It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
An exotic star is a compact star
Compact as used in politics may refer broadly to a pact or treaty;
A compactor is a machine or mechanism used to reduce the size of waste material or soil through compaction.
In Hinduism, Chandra (Sanskrit चन्द्र lit, Telugu చంద్ర Tamil சந்திரன். "shining")[1] is a lunar deity and a Graha. Chandra is also identified with the Vedic Lunar deity Soma (lit. "juice").[2] The Soma name refers particularly to the juice of sap in the plants and thus makes the Moon the lord of plants and vegetation.[1]
In Vedic astrology Chandra represents brain and mind, emotions, sensitivity, softness, imagination, queen and mother.
Chandra (and the gem supposedly on the forehead of a statue of his at Somanath) plays an important role in one of the first novel-length mystery stories in English, The Moonstone.
The Moonstone (1868) by Wilkie Collins is a 19th-century British epistolary novel, generally considered the first detective novel in the English language.
The Moonstone of the title is a diamond (not to be confused with the semi-precious moonstone gem). It gained its name from its association with the Hindu god of the moon, Shiva. Originally set in the forehead of a sacred statue of the god at Somnath, and later at Benares, it was said to be protected by hereditary guardians on the orders of Vishnu, and to wax and wane in brilliance along with the light of the moon.
originally posted by: kauskau
a reply to: muzzleflash
If you want to see reality as a shoe...Go for it.. ( i dont understand what you are asking)
sole 1 (sōl)
n.
1. The underside of the foot.
2. The underside of a shoe or boot, often excluding the heel.
3. The part on which something else rests while in a vertical position, especially:
a. The bottom surface of a plow.
b. The bottom surface of the head of a golf club.
1. Being the only one:
Shu (/ʃuː/; meaning "emptiness" and "he who rises up")
originally posted by: kauskau
a reply to: muzzleflash
i see what you are doing there
web (n.)
Old English webb "woven fabric, woven work, tapestry," from Proto-Germanic *wabjam "fabric, web" (cognates: Old Saxon webbi, Old Norse vefr, Dutch webbe, Old High German weppi, German gewebe "web"), from PIE *webh- "to weave" (see weave (v.)).
originally posted by: kauskau
a reply to: muzzleflash
i see what you are doing there
originally posted by: kauskau
a reply to: muzzleflash
one question:is there a kind of "unpleasent fealing" sometimes when you are seeing this "connections"?
originally posted by: kauskau
The power to forget ...Which can feel very good.