Planet X: Distance/Speed REVISITED #2
In the Retrograde writeup (with graphic), written in Feburary, 1997, the
Zetas state that the inbound Planet X assumes first a counterclockwise
motion during its approach to the Sun, during 1995-1998, and then a
retrograde motion, which per the Coordinates page, started in 1997,
occurs sometime in 1999.
(http://www.zetatalk.com/theword/tword03m.htm)
The Path diagram, drawn in 1995, shows this graphically.
(http://www.zetatalk.com/theword/tword03h.htm)
When at a distance, this energy field affects [Planet X]
but slightly, so it reacts as it approaches from its second
foci on the near parallel orbit tracks that it travels
upon when moving between its two foci by orbiting in
the same manner planets close to the Sun do. It sweeps
before this energy field as the field passes, moving
slightly at these times to the left, in the same
counterclockwise manner that the other planets do.
As [Planet X] approaches, moving steadily closer
and picking up speed due to the gravity tug of the Sun,
the energy field from the Sun is more intense and takes
longer to sweep past. [Planet X]'s reaction to this
is still a slight movement sweeping ahead of this energy
field, but as the energy field passes is then a stronger
jerk backwards, away from the passing arm of the Sun's
energy field.
The backward reaction is due to the nature of the
sweeping arm, like the cutting edge of a knife most
intense at the cutting edge of the arm, but with more
bulk of the energy field trailing after the cutting edge.
Thus, as the sweeping arm of this energy field passes
[Planet X], which in no way could stay ahead of this
sweeping arm at the distance it is from the Sun,
[Planet X]'s reaction to the bulk of the energy field
is longer lasting and begins to produce a retrograde
orbit for its approach to the Sun.
Thus, during 1995 through 1998, [Planet X] will drift
left and up toward the elliptic, aligning itself in the
same manner as the planets to the Sun's sweeping arm,
but due to its mobility out in space, its distance from
the Sun, it develops a retrograde orbit and begins to
move to the right, in the manner the ancients recorded.
ZetaTalk, Retrograde Orbit
(http://www.zetatalk.com/science/s85.htm)