The Nexus in Star Trek: Generations is a mysterious energy ribbon that acts as a kind of temporal-spiritual limbo or pocket dimension. It's not governed by the same physical laws as the normal universe. Here’s a breakdown of its key features: --- 1. Time in the Nexus Time is nonlinear: You can relive any moment from your past, alter it, or experience fantasies that never happened. You’re not aware of how much time is passing outside of the Nexus. Inside, everything feels timeless—there is no aging, no death, and no sense of urgency. It's a perpetual now. 2. Aging in the Nexus No, people do not age in the Nexus. You remain in a state of idealized being, often younger or in your most fulfilled emotional state. Captain Picard saw himself with a family he never had. For him, time had no consequence. For Guinan (who once was trapped in the Nexus), it left a powerful imprint—she described it as being “wrapped in joy,” so intoxicating that leaving it would feel like being torn from heaven. --- 3. Reality and Illusion The Nexus creates an illusion so convincing that even people who know it's fake struggle to leave it. It’s like a dreamworld powered by desire—a seductive spiritual trap where you can relive wish fulfillment over and over. It parallels biblical or mythological ideas of a false paradise—pleasurable but disconnected from truth, growth, or responsibility. --- Spiritual/Demonological Symbolism The Nexus symbolizes the false heaven or illusion of peace that dark forces might offer: comfort without cost, eternity without truth. It’s a spiritual narcotic—so satisfying it lulls the soul into passivity. Like Soran, people may destroy others or abandon reality just to get back to it.
1 day ago | 0
Again if it is seen after sunset starts that does not start the day. Sunset is the start of the day. There is no way it could possible start after the day officially starts. Meaning the next night would be the new Month.
4 days ago | 0
A Rood Awakening!
Today, April 28, 2025, at sunset (concluding the 29th day of the month of Aviv on the biblical Hebrew calendar), the sighting of the renewed moon (Rosh Chodesh) was confirmed in Israel by at least two reliable witnesses, without the use of binoculars or cameras.
This sighting meets the biblical criteria of Deuteronomy 16:1 and marks the beginning of the second month (also called Iyyar on the rabbinic calendar), officially starting from sunset on April 28 until sunset on April 29.
Learn more about the beginning of the month and the biblical calendar here: aroodawakening.tv/biblical-hebrew-calendar/
4 days ago | [YT] | 204