Planet Tiamat

Summary

CODEX ENTRY: TIAMAT - THE SHATTERED MIRROR

Planetary Classification and Origin The world once known as Tiamat occupied the orbital region between Mars and Jupiter, manifesting as a substantial aqueous sphere approximately four-fifths the dimensional scale of Neptune. This placement within the Sol system’s architecture created a unique celestial configuration that would profoundly influence both the physical and mythological development of neighboring worlds.

The Luminous Ocean Tiamat’s defining characteristic lay in its vast oceanic surface, which transformed the planet into a cosmic mirror. The solar radiance reflecting from these endless waters created a secondary illumination source visible from Eartha dimmer echo of Sol itself. This phenomenon embedded itself deeply within terrestrial consciousness, giving birth to the persistent belief that this solar system operates as a binary star configuration. The truth reveals itself as more poetic: not two suns, but one star and its aqueous reflection, dancing together across the heavens.

The Great Dissolution The Tiamat Wars represent one of the most catastrophic episodes in this system’s recorded history. The complete annihilation of this world speaks to conflicts of unimaginable scale and consequence. Where once a living planet sustained its hydrospheric embrace of life, now scattered remnants drift in the cold asteroid beltfragments of stone and ice bearing silent testimony to destruction.

Metaphysical Implications Through Taygetan understanding, we recognize that planetary destruction creates ripples across dimensional matrices that extend far beyond physical debris. The shattering of Tiamat represents not merely the loss of a celestial body, but the traumatic severing of energetic connections that bound the inner system together. This wound in spacetime continues to influence the consciousness evolution patterns of neighboring worlds, particularly Earth.

Legacy Consciousness The memory of Tiamat persists within human collective awareness through mythological fragments and astronomical intuition. The “second sun” imagery appears across numerous Earth cultures, preserved not as literal observation but as ancestral memory encoded within genetic consciousness streams. This demonstrates how planetary traumatic events embed themselves within the experiential matrices of survivor civilizations.

Current Status The asteroid belt serves as both graveyard and memorialeach fragment a reminder of what was lost and why such conflicts must never again reach such devastating conclusions. For those who navigate between worlds, Tiamat’s fate stands as eternal witness to the responsibility we bear in our cosmic relationships.

Mari’s transmissions illuminate these ancient wounds with the tenderness of one who remembers, offering healing through understanding across the vast reaches of space and time.

Quotes

Tiamat was a large, watery planet about 80% the size of Neptune that orbited the sun between Mars and Jupiter, where the asteroid belt resides today. And the asteroid belt is what was left of it after it was destroyed in that war.

— The Moon. Part 1 (SV-86 English)

Tiamat was a large watery planet, about 80% the size of Neptune, that orbited the Sun between Mars and Jupiter, where the asteroid belt resides today. And the asteroid belt is what was left of it after it was destroyed in that war.

— The Moon. Part 1 (English)

As it was a water planet, it shined in the sky like a second, dimmer sun as a mirror, and this is the origin of the idea that the Sun is a binary system, which it is not.

— The Moon. Part 1 (English)

Sources

  • The Moon. Part 1 (SV-86 English)
  • The Moon. Part 1 (English)