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In trying to understand the behavior of light particles, which are many and not a single particle, humans boggle. They ascribe the various colors to speed of 
vibration, the wave pattern high or low, long or short. The breaking of a ray of sunlight going through a prism into a rainbow of colors is thus ascribed to a change in 
speed or a modified wave pattern, as though a sub-atomic particle is forced to compact and squeeze in some invisible tunnel. Does glass have invisible tunnels they 
force light rays into, or the ability to hold light particles back so they compress? They speak of reflection or refraction of light as though it were an object bouncing, 
which sub-atomic particles do not do unless a direct repulsion occurs. Are light particles repulsed by the sub-atomic qualities of a silver backed mirror, such that 
they bounce? They ascribe the Auroras to an attraction by light particles to electro magnetic particle, such that they dance, apparently, only at the poles, but balk at 
giving this attractive quality to gravity. The orange light that floods the sky at sunrise and sunset is ascribed to dust, of all things, with no explanation of why this 
spectrum is so affected but the other spectrums not. The huge size of a light emitting object such as the Sun coming over the horizon, in conflict with established 
human explanations, is rejected. If it conflicts with the current establishment line, it did not occur, and they call anyone saying otherwise deluded. 
Why does light reflect from some surfaces, absorb into others, or change color when emerging from a prism? And what does this have to do with the obvious 
bending of orange/red light over the surface of the globe, as seen at sunrise or sunset? Is there a relationship? There is indeed. Some sub-atomic particles, a ready 
example being the many particles in the electro-magnetic arena, flow together, are attracted to each other, and are incited to move with each other by that 
attachment. Man thinks of electrons as being one sub-atomic particle and has barely considered magnetism to be a particle flow, yet these particles number in the 
hundreds, and are not all the same in their behavior. Light particles, thus, are immense in their numbers, and the various wave forms with resulting color signature 
recognized by a retina only one example of the many. Do these light particles like to flow with one another, being attracted to one another in a similar manner to the 
electro-magnetic particles? Obviously. 
And as we have described, they flow not in a straight line, not in a wave form, but in a twisted cable form. Like the Moons of Planet X, they swirl about each other 
in a double helix pattern, neither escaping or bonding, in perpetual motion. These helix strands likewise coil around other strands, often in a criss-cross pattern 
depending upon how much distance the strands need from each other. Like electrons that chase but do not catch each other, and magnetons that are likewise 
always in motion and cannot stand crowding but likewise desire to clump, this is a dance that never ends, perhaps by Gods design. Where electrons can be caught 
and reside around the nucleus of an atom, and magnetons are normally humming about the nucleus of an atom, the flow of light particles is an aberration of their 
normal abode, within and around a nucleus. They emerge when this nucleus is flooded with particles and are pushed out due to crowding, due to pressure which 
crowds them or the application of heat which is in and of itself a particle flow, or the introduction of some bonded atoms that act as a catalyst for change. Light can 
be produced by friction, heat, emerges during fire, or by chemical mix, as man knows.
When the twisted coil is on the move it, as a group, moves in the direction that they particles were flung in by the explosion of particle crowding they were 
escaping. The direction of the light ray. When many particles are involved, this is considered by man to be white light, all color spectrums included, as the colors 
emerge when this white light is separated into its parts. The helix coils have another direction, other than the overall direction, which is straight ahead. They are 
moving away from, and back toward, the pairing particle in their coil. Depending upon the particle, this coil is tight or loose, with a wide wave length or short, and 
involves many other coils tightly attracted to it or few. When encountering other matter, these particle pairs find themselves in a marital crisis. One of the pair wants 
to have an affair with the other matter encountered, lingering, while the other partner cannot because the pair would then be too close, too crowded. Thus, the 
particle lingering forces the partner to exit the coil, suddenly, in the manner of their original expulsion from some comfortable atom into a light ray direction. The 
exiting particle of the pair leaves, likewise, in a direction that creates the least crowding for it with the other helix coils they are entwined with.
Thus, white light entering a prism of glass finds that the most vulnerable particle to an attraction affair lingers and expels its partner first. These particles having 
peeled off, the next most vulnerable particle is exposed to the adulterous attraction of some quality of glass, and lingers and expels its partner. This process 
proceeds until there is only the helix coils of those light particles that are resistant to attraction, by being so tightly bound to the coils, and resist the flirtations of 
nearby particles inherent in the glass. Some material simply absorbs the light rays by preventing them from leaving, an affair that has become a new marriage of 
sorts. Some material is so attractive that the lingering partner and expulsion proceeds at an almost violent pace, considered a complete reflection surface by man. 
When light coils pass over a gravity giant such as a planet, it is not the long distance call of a lover they are listening to when they curve toward that giant, it is the 
flow of gravity particles flowing back toward the planet. These are encountered on the way, slow the flow of those parts of the coil that are most attracted to the 
gravity particles, causing them to separate from the other parts of the larger intermeshed coil. This separation is not violent or sudden, as adjustments are made 
during the bumping process so the coils of those particles wanting to pull along with the flow of gravity eventually find themselves outside of the larger coil, and free 
to move in independent helix coils. Thus where white light, or light in color spectrums not susceptible to gravity particle attraction, move forward in their straight line 
path, the red spectrum light susceptible to gravity pulls toward the gravity particles drifting back to their gravity sink, and are bent thus, toward the gravity giant.