Planet X, a.k.a. Nibiru

We made it back to Houston after a very nice business trip courtesy of Rune’s company. Poor Rune then had to load up the trailer with all of Lukas’s belongings and move him back into his apartment in College Station an hour and a half a way. In the rain. 

While I was at the Salt Lake City airport, I received a text from my son-in-law, Houston, that was an image of his friend request page. On it was a friend request from my deceased father. Pretty weird!

Before we begin with today’s topic, I’d like to make a request, hopefully without sounding too rude. I get tons of emails and Facebook messages and return every one of them because I love you guys. My OCD might play a role in that, too. Answering all of them usually consumes close to 4 hours out of the day. That said, I’d appreciate it if you would refrain from sending me anything in the evening or on the weekends. During the trip, despite my pleas to allow me to have a little time off, I kept getting messages constantly, even phone calls. The truth is, I need time with my family. I hope you understand. 

Me: Good evening, Robert.

Robert: Hello.

Me: Hey, Erik. What’s going on?

Erik: Long time no see.

We just recorded the first segment right before.

My cell phone starts to ring so I shut it off.

Me: I thought I muted it, but I guess not!

I drop all my papers on the floor.

Me: Hang on. I dropped my papers. I’m in a bad way! (I pick them up.) There we go. We’re good. We’re good. Okay, so look, I’ve had a lot of people talk about this planet, Nibiru that’s supposed to slam into Earth or something so I thought, “Meh, kind of important.” So here we go. This is from a blog member: “Nibiru or Planet X is a planet 3 to 5 times bigger than Earth. It comes into our solar system about every 3600 years. It has caused much havoc to the earth in the past.” Sounds like a bad dude. “Ancient texts have also talked about it. It may have been the cause of Noah’s Great Flood. There are a lot of videos on YouTube.” (which I do not have time to watch) “The government has denied it exists, but many are now seeing it in the skies. There is so much to it. I just want to know if Erik knows what’s going on with all of this. I hope you can take some time to view some of the videos.” No, sorry. I wish I had the time, but I’ll put them in my queue. “Thanks for your time in looking into this. Peace and love to all. Could you let me know if and when this will be presented? I watch the blog, but I just don’t want to miss anything.” Yeah, so I just told her to make sure she contacts me in a couple of weeks. So, yeah, what about this Planet X?

Erik: It exists. The way it affects Earth and everything in the solar system is different now than it was a long time ago, Mom. It’s not anything we have to be afraid of, but you know how on Earth there are currents that create different air pressures and winds?

Me: Oh, yeah.

Erik: The same thing happens in a certain form in space.

Me: Ah.

Erik: This planet is further away than it used to be, but there are times when it comes in a little closer. The way it orbits—

Robert: I guess there’s a kind of wind in space. I don’t know. I thought there was nothing in space.

Erik: It affects gravity, and that’s what creates these different, what we might call, “winds,” but it’s really not wind, per se.

Me: Like different changes in forces.

Erik: Yeah. It affects gravity. Gravity gets affected by everything moving around nearby.

Me: Oh, yeah.

Erik: So, that affects the spin of the earth; it can affect how people feel physically and emotionally; it can affect weather patterns on Earth, so yeah, [Planet X] can cause changes on our planet and a lot of other planets. But it doesn’t do it in the way it used to.

Me: What did it do 3,600 years ago to Earth?

Erik: It was partly responsible for causing a small Ice Age.

Robert: There was an Ice Age 3,600 years ago?

Me: I don’t know. Did it cause Noah’s flood, the Great Flood?

Erik: Yes, on a certain level.

Me: What do you mean?

Erik: It’s not necessarily that the planet caused it. There were a whole bunch of other events that created the flood, but they were all set into motion by the planet, at least partly. There were two other [celestial] bodies that were out there that were also part of it, but those other bodies are gone now.

Me: Okay.

Erik: Yes, they can affect all that.

Robert (waving in front of his nose and coughing): I’m sorry.

Me: Oh, is that Erik? He makes some noxious smells sometimes.

Robert (continuing to cough): It smells like someone threw powder up my nose!

He laughs.

Me: Uh oh! Wow!

Robert: I hope that made sense because I got distracted when that smell came in!

Me: No, no, no!

Robert: Erik showed me this visual of all the bodies floating around, and I’ve seen this play out before, which is why it made sense to me. You have the sun sitting there and it bubbles down the fabric of space, and everything else is doing that, too. So, this planet comes in and slightly changes how all of that is sitting. Then everything orbit-wise and energy-wise gets changed.

Me: Yeah. So is this Planet X coming toward us?

Erik: It’s in a closer trajectory than it has been for a thousand years.

But, as Erik said, not as close as it has been before.

Me: What effect will it have?

Erik: Part of it will be environmental.

Me: For example?

Erik: Now this is where I can’t say that everything is one thing, right? That’s because in the Universe, everything collectively works together like a symphony.

Me: Oh, yeah.

Erik: You can’t have a symphony with just one violin. All these different things produce that. So a lot of different things in the environment that have been going on are building up partially because of [Planet X] but also because of what humans have done. It also affects the unrest. Human emotions are very fragile, particularly when energy changes.

Me: So we’ll have a lot of emotional—

Erik: We have a lot of unrest.

Me: Is this why we’re having on the terrorism like the Brussels tragedy and —

Erik: Yeah.

Me: So that’s because of Planet X? In part? I know it’s a symphony, but…

Erik: In part, yeah. Mom, if you look through history, thousands of years, millennia, you’ll see that there have been periods when things have been calm and then there are times when things got a little crazy and more extreme than others. There have been long swaths where things are crazy but not as extreme as it’s been at other points. During those extreme points, that’s when there have been a lot of changes with the gravity and a lot of other things. I’ll just speak generically in that changes in energy affects how humans behave.

Me: Yeah, and the change in the magnetic poles can cause people to go nuts!

Erik: Right. All life forms on this planet react to that. Because of how our consciousness is manifesting itself, we tend to react in very emotional ways, which then causes us to become more violent or mentally unstable like with depression and anxiety.

Me: I remember when I was a resident in my training in medicine, when there was a full moon, all hell broke loose. Babies would be born like crazy and then you’d have all sorts of mentally unstable people come into the ER.

Erik: Mom, that’s a perfect example. You’ve seen it firsthand.

Me: Oh yeah!

Erik: The moon itself, when it’s full, is in a different state, and that affects how the energy is on our planet.

Me: So will Planet X eventually destroy us in the near future?

Robert: Wow, your voice just turned into an insect sound!

Me: Well, I never heard an insect talk, so…

I didn’t hear any change in my voice live, but I hear it on the recording. I sound like a robot.

Robert: It sounded like an echo.

(He imitates it perfectly.)

We both laugh.

Erik: It’s not going to destroy us, no.

Me: What’s the worst that can happen?

Erik: The worst that can happen is it will get us slightly closer in orbit and will cause more turbulence in how the energy [of our planet] is, but that’s not really likely. I don’t see that happening. What’s really going on is the planet will get further and further away—

Me: From the sun?

Erik: From the sun and from Earth.

Oh, I thought he was talking about Earth, but he was referring to Nibiru, so I clarify.

Me: Wait, so the earth will get farther away from the sun?

Erik: No, Planet X.

Me: Oh, okay. So it should have less effect!

Erik: Over time, yes.

Me: So no big woop.

Erik: It’s not spiraling in at all.

Me: Okay.

Phew.

Too close for comfort?

Too close for comfort?

Here’s a very interesting review for Erik’s book, My Life After Death. Support his cause and purchase your own copy HERE

First, I am a non-believer. I am such a non-believer that I question everything anyone ever tried to teach me, including during all those years spent at a schoolroom desk not only being told exactly what to believe, but being tested on it just to make sure I was adequately indoctrinated. I am a non-believer in the afterlife. As I would say, after WHAT? I suspect that life is primal and eternal, and it is not a body, which as far as the world seems to know is composed only of sub-atomic particles and possibly only of non-material energy, if anything. I do not know what consciousness is, except maybe it is what I AM. If you asked me, I would say the body is in the mind, and not the mind in the body. And I thoroughly enjoyed this book, for the opportunity to participate in a lovely new perspective on many “commonplace” matters. I adore perspective, as many previously untried ones as possible, in the hopes of gaining more understanding of that which we call life. In particular, I was mesmerized by Erik’s discussion of the materialization process, and how he struggled with creating the gold bar, because he lacked an affinity for it. Guitars and motorcycles had come easy to him. This provided me with a wonderful new perspective on money and the human relationship to it, and I was able to do a little “thought experiment” where I traveled on the back of a dollar bill (or a $1000 bill) and experienced all the different attitudes people had toward it. Poor money! A magnet for all the hopes, dreams, frustrations and sorrows of the world. No wonder it is so hard for some of us to attract it into our lives. Just such nuggets I search for among whatever experience presents itself to me, and this book was no disappointment. If you are a believer–if you believe everything you were told while you sat in that school desk, or learned at your mother’s knee–you will doubtless find this book nothing but an unacceptable fantasy. If you are of that group, then you may enjoy the safety of being a believer, including mocking all who do not share your beliefs. If you are a little more adventurous, you might want to take the trip this book offers.

–S. Patel

 

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