This section is from the book "The Pyramid: How To Build It, How To Use It", by Les Brown. Also available from Amazon: The Pyramid.
We must go back to the time when a much higher intelligence than ours had a pyramid on the drawing board. The pyramid was not built for its looks, or by accident or coincidence, and it did not simply start to perform to the Atlantians' amazement. Instead, it was built because they knew beforehand that it would do all of that for which they planned it. In my research of the pyramid I have gone beyond where your wildest dreams might take you; but for the present will stick to basics, taking you step by step, showing you what the pyramid does and why and how it works, so that you will be able to follow up my studies in a safe and sensible progression. The word safe may sound a little ominous, and well it should because there are dangers in using the pyramid blindly without knowledge of its functions and its great potential.
Having set the stage, let's get to the pyramid itself. The pyramid is built with straight lines of specific length and orientation. This is how we arrive at the line proportions. (See Fig. 1.) Imagine cutting the world in half at the equator (try this with an orange), taking the top half and cutting it into four quarters or quadrants, then taking one of these quarters and taking the peel off. Flatten out the peel and you will have a triangle with curved sides; trim the curve off without taking anything off the length and you will end up with one face side of a perfect pyramid.
(NOTE: If you constructed each triangle as the cone-shape without squaring the bottom, energy yield as a direct-current battery would become dangerous to life unless it was tapped off and used. --Ed.)
Having squared each triangle, put all four triangular shape pieces of peel together and you have transformed the northern hemisphere into a pyramid. The bottom corners of the base fit perfectly into the circle of the equator, and the sides lead up to its North Pole.
Using these proportions, any pyramid will function in unison with the natural elements that we enjoy, the natural elements that keep us alive and the world in balance. Change this ratio of measurement and you will drop below par in performance. The further you deviate from this formula the less performance you will get. Of course, we cannot build a pyramid as large as the northern hemisphere, but whatever size is built, if built in correct ration to the Great Pyramid of Cheops, it will give 100 percent performance.
I will not go into all the details of the Great cheops, but will mention a few, just to illustrate that this ratio was strictly adhered to, plus a few more items which indicate that it is not just a beautiful structure, but was planned for a purpose. Cheops covers approximately 13.1 acres and is square at the base, as we shall see it must be. It has been measured throughout the centuries by many brilliant men, using cubits, metrics and inches, and after years of controversy as to whose measurements were right, the consensus of opinion accepted inches as being nearest to the correct measurement. The distance around the base of Cheops is 36,524.24 inches, which coincides remarkably with the 365.24 days of our lunar year. If we add together the diagonals of the Great Pyramid's base, we find the sum to be 25,827 inches, a figure which also represents the number of years in the precession of the equinox.
The pyramid has five points and four sides plus a base. The line extending from the point sphere it would touch the Equator up to the North Pole (base side corner to peak), leans in at 51 degrees, 51 minutes, 14 seconds. Since this book was intended to simplify matters so that you can conduct pyramid studies with ease, here is a simple way to figure out a perfectly proportioned pyramid of any size (See Figure 2.) Predetermine the length of one side of your base (A). Now on paper, draw a square to your base, then divide it into four quarters. Now, draw a diagonal (B) down one of the small squares and measure it. Mark that measurement from the base up the center line (C). This will be the length of the apothem, that is, the length of the center line down one of the sloping sides of the pyramid. Finish off the triangle by drawing two lines (D) and (E), each running from the top of the mark you have made on the center line (C) down to a bottom corner of your base. By measuring these lines you now have the length of the side edges of your pyramid, and you already know the base measurement.
When you look at the triangle you have just drawn, it may look too tall, but don't forget that it has to lean in to join with the other three sides. When all four sides are put together you will have a pyramid the right height and leaning in at 51 degrees, 51 minutes, 14 seconds.
This method can be used for any size pyramid, whether it is two inches along its base or 46'1-1/4". There are other methods of constructing a perfect pyramid, but this is the easiest. Let's assume that you have not built your pyramid, and we'll talk about the energy. I personally believe that the answer to the puzzle of the pyramid's energy is right under our noses, but that scientists are looking beyond the obvious.
Until recently, comparatively speaking, it was assumed that the historically ancient Egyptians built the pyramids at the orders of their kings as mausoleums for the latter. This theory has been proven false by the fact that, so far as I know, no traces of any mummified human remains have actually been reported as having been found in any pyramid. It is highly questionable too whether primitive men, using bronze picks, wooden rollers and ropes, could possibly have erected these gargantuan edifices which modern civil engineers have declared would be almost impossible to construct even with the most advanced technical methods of today. Why then should the extraterrestrial beings have decided upon such a task, and how did they accomplish it?
As to the how, ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics depict many devices which are recognizable as types of technological equipment in use today. Electric generators, electric bulbs, etc. However, there are others, obviously tools, for which no counterpart exists today and about which we can only conjecture. Possibly, even probably, they were devices which were used for such tasks as cutting, transporting and lifting the gigantic blocks of stone with which the pyramids were built. These blocks range from two to 70 tons in weight. The work forces, the laborers, were probably the aboriginal inhabitants the extraterrestrial beings met on earth, educated in the use of the building implements by the superbeings who were the designers of the pyramids (10,500 years ago--Ed.).
As to the why, it is certain that there were many reasons behind the building of these unique edifices: landmarks, aerial beacons, trig points for cartographers, storage structures or temples, but more than anything else, for power of one sort or another. Each day gives birth to some new conception of the intended use of the pyramids.
 
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