November 5, 2010

Shadows Deliver

There was nothing remarkable about the wand session, other than the rapidly approaching satiety that often capped the event. As we started, I trained the unGrid to observe a line of high contrast that was produced by a stream of photons that reflected from an observable surface. As Wand-Time progressed from a stationary standpoint, there was a change in the position of the line of high contrast in the intercepted image.

Recalling previous initial wand events, the contrast was often muted or non existent. When it was there, it was a much larger area of illumination, and the contrast line was even farther away and usually out of the primary reception zone of the photon detectors and somewhat difficult to observe. Today, however, it was well within the primary focal zone and was much easier to track as the zone of reflected illumination continued to shrink slowly across the observable surface.

Unexpectedly, there was additional input on the compression-relaxation sensors beyond the typical inputs that occurred during a wand session. The inputs to the unGrid shifted as orientation of the central network was rotated to aim the photon detectors in the direction from which the compression input was received. A bright vertical rectangle darkened in the middle, increasing to fill the bright void as a form approached. Moments later, a retrieval sequence was queued for execution.

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