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Jan 3, 10 tweets

Let's determine if we truly are at the end of the Dark Age or the Kali Yuga, the time of destruction and rebirth!

If we trust ancient knowledge, we are currently in the age of Kali Yuga, also known as the Dark or Iron Age. This is the final phase of the Great Year, which culminates in destruction and a new beginning. According to Hindu teachings, the beginning of Kali Yuga occurred after the end of the Mahabharata war and the departure of Lord Krishna from Earth.

Kali Yuga began with a specific planetary alignment, during which all seven traditional planets (Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn) were in conjunction near Revati Nakshatra, or near the star Revati in the constellation Pisces.

The mainstream accepted date for this is February 17–18, 3102 BCE. I checked the date for the alignment, and here's what I found! (1/18)🧵

I used Stellarium to check the accepted date for any planetary alignments near the star Revati in the constellation Pisces, and from the results shown in the photo below, we can see that the planets are neither in the same sign nor close to each other. The alignment is interesting, but it is neither near Revati nor in Pisces.

But! (2/18)🧵

I went one year forward, and in the same month of February, all seven celestial bodies were in Pisces, with Saturn at the beginning of Aquarius. Jupiter, Venus, the Sun, and Mars were close to the star Revati, making this the main candidate for the start of Kali Yuga according to Hindu teachings.
(3/18)🧵

Because much of the knowledge from the past has been lost and timelines have become mixed, I checked multiple timeframes for the start of Kali Yuga. I found this rare conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn right below Revati, with the other five celestial bodies in Pisces and at the beginning of Aquarius.

The year 3718 BCE is very interesting because it's close to the start of the Jewish calendar and the beginning of this age as described in the Bible, traditionally dated to 3761 BCE.
(4/18)🧵

If we consider the start of the Jewish calendar and this peculiar conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter, we are getting closer to the desertification of the Sahara and the geomagnetic excursion that occurred 6,000–7,000 years ago.

If we allow a couple of hundred years to pass for a new organized civilization to form, this date works perfectly as the start of the last season of the Great Year, also known as the darkest Kali Yuga or the Greek Iron Age.

We have multiple pieces of evidence for this event, including the desertification of the Sahara, the geomagnetic excursion, and the Y-chromosome bottleneck, during which 19 out of 20 male lineages went extinct. (5/18)🧵

If we go with 3101 BCE, this perfectly aligns with the start of the Mayan 13 Baktun cycle, traditionally dated to 3114 BCE.

One Mayan 13 Baktun cycle, also known as a Great Cycle, lasts approximately 5,125.36 years. Adding 5 cycles of 13 Baktuns brings us very close to the duration of the Great Year, which is approximately 25,626 years.

The Mayan calendar was adapted by the Aztecs, and take a look at the similarity between the Bhavachakra wheel and the Aztec stone! (6/18)🧵

If we rely on the Mayan 13 Baktun cycle and assume we are in the Kali Yuga, it suggests that we are very close to the end of the Great Year. According to mainstream scientific consensus, the cycle ended in 2012, though some argue it ends in 2030 or 2040 due to calendar discrepancies. Nevertheless, ancient cultures often preferred working with rounded numbers for long cycles.
(7/18)🧵

But the Kali Yuga lasts 432,000 years. How does this align with the current date if the Kali Yuga began only 5,126 years ago?

The Hindu Yugas are encoded, and we need to apply the correct numbers and degrees from the full circle to gain a clear understanding. For example, the full duration of the Yugas is 4,320,000 years. If we divide this number by the degrees of a circle (360° for a full cycle), we get the number 12,000.

So, we get 12,000 years, which is half of the Great Year. Remember, ancient knowledge often used rounded numbers. One of the 'sacred numbers' is 72.

It takes approximately 71.59 years for the precession of the equinoxes to move one degree. The ancients rounded this number to 72.

If we divide 432,000 years by 72, we get 6,000 years. But there is more... (8/18)🧵

The ratio of the four Yugas is 4:3:2:1, and many believe this determines the relative duration of each Yuga. So, does Satya Yuga last four times longer than Kali Yuga, or 1,728,000 years?

No, we need to apply the ratio: 72×4=288. If we divide 1,728,000 by 288, we again get 6,000 years.

Dvapara Yuga – The Bronze Age doesn’t last 864,000 years. According to the ratio, it’s 72 degrees×2=144. So, 864,000÷144=6,000 years.

Treta Yuga – The Silver Age doesn’t last 1,296,000 years. It’s 72 degrees×3=216. So, 1,296,000÷216=6,000 years.

The ratio is about degrees, not years.

So, they divided the four Yugas equally within the cycle, with each Yuga lasting 6,000 years, totaling 24,000 years. This is a rounded number.
(9/18)🧵

Read the rest of the threads and more than half of this post on my Patreon. This post is available to all tiers:
patreon.com/posts/lets-det…

Or you can subscribe to my account here on X and read the entire thread in the subscribers' category:
x.com/OMApproach/sta…

There are so many connections here. Additionally, on my Patreon and here on X, if you subscribe, you will find three more exclusive articles about the Great Year, delving into different but interconnected theories.

I’m still trying to determine which part of the Great Year we are in and what is coming next. All possibilities are on the table, so there will be more posts. Follow me if you’re interested.

Everyone needs to watch this video at least once because it’s connected to the geophysical events at the end of the Great Year: youtu.be/maOwdSb8j2Q

End🧵

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