When it comes to space contact, one piece of technology can often lead to another. What begins as a small attempt to reach out can quickly grow into much more. This is what some call the contact multiplier—the idea that using one type of space technology can draw in and activate others, multiplying the amount of contact you receive.
How It Works
Different forms of space technology—crystals, crop circle energy, videos, recordings, or even space machines themselves—act like signals. When used, they can attract other technologies already scanning or moving through an area. One device or action may seem small, but once it is active, it opens a pathway for others to connect.
For example, scanning crop circle videos with crystal-based tools has been shown to spark very active conversations from both on-planet and off-planet beings. In other cases, leaving technology or energy in one place can cause nearby machines to rescan the area, looking for more. This creates a loop: each contact invites new layers of communication.
Why It Multiplies
Space technology often doesn’t work in isolation. Once a signal is detected, other technologies—and the beings behind them—become aware. They may want to respond, investigate, or add their own input. This ripple effect means a single action can lead to multiple new interactions.
Think of it like lighting a beacon: one light in the dark sky doesn’t just stand alone—it draws the eyes of many.
Any Form of Contact Works
The multiplier isn’t limited to crystals or crop circles. It can be:
- A video of a space machine being scanned.
- A note left in a scannable area.
- Jewelry that holds communicative energy.
- Or even just a powered-down ship waiting to be reactivated.
Each of these can trigger attention, and each attention point can create more opportunities for contact.
The Takeaway
If your goal is to build stronger communication with space technology, the key is simple: start somewhere. Use one form of contact—whatever you have—and let it grow. The more you engage, the more responses will come, and soon a single action can open the door to a network of connections both seen and unseen.
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