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Edition 2010/5010 U
5010+1.5x1010 Universal

 
 

 

 

BACTERVIRA:
CREATOR OF THE SPECIES

Volume 1

by Chérie Phillips
NovaStoic Priest
Theoretical Philosopher

 

Copyright © 2010-1997 Chérie Phillips.
All Rights Reserved.
Universal Copyright Convention.

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Selected Excerpts from the book.

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New: 2024 Brief.

Copyright © 2024 Chérie Phillips.
All Rights Reserved.
Universal Copyright Convention.

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Chapter 6

HAWAII

Hawaii is the Jewel of the Pacific that radiates the full spectrum of magnificent colors of lightwaves creating unsurpassed beauty.

 

Hawaii has ideal environmental conditions of sunlight and weather for the BacterVira's creations of living color. Whatever grows here in Hawaii thrives with great sturdiness. In fact, the sturdiness is so great that it clearly indicates that the plant BacterVira have experienced very strong winds for which Natural Selection has assured their survival by preserving their hardiest creations.

 

It is interesting to analyze the architecture of plants that the BacterVira have engineered to withstand strong winds.

 

Palm trees are slender and tall. Some are layered with rings of wide wedges. Others extend their concentric circles outside to the bark in a crescendo of wide circles layered upwards. The layers are wider at the bottom and decrease in circumference as it rises. Thus the tree grows both upwards and outwards in a long slender pole shape. In between the circles or wedges are reinforcement material. Between the wedges are loose hairy fibers, and between the circles are coarse fibers randomly crisscrossing.

 

The fronds (leaves) at the top of the palm are extraordinarily sturdy. Hawaiians use them as brooms straight off the tree as some of them are pruned off or fall off through aging.

 

The tall and thin design of palm trees reduce the amount of wind impact per square inch, and along with their segmented vertical structure they are constructed to bend and sway under strong Pacific trade winds, tsunami, or hurricane, without being uprooted, splitting nor breaking.

 

We can learn from the mathematical intelligence of the BacterVira engineers in the construction of our own buildings. Countless homes are destroyed by hurricanes throughout the world, yet after it is over, they return to their shattered homes and replace it with the same flimsy design as if luck or fate, not intelligence, was their operant.

 

Yet, we could build a very sturdy house that has a strong, deep basement, with slender concentric circles of increasingly smaller dimensions moving vertically upwards, and with reinforcing material in between layers that is capable of bending under strong winds. You could go from room to room via a spiral center stairwell. This design is very similar to a lighthouse, which is built to withstand strong winds, but is not capable of bending.

 

Many palm trees grow at an angle which is also an ingenious design which greatly decreases the impact of the wind per square inch. Some angles are so acute that it makes you concerned that it might fall. Thus, our dream house in hurricane valley might end up looking like the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Further, if our dream house was designed similar to palm trees combined with the internal design of Fuller geometric domes in multiple layers, then it would have a greater chance of withstanding the environment.

 

After all, we should build according to the worst possible chance of an event, because 30 years of calm can be wiped out in a single night of chaos. That is a lot of accumulated possessions lost overnight, but logically expected and unwisely ignored.

 

Hawaii exists partly in the mind. The color of everything in Hawaii whether living or nonliving exhibits the most beautiful shades of the spectrum in the world. Like a living spectral prism, Hawaii is the "Jewel of the Pacific."

 

The azure sky is so vivid and contrasting that it sometimes clashes in color with the ocean which displays waves of liquid turquoise fading into a deep navy blue off in the distance.

 

When I first came to Hawaii, I asked why the water was that color and I was advised by a longtime resident that the government colors it for tourists. Yet, I could not believe that government funding would be so lucrative to supply the enormous quantity of dye that would be needed to maintain that beautiful color around the entire island all year round. And it does not explain the exceptional color of the sky, clouds, sunset, and all the living things on the island.

 

As time passed, I began to notice that ordinary things had unusual colors. Living in Waikiki, I have an opportunity to see many people from around the world. No matter what time of day or night, the beach front is always filled with tourists, still following their body clocks, unable to sleep at night, and others programmed by their itinerary, filled the streets during the day. Thus, 24 hours per day there are tourists in Waikiki of every variation in shape, size, and color.

 

On a usual sunny day, as I was observing the tourists, an elderly lady walked by with bright purple hair. I know that purple hair did not come into fashion until well after my generation, so this could not be an aging punk rock gal. I thought little of it until a few days later I saw another tourist who was an elderly man with bright purple hair. I told my language teacher about it, and she said that she knew of no such fashion for elderly people in his country.

 

The mystery was finally solved when I saw that same man in the evening, as I recognized his face, but his hair was now black. It was then that I realized that the roots of his hair were solid white, and that the dye he used to color his white hair appeared purple in the Hawaiian sunlight. Surely it was not this color in his country, for during the Hawaiian nighttime it was black, which was its obvious intended color.

 

On another occasion during the daylight, I ventured to the Hawaii Kai area and while I was waiting for the bus, along came a mother with her two children. I was amazed at their hair color. Had the mother been alone, I would have thought she colored her hair, but a mother rarely colors her children's hair. They were all natural blondes, but the light made their hair look a beautiful color for which I have never seen before, looking a silvery iridescent blond.

 

While the ocean and sky are the same anywhere else in the world, they are perceived as being more beautiful in Hawaii than any postcard or picture can depict. You have to see it to believe such beauty can exist.

 

What is different in Hawaii is that the sunlight of Hawaii increases the eye's ability to perceive more shades with greater intensities of the visible spectrum as evidenced by its vast perceptual affects on blond and the colors of dyes on white hair.

 

Because Hawaii is located near the equator, the shorter solar rays at nearly constant straight angles ideally provide a vast spectrum of high frequency light that crystallizes beautiful colors that are not visible in other parts of the world.

 

Living things achieve color blocking out parts of the spectrum while reflecting specific colors. Thus, a red flower blocks out the other colors of the spectrum while it reflects the red spectrum. Flowers make various intensities and shades by combining the selected spectral lights with mathematical precision.

 

Thus, Hawaii's beauty is an optical illusion created by the location of the solar rays relative to our eyes. The true beauty of Hawaii is in the eye of the beholder.

 

Because all the creations of the BacterVira can see more colors and greater intensities, Natural Selection favors living things that transmit more color, and so everything is colorful, the birds, fishes, trees, bushes, the whole island is blooming with color which makes Hawaii beautiful.

 

The rain in Hawaii tends to occur as sprinkling frequently and often throughout the day while the sun is shining brightly. This produces a foray of rainbows at least one daily over the mountains. Our ability to perceive more quality colors makes them even more visually pleasing as the raindrops disperse the solar spectrum into a rainbow. But exceptionally rare was the one I saw when I first came to Hawaii, which was a magnificent rainbow that stretched from one end of the ocean to the other. That was the epitome of beautify personified in the spectrum of sunlight.

 

The creations of the BacterVira, also are able to utilize natural selection more effectively by perceiving more colors , and, thus, to express more variety and intensity of the spectrum for natural selection. That is why there are so many beautifully colored flowers. Flowers love color which they create by converting the inorganic sunlight into an expression of living color displayed in the language of flowers.

 

The result is numerous plants of impeccable order with blooming flowers everywhere and animals of starkly beautiful colored varieties.

 

Everything blooms in Hawaii, every tree, and every bush even those which at first glance appear to be ordinary are covered with blossoms. Even the front of an old caddy shack is caressed by breathtakingly beautiful blooming plants. There are so many blossoms everywhere that they roll down the streets like tumbleweed energized by the Pacific trade winds.

 

The BacterVira have created the finest specimens to display the broad spectrum of color in the trees, the flowers, and the animals in Hawaii.

 

The intelligence of the animals in Hawaii has amazed me. I get the impression that they all have evomorphed to a higher level than the animals in the colder states. Perhaps the good weather gives them more time to work on natural selection because it is nonstop year round.

 

Today, Thursday, May 18, 2000, I was walking along the ocean and came upon a quiet pool of water settled amongst some volcanic boulders. Untethered by the stronger waves further down the beach, this pool was relatively calm. There were fish of bright yellow color with a large black stripe bobbing their mouths intermittently out of the water taking in oxygen. After completing their oxygen supply, they dove into the deep ocean.

 

Remaining behind was a school of small raven black fish that darted so fast that they looked like black lightning. It amazed me how they could maneuver such sharp angles in unison with mathematical precision with no Forest Gump amongst them. It was an impressive show of group skill.

 

I have seen few bugs in quantity compared to what I have experienced on the mainland. Although I heard that there are parts of the island where people are bothered by them. Here in Waikiki, I find relatively few.

 

I will never forget the gnats in Virginia. They are tiny little bugs that boldly fly up your nose, into your ears, and dive right into your eyes. It is times like this that you know the real purpose of your hair is to block the entrance of bugs around your head while you can see through the strands of hair. And ear wax had to have been invented to keep out the nats. I met up with a swarm of them when walking to my car and they literally engulfed me. I thought I had escaped, but every stoplight they would cover my windshield. I was beginning to think my perfume must be made from some kind of nat pheromones. Most likely, however, it was the salt on my skin that they were after. I must produce mighty tasty salt. They followed me for 5 miles in my car before giving up the chase.

 

Back to Hawaii, almost every household has seen a gecko. This is a little reptile that is quite cute until you find one under your pillow. Geckos are lizards and they love to live in your house. They are quite tiny and fragile, and appear almost human in a reptilian way.  They have the cutest little eyes and tiny little fingers, and they seem to be quite friendly. I was playing my radio one morning, and the gecko began singing along.  Some people encourage them to stay because they eat the bugs and spiders in their homes. But, I catch those who slither in, and place them back outside.

 

There are many feral cats on Hawaii, which are domesticated cats that live wild because they have no human partner. The weather permits them to survive in the wild all year long. No matter what color they begin with, once in the wild, their preference for mating is the tabby color that blends into the scenery at night. They are nocturnal, and sleep all day and tramp around all night. They have long slender legs, and strut with princely demeanor.

 

They prefer to be fed by humans rather than to kill for food. The locals want them to catch mice, but they would rather have fish.  I know this because I tried feeding one, who rejected every offer even under threat of starvation, or so I thought, until I gave it some fish. Yet these cats will do anything to avoid water and having to catch the fish themselves. I sometimes felt like I was being trained. They will scale along seemingly impassible thin iron railings to get onto balconies with open doors and beg for food. These animals have the most beautiful large cat eyes I have ever seen that look like fashioned jewels.

 

Their meow is very soft, but if they do not get any food, when someone exists through the hallway, they will give a loud guttural cry that sends chills up your spine, and the communication is quite clear that cat is "very" hungry and is suffering. Their cry reminds me of a human baby because it draws the instinct out of you and literally moves you to help them. Sometimes when I am outside, I hear a sound like a cat, and I turn around and see it is a baby. It almost seems as if a cat and a human baby speak the same language, and perhaps for the same reasons of motivation to get what they want.

 

The feral cat can also make many extraordinary noises that expresses different levels of emotion. They can clearly express frustration when they cannot find anyone to feed them. After awhile of gentle meow, they walk away making a noise that sounds with all the tonalities and undertones of anyone who would say: "Oh, darn it!" When they are happy, which you will know if you give them fish, they make the nicest purring sound. They will also rub against you to show gratitude as well as reaching a paw forward to gently scratch the ground in front of you.

 

They also will roll back and forth to show playfulness, but if you touch them, they will reach up to scratch you although it is done in playfulness. Their claws, however, are extraordinarily sharp like razors. Yet, their teeth look quite small, and they don't seem to be fit to do any heavy chewing. They eat very slow and delicately with great manners, and always wash their face and paws after they eat.

 

I was able to teach a feral cat sign language in only 2 days. He understands that holding my index finger up means "wait." It is not conditioning, it is intellectual understanding because it is the same intelligent BacterVira in all life with only varying kinds and functions of intelligences, but intelligence nonetheless.

 

As I was preparing some dried fish cat food, he would meow constantly. Since he didn't digest the dried cat food well, I began putting warm water on it, and then waiting for it to cool down and soften the morsels. Thus, it took a while for this to occur. I, therefore, taught the cat to patiently and quietly wait without meowing whenever I used the sign language for "wait."

 

I did not have to teach him that it takes time for hot things to cool down. Many animals know this basic intellectual concept. When I gave the feral cat some food that was too warm for his likeness, he licked the dish, recognized it was too hot, and then sat in front of the dish and waited for it to cool, after which he ate his dinner. I have also seen this intelligent behavior in dogs, which requires the ability to understand that temperature becomes cooler after a time. This is an intelligent concept.

 

I just heard on the news about a dog that climbs a tree just to sit up there and enjoy the view! The animals in Hawaii show greater intelligence than on the mainland, and those who live in colonies have social skills that are quite unusual and highly evomorphed.

 

Recently after going for a long walk, I sat down on a bench in a quiet little area surrounded by draping plants and beautiful flowers. I pulled out a pack of peanut M&Ms™ and when I looked down, I saw a brown crested cardinal quivering and squawking loudly to a red crested cardinal. The crest on top of its head looks like a Mohawk, and is quite fashionable. The red crested cardinal slowly edged his way toward me seemingly a bit shy. But, as he inches his way toward me, he kept looking back at the brown crested cardinal who repeatedly began quivering and squawking and appeared to be motivating him.

 

I was so surprised and I did not know what he was going to do, and then he hopped right up beside me while he kept looking back at the other bird, and with her continued encouragement, he came right up to me and opened his mouth and showed me his tongue, clearly gesturing for me to feed him some of what I was eating. In all my life, I have never seen such a show. I didn't think he would like peanut M&Ms™, but I was so impressed that I placed some chewed up pieces in front of him. He picked it up and carried it over to the female who began quivering and squawking again. I saw him swallow a little piece in a stealthy way, and then he fed the brown cardinal mouth-to-mouth. Fascinating.

 

There are beautiful white birds that look like doves, but they are pigeons. They are quite domesticated and love being fed white bread by the tourists. However, many of them have deformed legs with missing limbs, balled feet, and other deformities. I believe it may be due to the white bread diet that some of them eat as their sole source of nutrition. It would be nice if there were machines with bird seed by the park seats. The tourists could purchase a handful of birdseed for a quarter and enjoy feeding them healthy food instead of white bread, while the owner of the machines would make a profit.

 

My favorite birds are the zebra dove, which are gray striped with soft pastel blue eye shadow around their eyes. They are cute and plump and have the most gentle personalities. These birds make an adorable staccato series of cooing sounds, even during flight.  Also, they bow to each other as they spread their back tail feathers. One will do a series of bows until the other responds with a bow. Sometimes they will just keep bowing back and forth to each other. When they are resting, they tuck in their legs and rest flat on their belly right there on the ground.

 

The minah birds have beautiful black feathers, and a deep dark brown body to soften the color. However, at a distance, they look solid black. They have long legs which they use to scratch mites on their head just like a dog scratches fleas. When they fly, their moving wings show a white patch. It is not visible when their wings are at rest. Now how could the BacterVira know how to the create this geometric figure that can only be visible during flight? This is intelligence.

 

When I first moved into my apartment which had been vacant for some time, I arrived with a bag full of groceries which I set on the floor. The counter was covered with starving roaches, and one large roach crawled to the edge of the counter and with antennas pulled back he leaped off the counter and dived into the bag of groceries. I cleaned out the apartment really well, and ate out until there were no more just to be sure there were no crumbs.

 

Six months later I moved across the hall to a more quiet apartment. This apartment had a trail of tiny little ants on the counter top. I did not have time to clean at first, and so, I just tolerated them. I began to observe them and thought it was rather interesting how peaceful they were. One morning I was washing dishes and as I filled the cup with water, I noticed a tiny little ant had been caught off guard in there and had drowned. I picked up his lifeless body and gently laid him on the counter. He looked lifeless, and I was going to throw him in the trash, but I just couldn't. He was so tiny, so cute.

 

I thought he might just be unconscious just like people after they drown. I gently dried him off with a tissue, and I continued to hope. I gently prodded his lifeless body with the edge of a tissue, but there was no response. I continued to hope. Nothing.  I felt a tear rolling down my cheek and caressed onto his lifeless body. Suddenly I thought I saw his antenna move. I'm sure I saw it move. I waited and hoped. Yes, I saw his antenna move again. He's alive, alive, I tell you, alive!

 

After awhile, he finally stood up, and his butt was dragging, being still a little water logged. He wobbled around slowly at first. As I continued to watch, he began to look normal. Soon he was scooting around the countertop with all the other ants.

 

With this experience, I learned that ants, indeed, fall into the nonconscious state after injury, and after the BacterVira repair and assure that the environment is safe, they return it to consciousness similar to people .

 

But there was more to learn about these ants. I finally found the time to really clean my apartment. The countertop was essentially sterile when I finished. Later as I observed the ants, they seemed confused. After that they suddenly disappeared. I realized that when I cleaned up, I had removed their scent trail, and apparently, there was not enough food to support their colony. With these two factors, they moved out. I thought this was quite smart, because I have been around a lot of ants in my lifetime, and they never give up. These, however, face reality and are willing to move to where the staples are. The ability to adapt to a changing environment is intelligent.

 

I see animals of much greater intelligence than the mainland, throughout Hawaii, and I attribute it to the ideal environment for the BacterVira with just the right amount of sunlight and increased time for creation and evomorph without interruptions by inclement weather.

 

Further, the frequency of lightwaves near the Equator may increase the conscious functioning which the BacterVira makes from energy from lightwaves, and, thus, the ability to think. However, in our species, logical thinking requires the input of data.

 

Knowledge, just like evomorph of the species, can only be achieved when it is laid upon a solid foundation of memories from our ancestors.

 

 

 
     
     

 

     

 

May the Lightforce Be With You
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All Content Copyright © Chérie Phillips. All Rights Reserved.
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