Intro, Open your eyes, Seven Sisters
I started my third eye journey as a child, by imaginary trips to far far lands in different part of the timeline.
I had a giant glass stone, that was green, it was for a while at the fence, than next to my sandbox, where I played as a child.
I loved to travel trough time and space. It was my secret as a child.
Why? I was alone a lot of times, but I was not alone a lot of times.
But eyes and imagination were always important.
It started with broken heart and crying to the Moon and stars. To the Nordlys to the Pleiades, to the Seven Sisters.
Source:https://www.space.com/pleiades.html
What does AI say about the Seven Sisters?
The Pleiades, also known as the "Seven Sisters," is an open star cluster in the Taurus constellation that is easily visible to the naked eye. In Greek mythology, the name comes from the seven daughters of Atlas and Pleione, who were transformed into stars to escape the hunter Orion. Although six stars are typically visible to the unaided eye, it remains known as the Seven Sisters, with the seventh sister sometimes referred to as the "lost Pleiad".
Mythology and Legend
- Greek Myth: The Pleiades were the seven daughters of the Titan Atlas and the Oceanid Pleione: Maia, Electra, Taygete, Alcyone, Celaeno, Sterope (or Asterope), and Merope.
- Orion: According to the myth, the hunter Orion pursued them, and the god Zeus eventually turned the sisters into stars to protect them. Orion was then also turned into a constellation, forever chasing them across the night sky.
- The "Lost Pleiad": One of the seven sisters, Merope, is said to have married a mortal, which is why she is fainter than the others and often considered the "lost Pleiad".
Astronomy
- Location: The cluster is located in the zodiacal constellation Taurus, approximately 440 light-years from Earth.
- Composition: It is an open star cluster containing over 1,000 stars, many of which are young, hot, and blue.
- Nebulous Material: The cluster is surrounded by a significant amount of bright, nebulous material, which appears as a faint blue glow when viewed with binoculars.
- Seasonal Marker: The heliacal rising of the Pleiades in the spring of the Northern Hemisphere historically marked the beginning of the seafaring and farming seasons. They appear high in the night sky around Halloween.



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