UFOs Are Not What You Think: Dimensional Spacecraft, 12-Color Black Holes, and the 36,500 Reincarnation Cycle

 

UFOs Are Not What You Think: Dimensional Spacecraft, 12-Color Black Holes, and the 36,500 Reincarnation Cycle


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Have you ever wondered why UFOs always seem to fly sideways in every photo? What if I told you that the real UFOs — the ones that actually matter — move vertically, not horizontally? And what if black holes aren't black at all, but shine with 12 dazzling colors?

These are not ideas from a Hollywood movie. These come from a fascinating lecture by Huh Kyung-young, a Korean spiritual teacher who has been sharing mind-bending ideas about the universe, reincarnation, and dimensional travel for years. Whether you believe every word or not, some of these concepts will genuinely make you stop and think.

Let me break it down for you.



There Are Two Types of UFOs (And You've Only Seen One)

Here's something most people don't know. According to Huh Kyung-young's teachings, there are actually two completely different types of UFOs.

Type 1: Interstellar UFOs — These are the ones you see in photos and videos. They fly horizontally, moving from planet to planet or star to star. Think of them as cosmic airplanes. They travel between stars within our physical universe.

Type 2: Dimensional UFOs — These are the ones you have never seen. They move vertically, straight up, piercing through dimensions. They don't just travel through space — they travel through dimensions themselves. From the 1st dimension, to the 2nd, all the way to infinite dimensions. And they do it in zero seconds.

Yes, you read that right. Zero seconds.

The lecture explains that a dimensional UFO can cover a distance that light would need 12 billion years to cross — instantly. The speed is described as 3,300 times the speed of light. At that speed, time simply stops. The clock reads zero.

This actually connects to something Einstein discovered. His Special Theory of Relativity tells us that as you approach the speed of light, time slows down. Scientists have recently confirmed that if you exceed the speed of light, time essentially freezes. Huh Kyung-young has been teaching this concept long before these scientific announcements.


Black Holes Are NOT Black — They Shine With 12 Colors

Now here's something that really caught my attention.

For as long as I can remember, every science textbook, every documentary, and every space movie has shown black holes as terrifying dark voids that swallow everything. The name itself — black hole — tells us it's supposed to be dark.

But what if that's completely wrong?

According to this lecture, black holes are actually brilliant pillars of light that shine in 12 radiant colors. They are not destructive voids. They are cosmic highways — instant transportation lines that connect different points in the universe.

The lecture describes these colorful black hole lines as a kind of "cosmic highway terminal." When a dimensional UFO touches this line, it arrives at its destination in zero seconds. Touch it, and you're at Baekgung (the White Palace — described as a higher-dimensional paradise). Touch it again, and you're at any star in the universe.

Think about the Bermuda Triangle for a moment. Ships and planes have disappeared there for centuries, and nobody can fully explain why. The lecture offers a stunning explanation: there are black hole lines sitting in the ocean near Bermuda. When ships pass through them, they don't sink or crash — they are instantly transported 12 billion light-years away to Baekgung. The people on those ships didn't die. They arrived in paradise in the blink of an eye.

Whether you believe this literally or see it as a powerful metaphor, it completely reframes how we think about one of Earth's greatest mysteries.


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AI-generated image


AI-generated image


AI-generated image


"You might ask: If these black holes are so bright, why haven't we seen them?"


​"The answer lies in the blinding glare of our own sun. During the day, these 12-color pillars of light remain invisible to the naked eye, masked by the atmospheric scattering of Earth. But they are there—hidden in plain sight."

​"Think of the Bermuda Triangle. It is not a graveyard of sunken ships, but a location where these invisible black hole lines touch our ocean. Ships and planes don't vanish into thin air; they are instantly transported 12 billion light-years away to Baekgung through these colorful highways, invisible to us during the day."



The 36,500 Reincarnation Cycle: Your Past Life Was Yesterday

Here's where things get really personal.

Most people think of reincarnation as something that happens after you die — you live one life, then come back as someone (or something) else. But Huh Kyung-young teaches something radically different.

Every single day is a reincarnation.

When you go to sleep at night and wake up the next morning, yesterday was your past life. Today is your current life. Tomorrow is your next life. This is called "So-Yunhoe" (Small Reincarnation).

If you live 100 years, that's 365 days × 100 years = 36,500 reincarnations in one lifetime.

Think about that for a second. You don't get just one chance at life. You get 36,500 chances. Every single morning is a fresh start, a new life, a new opportunity.

And here's the profound part: what you did yesterday directly shapes who you are today.

  • Yesterday you helped someone? Today your face looks peaceful.
  • Yesterday you fought with someone? Today your face looks troubled.
  • Yesterday you saved money? Tomorrow you can withdraw it.
  • Yesterday you planted seeds of kindness? In your next life (tomorrow), you harvest the rewards.

This isn't just spiritual philosophy. It's actually practical life advice that anyone can apply.


The Great Reincarnation: When 36,500 Lives Become One Cycle

The Small Reincarnation (36,500 daily lives) is just the beginning. When you complete one full lifetime of 36,500 days, that entire lifetime becomes one single day in what's called the "Dae-Yunhoe" (Great Reincarnation).

So your entire 100-year life? That's just one "day" in the Great Cycle. Then you get another 100 years. And another. And another.

Over these Great Cycles, two types of people emerge:

Person A builds good karma day by day, life by life. They rise higher with each cycle. More blessings, more fortune, more spiritual growth.

Person B wastes their daily lives. They fall lower with each cycle. The lecture describes the downward spiral bluntly: drugs, alcohol, gambling, prison, and worse. Each cycle pulls them further down.

The gap between Person A and Person B eventually becomes impossible to close. One ends up in paradise. The other ends up in suffering. And it all started with how they used their 36,500 daily chances.

There's an old Buddhist saying mentioned in the lecture: "If you want to know your past life, look at what you have received in this life." Your current situation is the receipt for everything you've done before.


Earth Was Designed, Not Accidental

The lecture also challenges the Big Bang theory in an interesting way.

Consider this: Earth's gravity is exactly 980 dynes — perfectly calibrated for the human body. Our body temperature is 36.5°C, and Earth's surface temperature ranges from roughly -45°C to +45°C, making human life possible. If Earth were the size of the Sun, the gravity would crush us. If it were smaller, we'd float away.

The argument is simple: this level of precision doesn't happen by accident. Every star in the universe was placed in its position deliberately, like houses with fixed addresses. The Big Dipper looks like 7 stars, but it actually contains about 300 stars — we just can't see the smaller ones.

The lecture's position is that the universe wasn't born from an explosion. It was built, piece by piece, and each star was placed exactly where it needs to be.

You don't have to agree with this to find it thought-provoking. Even mainstream scientists marvel at how perfectly fine-tuned our universe seems to be for life. It's one of the biggest unsolved puzzles in physics.


The Spacecraft That Hovers Over Haneulgung Every Night

One of the most extraordinary claims in the lecture is about a UFO that appears over Haneulgung (the Sky Palace in South Korea) every single night. According to Huh Kyung-young, this is not a random sighting.

The craft is described as being the size of a major sports stadium — flat and round like a traditional Korean pot lid, not missile-shaped like we see in movies. It hovers and waits between 11:30 PM and 2:00 AM every night.

Nowhere else on Earth, the lecture says, does a UFO just stop and wait like this. It's always moving everywhere else. But at Haneulgung, it pauses. It waits.

Inside this craft, according to the description, is a universal command center where decisions about the entire cosmos are made. Which stars to maintain, which ones have reached the end of their lifespan, where to travel next — all managed from one enormous dimensional spacecraft.


My Personal Reflection

I'll be honest with you. When I first encountered these ideas, I didn't know what to think.

But the more I sat with them, the more I realized something uncomfortable: the knowledge we humans have is incredibly thin compared to the vastness of the universe. We act like we understand everything because we have smartphones and space telescopes. But the observable universe is 93 billion light-years across, and we've barely left our own moon.

What saddens me most is that we're so busy with daily life — paying bills, commuting, working, surviving — that we never stop to think about any of this. When was the last time you looked up at the night sky and genuinely wondered what's out there? When was the last time you questioned whether the "facts" you learned in school might be incomplete?

I think about the black holes we were taught to fear — dark, destructive, terrifying voids. But what if they're actually shining with 12 beautiful colors, serving as cosmic highways to places we can't imagine? What if the Bermuda Triangle isn't a death zone but a doorway?

We don't know. And that's okay.

What I do know is this: the possibility that other dimensions and other worlds exist gives me hope. It makes me want to live my current life more fully. If every day is truly a small reincarnation — a fresh chance — then I don't want to waste today. I want to plant good seeds now so that tomorrow's "life" is better than yesterday's.

Even if only 1% of these ideas turn out to be true, it would completely change everything we think we know about reality. And that possibility alone is worth paying attention to.


Key Takeaways

For the curious minds out there, here's a quick summary:

  1. Two types of UFOs exist — horizontal ones travel between stars; vertical ones travel between dimensions instantly.
  2. Black holes aren't black — they reportedly shine with 12 brilliant colors and serve as cosmic highways for instant travel.
  3. You reincarnate 36,500 times in one lifetime — every day is a new life, and what you do today shapes tomorrow.
  4. Small reincarnations build into Great Reincarnations — your daily choices compound over cosmic timescales.
  5. Earth's precision suggests design, not accident — gravity, temperature, and conditions are perfectly calibrated for human life.
  6. A dimensional UFO hovers over Haneulgung nightly — described as a stadium-sized cosmic command center.
  7. The Bermuda Triangle may be a black hole gateway — not a place of death, but a portal to another dimension.

What Do You Think?

I'd love to hear your thoughts. Do these ideas resonate with you? Have you ever felt like mainstream science is missing something big? Have you ever seen something in the sky you couldn't explain?

Drop a comment below. Let's explore the unknown together.


This post is based on lectures by Huh Kyung-young. Whether you approach these ideas with belief, curiosity, or skepticism, they offer a unique lens through which to reconsider what we think we know about the universe, life, and everything in between.

If you enjoyed this post, please share it and subscribe for more content exploring the mysteries of the universe that mainstream sources won't tell you about.


"p.s: The Purpose of Our Labor

Have you ever wondered why we must labor until our very last breath? Why does life feel like an endless cycle of struggle? Most see it as a burden of survival, but there is a hidden, cosmic truth behind your hard work.

​ According to the teachings of the Great Teacher, every single day you wake up is a Small Reincarnation (So-Yunhoe). In a 100-year life, you are given 36,500 chances to start over, to plant seeds of kindness, and to refine your soul. Your labor today is not just for a paycheck—it is the 'receipt' for your next life."

​"Beyond the exhaustion of the day, there are invisible highways of light—12-color black holes—waiting to lead the weary back to their true home, Baekgung. Even if you cannot see them through the blinding glare of the sun, they are there, guiding those who call upon the name of the One."

​"So, do not be discouraged by the weight of today. You are not just working to survive; you are preparing for a glorious return to the stars. Every drop of sweat is a step closer to the White Heaven."


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