(Kiri gives a heavy-duty
dissertation on fifth dimensional properties in
relation to her broom closet where she stores her
wine. Literally the size of a closet, she is able
to use gravity generators to store half a million
cases of wine. It is a smaller version of what
maintains the base in a fifth dimensional space
with properties that defy physical laws. She tells
us of her use of a fifth dimensional work space to
help with her engineering projects.)
Russ:
so I understand your
flower crop is looking
good.
Kiri: it depends on
how you look at it.
Russ: as in bad
weather but good for
you.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: you sold them
all I believe if I
heard right.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: congratulations.
Kiri: yes, yes, I sold
them all and the
highest bidder gets
the crops. I’m selling
them in groups of 12
so 12 flowers at the
moment are running
close to about 30
cases is the highest
offer so far.
Russ: for 12 flowers?
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: 30 cases?
Kiri: uh-huh.
Marilynn: I don’t know
what 30 cases means.
Russ: cases of wine.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Marilynn: wow.
Russ: yeah 12 bottles
of wine…..
Marilynn: right.
Russ: then you have 30
of those to get your
12 flowers.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: 30 cases of
wine. And how many
flowers are you
looking at?
Kiri: I’m looking at
probably in one
section I'm definitely
going to have 12
dozen, that’s in one
quarter and in the
next quarter probably
twice that and in
another quarter it’s
going to be half of
that and in the last
quarter it may be only
probably three dozen.
That’s the area that's
still under deep snow
right now.
Russ: that’s a lot of
flowers.
Kiri: no not really.
Russ: it’s a lot
for…..
Kiri: it’s about
half……
Russ: it’s a lot of
wine.
Kiri: it’s about half
of normal.
Russ: it’s more wine
than we could put in
this house at any one
time.
Marilynn: well yeah.
Russ: we'd have to
stop living here just
to store the wine
here.
Kiri: uh-huh well I
keep all of my wine in
the broom closet.
Russ: good call, I
would too.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: temperature
controlled….
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: easy to
maintain.
Kiri: it’s a unit
deep, it’s three units
high and two units
across.
Russ: that’s in the
fifth dimension.
Kiri: and it’s not
even a quarter full.
Russ: you need a big
forklift to put stuff
in there.
Kiri: no, I just put
it in the doorway and
push. Getting it out
is always a problem
though.
Russ: that would be a
bit of a problem, how
do you do that?
Marilynn: bottle by
bottle.
Kiri: no what I
actually do is I send
a little robot in that
seeks out what I want
and each one is tagged
and labeled so the
robot can find it and
then it brings out the
case.
Russ: oh.
Marilynn: well that’s
handy.
Kiri: and I programmed
it to do that. However
sometimes I have to
build new ones as the
last one that I sent
in there is still
searching.
Russ: “look, there it
is, up there on top.
Oh gee, it’s a flat
robot."
Kiri: no, no. No it’s
more along the lines
of the instability of
a fifth dimensional
workspace.
Russ: oh, tough for
the little guys to get
around in there huh?
Kiri: uh-huh, I think
it’s lost in there
somewhere.
Marilynn: sad.
Kiri: do you know of
the physics of fifth
dimensional space.
Marilynn: uh-uh, no I
don’t.
Kiri: (sighs happily)
okay, in fifth
dimensional space,
things do not appear
as they seem. For
example, Russ, find
two objects of
dissimilar size.
Russ: two objects of
dissimilar size, that
should be fairly easy.
Kiri: preferably a
matchbox and
a....small matchbox by
the way, and a book.
Marilynn: how about a
CD and a book?
Russ: how about….?
Kiri: a cassette will
work.
Russ: there’s a
cassette next to you.
I got the cassette
case and this box here
which is slightly
larger.
Kiri: perfect.
Russ: grander size I’d
say.
Kiri: okay, now we
have two objects here
of different
proportional size. Now
this is an explanation
of fifth dimensional
space. Okay now this
one is bigger, in fact
it’s so big that we
cannot do this and it
fits inside. Thank
you. Okay now, it’s a
perception thing, we
put this one
here…..okay, that one
there is still bigger
than this one however,
Marilynn…..
Marilynn: yes, I know
this game.
Kiri: okay, now if you
hold that one up in
front of that, in
front of that one….
Marilynn: right, I can
make it disappear.
Kiri: and that is one
explanation of the
appearance of the
fifth dimensional
workspace that that is
actually bigger than
that which isn’t the
case because we know
that that box there is
bigger than that
cassette case. But it
appears to be bigger
when you hold it up
close.
Marilynn: so
perception is….
Kiri: that’s correct,
perception is one of
the things to do with
the fifth dimensional
workspace. That is
part of how I can get
over half a million
cases of wine into a
broom closet.
Marilynn: okay.
Kiri: okay now the
other thing about the
fifth dimensional
workspace is that the
laws don’t stay
constant. For example,
this, in the fifth
dimensional
space......or in the
third dimensional
space does this.
Marilynn: uh-huh.
Kiri: now if I was to
do that in a fifth
dimensional space it
may end up on the
ceiling….
Marilynn: okay.
Kiri: or it could end
up on the wall. Also,
because of the
instability of the
fifth dimensional
workspace, let’s say
you wanted to walk out
the door…
Marilynn: uh-huh.
Kiri: and go to the
bathroom.
Marilynn: okay.
Kiri: in a fifth
dimensional workspace
you could get up and
start walking and on
one occasion it may be
just a simple walking
across the room and
into the bathroom.
But, another time, you
could walk and take
one step and the door
is just as far away as
it was when you were
sitting so you take a
second step and it
appears the same
distance and you can
walk and walk and walk
and end up walking for
several hours all day
and never get to the
door. But, if you were
to turn around, walk
out through the glass
door.....opening it
first of
course.....and walk
around, you’d get to
the bathroom.
Marilynn: okay.
Kiri: however, the
next time that you try
to do that you may
find that you can't
get to that door
because that door is
so far away that you
keep walking and
walking and walking.
Sometimes it would be
easier to walk up the
wall, across the
ceiling and out the
door instead of
walking directly
towards it. So it
varies from time to
time because of the
instabilities. Okay,
let’s answer some
questions before I
proceed.
Russ: has anybody in
the third dimension
ever adequately
explained the
mechanics of the fifth
dimension?
Kiri: not really, it’s
hard for us sometimes
but the fifth
dimension has some
very useful
properties. For
example, the fact that
you could store vast
quantities of stuff in
there. There are times
where if it becomes
too unstable, my broom
closet would start
spewing cases of wine
out until it had
closed down to be
totally the reverse of
what it appears to be
right now. However,
because of the
generators that are
mounted within the
retaining walls of the
broom closet that help
to create the
stability, it won't do
that. If I remove
those, it could
double, quadruple in
size and the poor
little robots I sent
in to get my various
cases of wine that I
want may be there
until whenever. But
just as quickly as it
can expand, it can
also contract and
reverse the process.
Marilynn: so just like
molecules with heat
and cold, that they
expand with heat and
become in essence
larger like steam or
contract with cold
like ice.
Kiri: that’s correct.
Marilynn: so you had
the same volume but it
does change because of
the speed of the
molecules.
Kiri: that’s correct.
With the fifth
dimensional space, it
doesn’t quite depend
on hot or cold…..
Marilynn: uh-huh.
Kiri: it depends on
gravities.
Marilynn: okay.
Kiri: as the gravity
changes and shifts it
will contract or
expand. If the gravity
is more dense, it
spreads it out more.
If it’s less dense, it
tends to contract to
maintain the same
space.
Marilynn: but you have
the same mass?
Kiri: uh-huh.
Marilynn: so again
like with third
dimensional with the
masses neither created
nor destroyed…..
Kiri: that’s correct.
Marilynn: it’s in the
same.....
Kiri: uh-huh.
Marilynn: okay.
Russ: I get it, so you
have gravity
generators mounted on
the walls to control
its size.
Kiri: correct, to keep
it constant and they
have to keep adjusting
because it doesn’t
always stay constant.
Russ: oh I get it. Do
they have like a
measuring device on it
that measures the
gravity and adjust it
up to or down to that
particular one you
that want to achieve?
Kiri: uh-huh, that’s
correct.
Russ: so if the
engines were to fail
somehow you could lose
your entire stock of
wine?
Kiri: uh-huh. It would
either expand so
rapidly that the wine
would be ripped to
pieces with the
expansion or I could
end up with bottles of
wine, each one being
10 foot tall or
because of the
contraction, it would
squash everything down
and I could end up
with wine bottles this
size.
Marilynn: are there
any limitations in
either direction?
Kiri: it depends on
the area that you’re
using. If you’re using
for example my broom
closet, there are
limitations on how far
out it will stretch.
Marilynn: okay.
Kiri: it will stretch
out to
approximately.....mathematics
time……about a mile and
a half. That’s if the
generators were to
fail or it would
compress to a foot by
a foot by a foot cube.
Marilynn: okay.
Russ: half a million
cases of wine into a
foot by foot cube?
Marilynn: small wine
then.
Kiri: uh-huh, that’s
the minimum. Now,
here’s an interesting
thing, if the
generators fail, I
said the wine would be
pushed out, that’s not
exactly true, it would
be better. If the
generators failed, the
wine isn’t destroyed,
the same with if it
expands the wine’s not
destroyed. See what
you’ve done? You've
started me having
difficulty with words.
But, what happens is
as I hinted I would
have bottles of wine
either 10 foot tall or
yea big.
Marilynn: so even the
contents accommodate
the….
Kiri: that’s correct.
Marilynn: should I say
the holder of them. I
mean like if you had
something within a
balloon….
Kiri: uh-huh.
Marilynn: and that…..
Kiri: that’s actually
a very good analogy is
that it is like a
balloon.
Marilynn: okay.
Kiri: you blow up the
balloon and it gets
bigger and it will
hold more.
Marilynn: uh-huh.
Kiri: you let the air
out and it contracts
and it holds less.
Marilynn: and do
dimensions……say you
have something that’s
10 x 10…..
Kiri: uh-huh.
Marilynn: and
something 20 x 20….
Kiri: uh-huh.
Marilynn: do they both
have limits to their
expansion in
consideration to their
original…..is there an
original size I guess
is what I’m getting to
or is everything
constantly moving?
Everything adjusting
at all times………
Kiri: everything is
adjusting at all times
however with the
stability generators,
it minimizes that. The
generators themselves
actually adjust to
keep it constant.
Marilynn: it’d be a
real shame to go out
of your abode whatever
it'd be and it'd just
be smaller and you
couldn't get back in.
Kiri: uh-huh, it would
be a shame yes.
Russ: it sounds like
you’re almost
harnessing the power
of a tame blackhole
without the incredible
gravities.
Kiri: hmm, that would
be one way to describe
it is a tame blackhole
but it’s not because a
blackhole is actually
intense gravity, this
is not intense
gravity.
Marilynn: it can be
absence of gravity.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: well it can’t be
absence.
Kiri: well the gravity
helps to keep the
stability.
Russ: you have to keep
everything on the
ground, the absence of
gravity would be all
floating around there.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: that be a real
mess for the robots.
Kiri: uh-huh, it would
be, it would be.
Everything…..gravity
is applied in the
normal means that you
understand but it’s
not always as it
seems. The perception
part is something that
is very useful. For
example I made the
statement that you
could walk up walls,
you quite literally
can and your
perception would be
that people would be
sitting on the walls
or holding onto the
walls to stop
themselves from
falling off.
Russ: do people go
bonkers studying the
fifth dimension in
sixth dimension?
Kiri: uh-huh.
Marilynn: yeah the
absence of gravity
doesn’t mean I’m not
saying no gravity, I’m
just saying that
different levels of
gravity. I mean
there’s different on
each planet, there is
a different
gravitational pull……
Kiri: uh-huh.
Marilynn: and less and
more, so......and even
the moon isn't without
gravity to my
knowledge, it’s just a
much different….
Kiri: it’s one fifth
of your earth gravity.
Marilynn: right, so
it’s just a
different…..
Kiri: uh-huh. That's
correct and it’s all
to do with the
relative mass of the
size of the body. For
example, the moon is
about one fifth the
size of your planet
correct?
Marilynn: uh-huh.
Kiri: so the gravity
is one fifth.
Marilynn: uh-huh.
Kiri: whereas if you
look at somewhere much
larger, let us take
one of our favorite
heavenly bodies
Tia…..I mean Jupiter,
and have a look at it,
at the core the
gravity is so intense
that if you were to go
to the core you would
be about half an inch
thick and about 8
miles wide. Or even
less than half an
inch, you see?
Marilynn: I think I do
understand as best I
could.
Kiri: okay…..it’s a
little tricky, it’s
little tricky. Don’t
underestimate
yourself, you’re
actually extremely
smart and you know
that.
Russ: time would have
a funny thing to do
with the fifth
dimension.
Kiri: how do you mean?
Russ: well, because
the fourth dimension
would intrude on the
fifth dimension at
some point.
Kiri: well doesn’t the
second dimension also
intrude on the third?
Russ: right so time
interacting on the
fifth dimension would
probably screw up your
time perception as bad
as your distance and
directional sense.
Kiri: not as much as
you think.
Russ: hmm.
Kiri: does time affect
the third dimension?
Russ: absolutely.
Kiri: in the normal,
linear line that you
are used to correct?
Russ: correct.
Kiri: and it does in
the same way in the
fifth, time does pass.
It doesn’t pass any
more rapidly or any
more slowly but it is
slightly different.
Russ: hmm, okay and
then again it’s
slightly different in
the sixth.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: so your
perception of time is
different from our
perception of time.
Kiri: yes. The fact
that, to use one of
Skip’s phrases, I am a
snot nosed kid is
quite true even though
Skip and myself are
only I think six
months to a year
younger than Skip?
Russ: uh-huh.
Kiri: in my time, I’m
a snot nosed kid, I
can live up to a
thousand years old.
Russ: well that’s
pretty young for most
people in the higher
dimensions.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: okay I’m
starting to get a
better idea of it
anyway of what takes
place in the fifth
but......
Kiri: it’s not always
as it appears which is
the most important
thing.
Russ: but the fact is
that you’re able to
harness it.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: and use it as a
bit of a tool.
Kiri: yes, it’s also a
very useful teaching
tool to understand
things.
Russ: what, stick
somebody in a room in
the fifth dimension
for an hour?
Kiri: yeah, about
that.
Marilynn: a whole new
meaning to timeout.
Kiri: uh-huh. Well
it's also can be quite
torturous especially
if you have a
disposition towards
indulging in vast
quantities of food.
You can put a plate of
food in down in front
of somebody and maybe
or maybe not they
could get to it.
Russ: that’d tame your
alcoholism in a
heartbeat.
Kiri: uh-huh. Yeah an
example is that you do
have a glass of wine
sitting on a table
right in front of you
and you can reach for
the glass of wine and
it’s just as far away,
so you lean further
and it's still just as
far away but if you
get up and walk around
to the other side of
the table….
Russ: reminds me of a
dream I had once,
something very similar
to that happened to me
once.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: it’s very
disconcerting.
Kiri: the one I like
is where I put my arms
up just like this and
somebody thinks I’m
standing on my head.
Marilynn: interesting.
Kiri: uh-huh, I’ve
done that just to goof
with people. I’ve
actually stood on my
head and somebody’s
walked into a fifth
dimensional space and
they look at me and
they're like, “Kiri,
are you standing on
the floor or are you
standing on your
head?” And I’ll tell
them I’m standing on
the floor which really
plays with them.
Marilynn: I’m sure.
Kiri: uh-huh. See I’m
used to the fifth
dimensional workspace,
I use it sometimes for
engineering projects.
Russ: what good would
that come?
Kiri: ohhh there’s
lots of goods that can
come from it. By
amplifying the local
gravitational field, I
can take a
microcircuit board
that’s this big and I
can make it this big.
Russ: oh.
Kiri: which means?
Russ: it would help in
your robotic work.
Kiri: uh-huh or did I
let a little trade
secret out there?
Russ: you possibly
might’ve of.
Kiri: drat.
Russ: well it’s not
one we can use down
here.
Marilynn: well
alrighty.
Kiri: how do you think
I make such beautiful
and powerful little
robots that stand yea
tall?
Russ: what’s
interesting though is,
if you’re able to
manipulate the fifth
dimension on the sixth
dimension.....
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: how come we
can’t manipulate the
fifth dimension in the
third dimension
because we're not past
it yet or it’s the
fact that we don’t
have the technology to
do so?
Kiri: both, you need
one to get to the
other to achieve the
other. Now, also there
are some very
interesting things
that you can do with a
fifth dimensional
space. As I’ve already
stated, you can take a
circuitry board that
is that big, make it
that big, that big or
however big you want
it and you can go
through the wiring
process. And then by
removing the
gravitational field
that you’re using to
either stretch or
contract, you can go
back to the original
size but it will never
be smaller than the
original size.
Marilynn: okay.
Kiri: you can make it
bigger, much, much
bigger…….
Russ: why can’t it get
smaller if the wines
can get smaller?
Kiri: I can make it
smaller but once I
take it out it returns
to its normal size,
let me clear that up.
Russ: oh okay, that
makes sense.
Kiri: for example, if
I was to take the
bottles of wine that
are yea big, bring
them out and as I
bring them out they
become bigger.
Russ: well let’s say
500,000 cases and you
put them all in the
size of a shoebox…
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: you wouldn't
want to take the
shoebox out at any
point….
Kiri: no, because the
weight would be such
that it would be
impossible to lift it.
See the weight doesn’t
change.
Russ: oohhh, that
makes a difference.
Kiri: the volume
inside doesn’t change.
Russ: I see.
Kiri: it just…..
Marilynn: becomes more
dense.
Kiri: that’s correct,
that was the word I
was looking for. It
wasn't in....well it
is in my vocabulary
but it’s difficult
sometimes for me to
call up words.
Marilynn: I
understand.
Kiri: yeah.
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