mushrooms. Yes, they are there. The hardest part is seeing the first one. Start with looking at 5-10 stars closely lined up together in a slight curve. Then follow off the side of the line to a nearby group that has similar size and orientation. These two groups are part of one "side" of the helix. Look for a mirrored group nearby, with opposite curves and you find the other side. Now extend those groups outward and you find that the "rope" forms. This is kindof like those "magic-eye" posters in that the first time you try it is reaaally hard to see the picture but once you learn the methodology, it gets very easy.

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[–] 0 pt

You are pattern seeking. Your brain is hardwired to do so. Q is a psyop and gematria is retarded.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

Pattern seeking? Of course I am. I score very high in that cognitive ability, according to tests.

Patterns have been found. If you don't see the patterns (after having them pointed out) then you should try harder.

The patterns are real, in front of your eyes. Your failure to recognize them does not invalidate them.

Good day, sir.

[–] 0 pt

A cloud that looks like a rabbit is not a rabbit.