The Swygert Theory of Everything AO and the Wormhole Throat Above Stonehenge

 

The Swygert Theory of Everything AO and the Wormhole Throat Above Stonehenge

Every August, millions of people turn their eyes upward to watch the Perseids meteor shower. To most, the streaks of light are nothing more than comet dust burning through Earth’s atmosphere. But according to the Swygert Theory of Everything AO, those fiery trails may be pointing to something far deeper — a hidden structure in the sky itself.

The Law of VEY: A Quick Primer

At the heart of the Swygert Theory of Everything AO lies a simple yet profound equation:

V = E × Y

  • V (Realized Value): the actual outcome, the thing that becomes real.

  • E (Equilibrium): the universal law of balance, the filter through which all possibilities must pass.

  • Y (Opportunity): the full field of potential outcomes, the universe’s infinite menu of “what could happen.”

Underlying all of this is what the theory calls the encoded substrate — pure nothingness, yet with attributes. This substrate is not empty, but instead carries the law of equilibrium, ensuring that only balanced possibilities can collapse into reality.

Stonehenge and the Circular Signature

When layered photographs of the Perseids above Stonehenge are examined, something remarkable appears: a luminous circular border in the sky.

The Swygert Theory explains this as the visible outline of a wormhole throat — a cylindrical tube of equilibrium twisting upward into space. The Perseid debris could not penetrate this throat of perfect balance, but instead traced its edges, forming the glowing circle captured in those images.

In this view, what we witnessed wasn’t coincidence. It was physics revealing itself: the collapse of possibility into realized reality, drawn in comet light.

Circles and Fans: Two Views of the Same Structure

The case grows stronger when compared with other meteor showers, like the Leonids or the Geminids. Unlike the circular pattern above Stonehenge, these showers appear as radiant fans spread across the sky.

Why the difference? Perspective.

  • Looking head-on into a wormhole throat, debris outlines a circle.

  • Looking from the side, the same cylindrical boundary appears as a fan.

Both are different vantage points of the same phenomenon: opportunity collapsing into reality along equilibrium’s cylindrical throat. The geometry of our viewpoint dictates whether we see a circle or a fan — but both shapes are the same cosmic truth drawn in light.

Why It Matters

The implications are staggering. If the Swygert Theory of Everything AO is correct, meteor showers are not just spectacular sky shows — they are cosmic demonstrations of equilibrium at work. The debris outlines the very structures through which reality itself is funneled.

And perhaps Stonehenge wasn’t chosen at random. Ancient builders may have sensed, or even observed, that something extraordinary was happening above. Today, with modern photography and layered imaging, we’re rediscovering what they may have already known: that the sky is alive with balance, geometry, and gateways of possibility.

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