Wednesday, May 30, 2018

How Can Plants Grow Without Light




Billy Meier on ....

March 16, 1987

Concerning plants, it is well-known that these don’t grow and can’t exist without light, with certain exceptions, like when these grow in the dark.

Why can these do without light?

Explanation :

Plants that grow without light underground always grow towards the light.

And light is also vibrationally present in the dark, even though the person, with all his senses or by technical apparatuses, can’t ascertain this, such as by light-sensing devices.

The vibrations of light don’t simply end at the surface of an object, on the rock stratum and rocks as well as on the Earth's surface or at a dark cloud in space, etc.; rather, these still penetrate very deeply into matter.

This means that also in the subsoil of the Earth, certain plants can prosper because they grow toward the light vibrations that are invisible to humans and that penetrate through the soil and which are sufficient for the prosperity of the plants to be assured.

This is a fact that will still remain a secret to the earthly scientists of biology for a long time; therefore, they still must first investigate and fathom everything.

Without these light vibrations that penetrate very deeply into the Earth, the underground plants, as we call them, couldn’t prosper and couldn’t exist.

However, where the light vibrations are no longer able to penetrate, also no plants can grow any more.

It is also important to note that the deeply penetrating light vibrations only exhibit partial rays of actual light and, therefore, a different form than the actual light vibrations.

Moreover, such forms of light are already known to the earthly scientists; it’s just that these don’t concern the ones that penetrate into certain depths of matter.

And from the same light vibrations, from which the underground plants or plants of the dark draw their vitality, also the underground animals or animals of the dark benefit, including the fish of the dark and deep sea animals of every genus and species.

CR 216


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