More to Life Than the Third Dimension

I'm not sure when the spaceship will leave the planet Myton
in the Pleiadean star cluster in the constellation of Taurus, but it
will arrive sometime in the year 2001. To the disappointment
of most San Diegans, the ship won't be landing Jamul, as reported
by local media over the past few years. Instead, the ship, named
Voyager, will touch down on a rising land mass in the Bermuda
Triangle that was once part of the continent Atlantis. And the
one-world government that our space brothers will institute
following their arrival won't spell the doom of the good ol' U.S. of A,
the way fringe elements and Ross Perot have predicted. Instead, it
will solve most of our planet's problems: disease, pollution, war....

The first landing will be sort of a probationary period. We will first
learn how to remove the barrier that has prevented us from
communicating with our space brethren. Once we do, our minds
will begin to function similar to the way communications transmitters
and receivers do, allowing us to speak with each other in the fourth
dimension.

"To accept this concept, we must also accept that we've all lived
before," says Charles Spaegel, head of Unarius. "We've lived thousands
of lifetimes, but we have something called 'psychic amnesia,' because
of the traumatic nature of our experiences. All people know that there's
more to life than our five-sensed body. We are really inter -dimensional,
and our conscious mind is surrounded by more than the five senses
and the environment we see around us. In other words, there is more
to life than the third dimension."

After we have mastered the communications technique, then the
spacecraft will land on the 67 acres the Unarius Academy of Science has
purchased in Jamul.

This landing will take place sometime between 2001 and 2010,
depending on how quickly we accept our visitors. Thirty-two ships will
actually land at the East County site, each one stacking on top of the
first to for a research building.

Each of the 33 planets will have a single representative in the United
World Cabinet. The first person to head the confederation will be an
American named Godman, a hybrid of the words "god" and "man."

According to Spaegel, who became director of Unarius following the death
of cofounder Ruth Norman in 1993, the landing has already been
documented in a book titled Preparation for the Landing , published by
Unarius. The story is narrated by the captain of the 2001 landing ship, who
tells his crew about how Earth will join as the 33rd member of the
Interplanetary Confederation, and how space beings will offer their little
earth brothers and sisters a helping hand. (To the space beings, we live on
an underdeveloped "third world" planet, referred to as the Dark Planet.)

Because the book tell the story of an event that is seven years away,
skeptics might claim that Preparation for the Landing is simple prediction
on Unarius's part, but that's where they would be wrong. The story was
"transmitted" October 10, 1994, the day of the first Interplanetary
Celebration, to Uriel, the archangel that resided in the body of Ruth Norman.

The Unarius Academy of Science was founded in 1954 by Ernest and
Ruth Norman. Following Ernest's death in 1971, Ruth set up the foundation
headquarters, which includes a print shop and the studio where the group
takes their nationally aired cable-access show, on Magnolia Avenue in El Cajon.

As for Ruth Norman's recent death, Spaegel suggests a better description
might be "passing" or "transition." Although Ruth's physical body completed
its life cycle, her mind is still alive, communicating in the fourth dimension.

Unarius will hold its 11th Annual Interplanetary Day Celebration this
weekend at their El Cajon office. Saturday will feature lectures on the UFO
phenomenon, the upcoming planetary confederation, space travel, and
various Unarius teachings. Later that day there will be a documentary video
tour of the planet Vixall.

On Sunday, shuttles to view the Jamul landing site will depart Unarius at
9:15 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. This will be followed by the traditional Parade of
Banners, and a multimedia introduction to the Pleiadeans.

"These celebrations that we're having, they raise one's eyebrows if this is
the first time you've heard of it," Spaegel says. "It makes you think, and it
works against your belief system. If you say, 'Oh, no, you live one, you die,
and that's the end of it,' if that's the way you're set up, that's a very narrow
perception and you're not very intelligent.

Unarius Academy of Science

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