October 12, 2010

Feeding the Whorl

There were other central networks present. I was able to detect their presence without using the long range detection offered by the external sensitives and the whorlic responders, as there was a conversation of tokens across the compression-relaxation channels. The early sets of tokens that were exchanged had incredible effects on the whorl which expanded and began to crackle more loudly than ever before.

I had seen the whorl do this once before, and at the time, I was unable to record or recall any of the tokens that were exchanged. The unison full-duplex activities that occurred before were confusing enough that I could not match the tokens as I was hopping back and forth between the transmitter and the receiver. The token length was far longer than the propagation delay from transmitter to receiver, and there was the intermingling and harmonic interference that was contained in the received channel.

I kept my focus on the whorl as a unison full-duplex activity began. The response of the whorl was to contract slightly, and tighten up. The full-duplex transmission and reception through the compression-relaxation medium created a waveform in the central network that was in harmony with the natural pattern of the whorl. As the patterns continued, the whorl responded with resonant pulses that bolstered the output and improved the reception.

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