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written Mar 31, 2004

The ancient peoples of Earth seem to have had a fascination with the Phoenix. The story

associated with it seems so odd, even compared with other ancient stories. How did the story

of death and rebirth come to be associated with this creature?

Rising from the ashes, to begin anew, the Phoenix seems unlike any natural creatures, and

thus is assumed to be a myth. But like the myths of super humans who lived on mountain

tops, who could throw lighting bolts and fly through the air, exactly like the Annunaki

were capable of doing, this myth has a basis in fact. The Phoenix is also referred to as a

Sun bird, large, brilliant in gold-orange plumage, and long lived, just like the Sun which

rises faithfully and without which man and the Earth would surely die. The Phoenix was a

bird, long extinct, of impressive size and plumage, thus at the time this myth was born,

was chosen to represent the Sun during pole shifts. Ancient people, wishing to relay to

future generations what they had experienced, knew the value of an impressive story, as

these get retold. Consider the relationship to the legends of the Phoenix to what occurs

during pole shifts.

1. The Phoenix was long lived, and only periodically self immolated into fire, from which it arose. Passages of

Planet X occur infrequently, after a long passage of time, with the Sun rising reliable in the mean time.

2. The immolation in fire was inexplicable, unexplained, and sudden, the Phoenix disappearing into black smoke

and then returning. The arrival of Planet X where it is seen in the sky undeniably by all, is sudden, the roiling dust cloud blocking the Sun.

3. The Phoenix reappears quickly, seemingly rising from the ashes to full stature instantly. After days of rotation

stoppage, during which the roiling tail blocks the Sun and volcanoes explode blackening the sky, there is a

sudden shift and a prompt return to rotation and a shining Sun again.

Thus, the legend of the Phoenix is a tale of pole shifts past, but the drama of a beautiful bird, bell like cry and brilliant plumage, dominated, the true tale to be told lost.

http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta86.htm[2/5/2012 1:34:16 PM]

ZetaTalk: Trojan War

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ZetaTalk: Trojan War

Note: written on Oct 15, 1995

The Greek legends speak of the war at Troy, where a woman was so desired that legions of warriors were sent to free

her. Did this occur? It did indeed but with a twist, as Helen of Troy was not the desired object of this battle, a fact her ego did not allow her to accept. A hand maiden of Helen's, one she kept in tight bondage of servitude, was the true

cause of this battle, but Helen loudly announced before, during, and after that she was being sought after, and not hearing otherwise the historians wrote it thus.

Legend has it that Troy was successfully invaded when a gift, the Trojan Horse, was left outside the gates and brought into the city. At war, the citizens of Troy were not so naive as to allow in uninspected such an unexplained object. In fact, the Trojan Horse was not simply a statue, a curiosity - it was food, built of food, stacks of wheat bound together, gourds and dried fruit, all tied about a wooden frame. This, they knew, the starving citizens could not resist. To

minimize inspection of such a large object, which they knew was being done routinely on any baskets or barrels of

food, the camouflage was shaped into a familiar animal. The citizens focused on the food baubles on the hooves, tail,

and face of the horse, and so distracted lost themselves in their appetites before they ever got to the belly of the horse where a single infiltrator lay. Thin and agile, he worked his way out in the dead of night and gave access to his fellows at the gate.

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http://www.zetatalk2.com/myths/m05.htm[2/5/2012 1:34:17 PM]

ZetaTalk: Visigoths

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ZetaTalk: Visigoths

Note: written on Apr 15, 1996

If the giant hominoids from the 12th Planet inspired the myths about the Gods of Mount Olympus, were they also the

inspiration for the Viking Gods or tales of the Germanic Visigoths? They were indeed, and left their mark in legend

wherever they stationed themselves on Earth. Where their preferred garb looks something like what an ancient Roman

Legionnaire might have worn, they adjusted their garb to the climate. Northern Europe, during many eras in the past,

was as bitterly cold as it is today, and thus fur robes were standard. Like the Gods of Mount Olympus, the Viking

Gods and Visigoths were fierce and did not back away once a conflict had begun. As with their human counterparts,

they used all means of transporting themselves, and where mountains abut the sea, ships prove the most effective.

What were these giant hominoids doing in northern Europe? Exploring, in the same manner that took them to South

American and thence across the Pacific. They were looking for gold, and went prospecting everywhere.

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http://www.zetatalk2.com/myths/m36.htm[2/5/2012 1:34:18 PM]

ZetaTalk: Druids

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ZetaTalk: Druids

Note: written on Jul 15, 1997

Stonehenge has influenced many groups over the eons, as it was intended to do. The Druids did not build Stonehenge, but they incorporated it into their rituals. Thus, history tends to credit them with erecting Stonehenge. Religious rituals, or those semi-religious rituals that form in highly structured social groups, are put into place to control the membership and give them outlets for emotions that would otherwise be disruptive. Emotions such as jealousy or fear can scatter a membership, but if given an outlet that tends to support the group’s goal, build and support the group rather then tear it apart.

Human sacrifices are one such ritual, as the sacrificed one acts as a scapegoat, becoming a symbol for whatever has

caused rage in the membership. The leaders, of course, select someone they wish to get rid of, a troublemaker or an

independent thinker. Stonehenge by its very shape implies sacrifice, but it did not cause this behavior in the Druids, as using scapegoats and rituals involving sacrifice occur in all cultures and all parts of the world. The close proximity to such an edifice as Stonehenge to any sacrificial rituals would naturally align into a mental association over time, and this is what occurred - a coincidence, made into cause and effect by historians.

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http://www.zetatalk2.com/myths/m56.htm[2/5/2012 1:34:19 PM]

ZetaTalk: Tower of Babel

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ZetaTalk: Tower of Babel