Dead On Tail Swirl Overlap
the Zetas Explain
 As we have explained, the dozens of moons trailing Planet X do a dance among themselves, creating 
several swirls. These swirls, like twirling partners on a dance floor, stay apart from each other, just as the 
moons in a swirl stay apart from each other while perpetually on the move. While Planet X is in the main 
dead-on in a path toward the Sun, it veres in this dead-on path slightly on occasion as it was doing during 
the Dec 27th and 28th imaging sessions. This causes the moon swirls to be visible from the side or above 
or below Planet X, depending upon the direction of motion. But the now visible moon swirls will often 
overlap, when seen from a dead-on view, such that they are more dense than when seen individually in a dead-on view, or when seen 
stretched out in a side-ways motion. As we have explained, the dozens of moons trailing Planet X do a dance among themselves, creating 
several swirls. These swirls, like twirling partners on a dance floor, stay apart from each other, just as the 
moons in a swirl stay apart from each other while perpetually on the move. While Planet X is in the main 
dead-on in a path toward the Sun, it veres in this dead-on path slightly on occasion as it was doing during 
the Dec 27th and 28th imaging sessions. This causes the moon swirls to be visible from the side or above 
or below Planet X, depending upon the direction of motion. But the now visible moon swirls will often 
overlap, when seen from a dead-on view, such that they are more dense than when seen individually in a dead-on view, or when seen 
stretched out in a side-ways motion.
- ZetaTalk
