January/February 2008 Cosmic
Is Seeing Believing?

With digital cameras, we can capture images of orbs. Why now and not with older film cameras?

According to Miceal Ledwith, co-author of The Orb Project, digital cameras pick up a small range of infrared light, allowing a glimpse into a world that we normally can't see unassisted by technology.

The visible light spectrum that the human eye can see is less than one percent of the entire electromagnetic spectrum. Beyond that, the naked eye can't perceive gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet, infrared, microwaves or radio waves.

"If you expect to see it to believe it, you would be missing 99.9 percent of reality," says Sergio Lub, an architect and designer featured in the film Orbs: The Veil is Lifting. "We are becoming very good at crafting tools that allow us to see things that normally we won't be able to see with our limited senses."

Now that we can see them, just what are orbs?

"These lights have always been here," says JZ Knight, an educator and channel for Ramtha, in the film Orbs. "In the 1700s, the 1800s, they were called cherubs. The Renaissance painters painted them with wings only because they flew through the air and it's the way to capture in art the aerodynamic levitational quality of a brilliant presence."


Ledwith, who has collected more than 100,000 images, has discovered an enormous variety of orbs. From observation orbs "witnessing" humanity's daily lives to thought forms to disembodied souls, these orbs exist beside us in a frequency normally beyond human perception.

Find out more about orbs by visiting www.toolsfortranscendence.com, www.orbprojectbook.com and www.lights2beyond.com.

- Vicky Thompson