|
Post by ruth on Jan 6, 2011 13:50:41 GMT -5
s192.photobucket.com/albums/z157/ruthlyons_2007/?action=view¤t=Untitled_0014.mp4well this was an eyeopener check out 3:28 on the video. the reaction is fast but right before it happens i can see a couple quantum dots start moving towards the outer edge, then it happens at 3?28 i moved my plant into my bedroom at christmastime. i started seeing the C shaped indentations in the leaves the plant was in the living room and showed no signs of infection but in my bedroom close to the head of my bed, became infected.
|
|
|
Post by bannanny on Jan 6, 2011 16:45:35 GMT -5
Wow, that was cool ruth... and what I think is the same thing I see that I've always referred to as "gel bubbles." It also shows in the form of those tiny sparklies we see, but have you ever noticed while in the shower that strange looking bubbles will form on your skin right where you feel the gel the most? I do... and sometimes they refuse to pop too, but when they do they can pop and form into even smaller groups of bubbles instead of simply disappearing like a normal bubble would do. Been seein it happen for years now tho... it's getting exciting in a weird kind of way to now know what these things are. Just wish we knew how to get rid of the stuff. I wonder if there's a way to interrupt the electrons... or a way to short circuit this stuff somehow. Maybe I should go out and stand in the next big thunderstorm we have and see what would happen if I were to get struck by lightening, which probably would happen to me very easily since I feel like I'm my own electrical conductor these days. The reason I say that tho is I read an article somewhere about a woman who suffered greatly from MS and was wheelchair bound. She got caught in a thunderstorm tho one day and was struck by lightening. It didn't kill her... instead, she was able to walk again after it happened and her MS was gone! Pretty weird sounding, but true!
I just have to ask you this... are you positive these things are qd's? I'm positive it's morgellons that you're videoing, so if your positive it's qd's, then we have our answer girl.
big hugs ~~ bannanny
|
|
sage
Full Member
Posts: 116
|
Post by sage on Jan 6, 2011 17:19:36 GMT -5
Hi, Ruth, The last photobucket about the plant didn"t seem to work & I really want to see that one...What happened? I,too, believe you"re right on track here...and am willing to help...but, I don"t produce earwax enough for a specimen. What else can be used? Skin flakes in a container? Slides? Keep up the good work! sage
|
|
sage
Full Member
Posts: 116
|
Post by sage on Jan 6, 2011 17:39:25 GMT -5
Well, computers can be as strange as nanodot disease...third time it worked! sage
|
|
|
Post by ruth on Jan 6, 2011 20:16:39 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by bannanny on Jan 7, 2011 12:26:58 GMT -5
Ya know what I think ruth? I think the dots are held together in the lines they form by the gel. It seems pretty clear to me anyway.
So what's the black stuff in the video above? It looks just like the black stuff in my sample.
|
|
|
Post by morghunter on Jan 31, 2011 19:57:24 GMT -5
Ruth, if you look closely at your video also around 3:28 in the background are the tiniest pieces,smaller than the dots,moving around. Too small to identify but interesting. morghunter
|
|
|
Post by morghunter on Jan 31, 2011 20:18:01 GMT -5
Ruth you were right. It is dots moving. What propells them?Very strange. Later morghunter.
|
|