Triple Cone Bubble Tech

Even though I’ve built a triple cone over a year ago, I’m still a bit apprehensive about presenting this project in a post, yet here it comes anyway. That is due to a strange experience I’ve had with bubble tech group, lack of initial info about the triple cone to be built, and the plethora of problems I encountered while trying to edit my videos and make tutorial out of that. But now that a year has passed since this notable failure, and I’ve moved on, it is somewhat easier to be frank about the whole ordeal. I can never feel good about failing to follow through with my commitments, and in this case I promised Mike and bubble tech group a video tutorial, and I failed to do it despite my best efforts. So I’m using this opportunity for some reflection and inner work, while at the same time hope that this post will help highlight what has worked for me and what hasn’t, and hopefully provide some direction as to which mistakes can be easily avoided.

Let’s backtrack a bit. I’ve already posted about my two bubble pieces that I’ve made last winter, and there I explain what these things are supposed to do. At the time I had no contact with anyone making these “devices”, because bubble tech group was on facebook and I’ve deleted my facebook account 11+ years ago with no intention to have another. In the meantime, sometime in early ’21 I found that there was bubble tech group on Telegram, so I joined. People there seemed quite enthusiastic about making bubble tech and orgonite pieces, and have shared resources and how-to documents. I realized that in the meantime, the bubble tech piece design has evolved to exclude the copper pipe in the center and would instead utilize a copper wire wrapped around the pointed quartz in the middle for charging with violet ray wand. Then, there was all this talk about triple cone, and Mike Emery swore that it is the most powerful bubble tech piece yet. But there was very little info about it. There was a rudimentary document put together by Mike where he simply suggests traffic cone, dixie cup and kids football cone to be used as a mold. The idea is that there would be cement layers surrounded by three resin based amplification layers. Whoever in the facebook group made this triple cone originally hasn’t bothered making a tutorial or elaborating on how this is to be done, so many of us were scrambling to figure out best way to go about it, all the while all discussion on the subject of triple cones shared on facebook was completely out of my reach. Should there be magnets? Tensor ring? Diatomaceous earth? Clay? Perhaps, all that went out of the window and wasn’t important anymore. The resin layer was to have half resin, half iron oxide with addition of crushed crystals.

None of this prevented me from diving right into the project and even excitedly promising to make a video tutorial so that others can have easier time making their triple cones. Luckily I didn’t have to invest much more money into this, because I already had most of the ingredients I needed from making the bubble pieces previously. I think the only thing I had to get was mortar and pestle to crush the crystals, and I needed cone molds. I decided to print the molds again, but this time I thought I would get away without needing to use TPU filament. So without thinking, I printed three molds for three cones, not realizing that I really would just need one that I would reuse for all size of cones. In photo below, only the black cone was printed in TPU, the rest are PLA.

The next step was making a first batch of cement and metal filings mixture. I 3D printed a tiny sifter and sifted some sand from kids sandbox and added that to the mix, along with some small sized semiprecious gems, like jasper, agate, amethyst, citrine, jade and quartz. I still had a bunch of aluminum shavings from wheel lathe, so I crushed those in mortar and pestle to be able to pack more of them, since their swirls make the small amount very bulky. I wrapped the pointed quartz with a copper wire and placed that in the middle of the first and smallest cone. This cone was not taller than 3″. I left it to dry under IR light, and next day it appeared dry and cured, although somewhat crumbly and powdery on the surface and I wonder if that was because the portland cement I had got lumpy due to moisture in the air as it was sitting in the moodroom for months and I had to crush it with mortar and pestle before use – perhaps the reaction with water already happened and it wasn’t working as it should.

The resin layers were naturally more tricky. I measured and mixed resin and iron oxide and added some crushed amethyst, quartz and rose quartz. I don’t remember exactly how I did each resin layer, but I recall dipping the cone at first, and because the removal from mold wasn’t easy I ended up just hanging the cone onto the tripod and painting it with resin. For the last layer of resin, judging by the photos, I used the newly printed TPU cone mold, but this mold had leaking issues, so I had to line it with some aluminum foil. If I recall correctly, I printed this mold twice and really wanted it to work, because I destroyed one of the PLA molds while attempting to remove the cone with a resin layer freshly cured. For some reason, this blue TPU had problems with delamination, not along the print layers, but between them, which was really strange. And since TPU is so flexible, the little feet couldn’t prop up the mold full of resin and concrete, so I removed them for the second print, and used the PLA cone to keep this new mold in position, as seen in the last image:

I added some glitter to the last resin layer make the cone look more interesting. There’s also some yellow masking tape on the cone that I couldn’t remove, which was held aluminum foil together. One ingredient I forgot to mention, perhaps very important, is a dust from fully charged bubble pieces. As per Mike’s instruction, to fully charge a bubble piece, it needs to be touched by violet ray wand for 9 days, and I had that done with my two bubble pieces so I banged one of them with a hammer until I obtained some dust and bits, that I then added to each of my concrete cone layers. This was supposed to be a self-bubbling piece, perhaps because of this fully charged bubble dust.

All of this has been recorded with my phone and with a GoPro. I did not record any narrative or spoken instructions due to constant background noise in the house, and because I was hoping to do a bit of motion graphics and animate text with the instructions. I was really excited to do it too! Finally, there was something that handful of people is looking forward to, and I’ve been hoping to do some motion graphics for a long time, yet in a project that would be helpful and instructive, rather than just experimental. I even gathered some quotes from Mike’s essays, hoping to introduce bubble tech to those who may not be familiar with what it is and what it does and how it works… all the while I wasn’t quite sure of that myself!

From sometime in April last year, I made great friends with a woman living in Australia who was in a Telegram bubble tech chat group. She was able to communicate with her bubble genie, even though her bubble piece was just a piece of old concrete and UV lamp. I really had a great time chatting with her, joking and exchanging ideas. Then one time she out of the blue told Mike in private chat that she didn’t quite buy his ideas about this reality and disputed his claim that he controls all the bubbles (he really said that?! – I wondered) and he snapped at her in the most unusual, aggressive way, including a threat and calling her names. I was amazed! Totally uncalled for. And even admitting that he’s been paid by CIA in a stream of several voice messages sent to her, which she then shared with a group. But it was no problem for people in the group, it was her who was attacked and asked to leave, and Mike remained the revered guru that he was, no questions asked. I realized that Mike had a status of guru when someone instructed someone else not to send too many questions to Mike because “his time is valuable!”. However, I ended up receiving the same kind of treatment from this woman as Mike – she couldn’t help expressing her opinion about my relationship and about my garden, and since that didn’t upset me, she simply decided we’re no longer friends and we haven’t talked since.

But OK, since I made a commitment to make this video, and have already completed most of the work, let’s put it together and get it over with. I’ve been using DaVinci Resolve to edit my videos, because After Effects, which I used since I was in college, for some strange reason cannot use all of my 32GB of RAM, but only 1GB, which results in very short RAM previews and is annoying as hell. I tried all that I could find as suggestion to fix this issue, but nothing worked. I ended up destroying two external hard drives as a result of this troubleshooting, because disabling Comodo antivirus somehow triggered a hidden feature it had to disable all USB drives, and it made them unreadable so that I had to use Recuva application to get my files back, and directory structure was all gone. It’s always the antivirus that’s the real problem, as can be witnessed in the world today.

Resolve has a node-based animation module that takes a bit of time to get used to after working with layer/timeline centered After Effects. It was fun to learn and use Resolve, but trying to do an actual motion graphic project inside of it turned out to be more challenging than it was worth it for me. The reason was the corruption of the project file to the point that it was impossible to continue the work. I started this project three times, and each time I got to the point where something has gone wrong, I could not revert to previous saved version and current version ended up crashing the program. It was so infuriating that I said “to hell with it!” and deleted all the video files, so as not to be tempted to try wasting time again on this thing. I did have some videos backed up to Mega, but the longer ones were skipped as they exceeded the file size limit, so even if I wanted to try for the fourth time, I wouldn’t have all the videos I’ve made.

In the meantime, my interest in bubble tech has also waned. The main reason was that I was not at all impressed how my garden performed, and helping plants grow (along with protection for our household) was the main reason for building the bubble pieces in the first place. Last summer I began using grow bags instead of planting directly in the ground, and some things grew well, but for instance I didn’t have a single normal full sized carrot, and when it comes to tomatoes, squash and cucumbers, that was nearly total failure. So with three bubble genies around with intention to have them help my plants, how is it that this catastrophic failure of the crops occurred? Then again this spring I had trouble getting seedlings to grow. I had a few orgonite pieces, including the triple cone, inside a small greenhouse heated by small space heater and heating pads and four LED grow lights for the seedlings, and the results were very unsatisfactory. The tomatoes all got yellow and didn’t even grow the first two leaves, and I had to also add a fan so that mold wouldn’t develop. So it’s not like I was relying on bubble genies to keep my plants thriving – I did all I could think of to create good conditions for growth, yet how come that I couldn’t even get decent tomato starts? I plan to make a post on my 7th year of gardening, so I’ll go into more gardening details in that post.

After much consideration, I concluded that lack of results has to be related to the fact that I projected the source of power outside myself, while I would’ve perhaps done better if I gave same attention to the plants rather than some invisible genies that I never even felt I was connected to. I feel like I got myself punked again, just like when I spent big money on a so called lightstream pendant. All that comes to mind is this meme with slight modifications:

I would also like to note that there were some very notable positive effects of the bubbles, so it certainly wasn’t a failure. As the main intent for building bubbles was protection from any and all visible or invisible beings, energies or entities who might harm us, manipulate us or drain our energy, as well as from harmful EMF and 5G radiation – in that regard the results were great. Our health’s been great, and the mood usually pretty upbeat, while the lovemaking had intensity of pleasure that is out of this world. On the other hand, attributing all of this to the workings of bubble genies wouldn’t be right either.

Few weeks ago I went to Mike’s academia page to see if he had anything new, and lo and behold there is a document with thorough instructions on building a triple cone. I wish that was around when I was building mine, because I clearly didn’t do it properly. I didn’t leave my concrete layers to cure for three days but just for one, I used RO purified water instead of special crystal charged water, I didn’t put any LSD or cannabis or tensor rings inside, not to mention graphite and honey. Well, then, it turns out that it’s much better for everyone involved that this tutorial didn’t get released, because who knows how many other people would’ve made triple cones like mine that can’t even keep the pests off the veggie plants?! Am I going to make another one after the updated instructions? Likely not, even though I have bunch of materials left. I may make some more orgonite to use up the resin I got before it goes bad, but that’s about it.

Either way, what this entire bubble tech adventure has done for me is beneficial overall. It helped me see through some of the beliefs (delusions) I’ve held, and helped me realize that I have no desire to troubleshoot computer problems or spend excessive time working on computers anymore – I’ve done that for 20 years and now it’s time to move on. Additionally, it became clear that sometimes promises made with good intentions and enthusiasm can turn out to be something we couldn’t even imagine we signed up for (like perhaps incarnation in this insane world?). Instead of beating myself up about it, it was much better to honestly evaluate the situation and take in consideration all that took place, at the same time knowing that it couldn’t have been otherwise – which then leaves me at peace instead of being stuck with thoughts calling me untrustworthy and flaky. I also have no beef with anyone in Bubble Tech group, I appreciate them all the way they are, and I certainly have nothing against Mike – he’s cool and I like him a lot, along with his laughter, his style and all of his published research. So I hope that the bubblers have it in their heart to forgive me for not being able to deliver video tutorial, although I am also glad that I didn’t mislead anyone with my incomplete understanding about making a triple cone.

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