Cycle Diagrams
It’s suggested that the information in each of these diagrams be cross-referenced, so as to understand the esoteric knowledge we find encoded in the myths, the Bible and the Gospels – all associated with the two crucial points in the cycle where the opposites become one.
Cyclical phenomena and wave phenomena provide simple answers in regard to consciousness processes, and explain why the ancients were obsessed with cycles as they also provided evidence of Reincarnation.
"Light and Darkness, life and death, right and left, are brothers of one another. They are inseparable. Because of this neither are the good good, nor evil evil, nor is life life, nor death death. For this reason each one will dissolve into its original nature. But those who are exalted above the world are
indissoluble, eternal."
From the Gospel of Philip
"I am the Alpha and the Omega", saith the Lord, "the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End."
Revelation 22:13
Figure 1: Traveling Wave and Cycle
A Traveling Wave is really a continuous cycle of energy-information stretched-out linearly in time
Figure 2: Annual Cycle
The annual cycle is based on the earth's orbit around the sun which takes 365 and a quarter days. Because the earth is tilted at 23.5 degrees, the year is divided into 4 phases we call seasons - Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter. However, we can really divide the year into two - being Summer (positive) and Winter (negative), and these two halves of the cycle are divided in two by the days of the Spring
and Autumn Equnoxes - the neutral nodes in the cycle. The days of the Summer and Winter Solstices are really where these two
opposites in the cycle - the summer and winter phases - reach their peak.
Figure 3: Day-Night Cycle
The 24-hour Day-Night cycle is due to the rotation of the earth as it orbits the sun. These rotations constitute the days of the year of which there are now 365 and a quarter. As the earth turns the light from the sun will only fall on that half of the earth which is turned towards it. From our position on the earth we see the sun rise on the east horizon and move across the sky during the day, only to set (go down) on the western horizon. Our 24 hours consist of daylight (positive) to darkness (negative). The brief moments in time when the sun appears on the eastern horizon and when the sun sets on the western horizon and when the sun is neither up nor down, would represent the two neutral 'node points' in the cycle
Figure 4: Moon Cycle
As the moon orbits the earth, it goes through three phases - the two halves of the cycle where the moon is either waxing (positive) or waning (negative) and the third where it is becomes the New Moon and Full Moon. These are the node points in the cycle as the new moon and full
moon mark the moment where the moon crosses into the peak positive and dip negative halves of the cycle. The Threefold Goddess was associated with the 3 phases of the moon and really because these three phases were believed to correspond with the female menstrual and
ovulation cycle. 1. The waxing phase corresponds with the young maiden (sister of the 'resurrection sun god'), 2. The Waning phase corresponds with the Old Hag (wife of the 'resurrection sun god'), and 3. The New Moon and Full Moon (neutral point nodes) correspond with the Mother of the resurrection sun god. All three are the same woman. In the ancient Egyptian myths, she is Isis, sister and wife of Osiris and
also his mother as she gives birth to him as his son and as his reincarnated self Horus. In the story of Jesus she is the three Marys
Figure 5: Waking-Sleeping Cycle
