3I/ATLAS

The Visitor Called 3I/ATLAS

Avada-TextAndImage__Image
Have you been watching the stories about the visitor called 3I/ATLAS? On paper it’s a comet - an interstellar object passing through our solar system. But what if it’s not just a chunk of ice and rock doing what physics predicts? What if there’s more to this arrival than meets the telescope?

Let’s Start With The Facts

The sky-watchers are reporting: 3I/ATLAS was first noticed in mid-2025 and, by late September, astronomers watched it moving inward between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars, on a fast track that points to its origin beyond our system. It’s expected to make its closest approach to the Sun around October 29, 2025, and will be at safe distances from Earth throughout the encounter. So there is nothing to fear.

Next, Let's Explore the Anomalies of 3I/ATLAS

However, telescopes have seen a brightening coma and an unusually vivid green tint to its glow, and preliminary size estimates place its core on the scale of kilometers, making it the largest and fastest reported on record. The Guardian

There are other strange little details that fuel speculation. Some observers report 3I/ATLAS has bursts of activity and changes in brightness that don’t fit typical comet-like behavior. What if those patterns are not only physical outgassing but modulated transmissions, a sequence of light codes designed to interact with our planetary system? What might a message encoded in shifting color and intensity be communicating? 

Avada-TextAndImage__Image
This reminds me of the 1997 movie Contact, starring Jodie Foster, where radio signals were communicating from a distant star system. What if the oddities we’re seeing (the green radiance, the unusually strong brightness, the rapid velocity, its larger than normal size, the way its coma seems to shift in color and intensity) are not accidental? What if some of those behaviors of 3I/ATLAS are a kind of language; light and motion used as a signal?

Blending Scientific Curiosity With Spiritual and Philosophical Pondering

In that context, imagine 3I/ATLAS less as a random comet and more like a guided emissary carrying information encoded in light and structure. The green hue could be read symbolically (it’s the color of the heart, of healing) but it could also be a real, measurable spectral signature. Either reading, poetic or scientific, invites curiosity about its purpose and pattern. ScienceAlert

So why would an interstellar visitor come now? The timing is provocative. The arrival coincides with a period when disclosure conversations, whistleblower testimonies, and unusual governmental attention to aerial phenomena are surfacing publicly. A House Oversight hearing in early September featured Rep. Eric Burlison, a Republican from Missouri, showing video of a U.S. missile striking an orb that appeared to survive the strike and immediately recover; read more here. ABC News

What if that timing is not coincidence but synchronicity, a celestial event arriving during a global moment of political and cultural focus? Perhaps this dramatic visitor nudges societies to expand their frame of reference, and to confront the question, Are we alone?

So what should we do with this moment? We can watch 3I/ATLAS with curiosity and discernment. We can pay attention to the science as it arrives (new images, spectra, and orbital refinements), and we can also notice what the sky activity does inside us: does it open a question, a remembering, a readiness? Does it shift our interest toward a higher level of consciousness?

If this visitor is simply a massive interstellar comet, then it’s still an extraordinary gift - a sample of other worlds and a reminder that cosmic space is dynamic and alive. And if it is something more, perhaps a guided emissary craft cloaked to blend in with the familiar? Then the real gift may not be the object but its invitation: to wake up, to come together, and to choose how we respond to what we don’t yet understand.

Either way, look up and wonder. The sky is telling a story right now.

In harmony,
~Delphine

Back to blog

Leave a comment