SPACEWEATHER: The Arrival of Solar Wind

The Effects of the Sun on Earth

The first effects were seen, as predicted, on January 9, 2026, when the first shockwaves reached Earth. One after another, the Light Above is seen, Below.

SPACEWEATHER.COM NEWS: 01/11/2026

CME IMPACT SPARKS GEOMAGNETIC STORM: As predicted, a CME struck Earth on Jan. 10th, sparking a G2-class geomagnetic storm. Earth’s magnetic field is still reverberating from the impact. Minor G1-storms could continue through Jan. 12th.

SEE MORE: Realtime Aurora Photo Gallery

The Sun Today

Sunspot 4336 has arrived at the center of the Sun in position for a geoeffective strike aimed to Earth. We’ve yet to see the Light that’s on the way from the farside.

Daily Sun: 11 Jan 26
Sunspot 4336 has a ‘beta-gamma’ magnetic field that harbors energy for M-class solar flares. Credit: NASA/SDO

Coronal Holes: 11 Jan 26
Solar wind flowing from this coronal hole should reach Earth on Jan. 15. Credit: NASA/SDO | more data


Human Eyes in the Sky

WE’RE GOING TO MISS THE ISS: Soon, one of the most familiar sights in the night sky will be gone. NASA plans to deorbit the International Space Station in early 2031. This picture taken by Charline Giroud reminds us–we’re going to miss it.

Giroud caught the split-second transit on Jan. 3rd. It shows the station’s winged silhouette passing over Tycho Crater on the Moon. “I used the ISS Transit Finder– a tool that predicts where these brief alignments are visible,” she says.

The station is on the chopping block because it’s old and expensive. The ISS was designed for a service life of about 15 years. By the end of this decade it will be more than 30 years old. Key systems are experiencing metal fatigue, micrometeoroid damage, and air leaks, pushing the cost of operations to over $3 billion per year. NASA wants to redirect those resources toward the Moon and eventually Mars. Developed by SpaceX, the U.S. Deorbit Vehicle will guide the ISS into the South Pacific Ocean after operations cease at the end of 2030.

Giroud’s image compresses eras into an instant. Tycho Crater is 108 million years old, its bright rays frozen in lunar dust. The ISS, by contrast, is a creation of the 1990s, assembled piece by piece in low Earth orbit and shared by nations that rarely agree on much else.

The clock is ticking.


Mayan Calendar Time and Synchronicity

It’s Time to see One thing upon which we agree, the Beauty of the Sun and its Effects on Earth. We are united in our Love of all the stars in heaven. On earth as it is in heaven, the beauty is to great for us NOT to share. No one would believe it, without seeing what we’ve seen, and without knowing the reason why.

We could see the “living proof” that we are united by the effects of the Creator’s Beauty and Love.

May we count our blessings for those who share, above and below. God promises there will always be a way. The Big Bear Solar Observatory, where Jackie and Shadow live, houses a telescope that can see more clearly below, than all the satellites above.

Water is the Element through which the Spirit “bestirs the blood to speak.”


THE TRECENA OF STAR LAMAT: THE HIGHEST ASCENSION OF THE TZOLK’IN ROUND

Visit the 13-Day Trecena Guide Page for the “Tzolk’in Field Guide: A Daily Practice for Personal Discernment.” My gift for the Tzolk’in round offers an overview for each 13-day trecena and the aspects of each day of the Tzolk’in round. The page also offers a link to resources for your own practice of counting the days to conceive your own discernment of the Meaning of Time.

4TH SEASON: 1 Wisdom/CIB begins the 4th Season of the Tzolk’in that ends in the final Ascension of 1 Star/LAMAT, the Light of the Scion on 13 Sun/AHAU – VOLUME 2: Tzolk’in Seasons 3 and 4 (PUBLISHED SEPTEMBER 20, 2020)

2 Offering/MULUC (Cherokee, The River/YUN’WI GUNNAHI’TA)  – Day 2 of 13 of the 1 Star/LAMAT trecena

Descriptions by Ian Xel Lungold (12 Sun/AHAU), wisdom and Tzolk’in calculator preserved on MayanMajix.com

Galactic Tone 2: Mysterious as the question ‘to be or not to be?” Two is the recognition of the separation of self from all else and the desire to be rejoined. Walking a balance while making choices of all kinds, light/dark, male/female, good/bad, Yin/Yang, is the energy of this number. Experiencing the differences between one and another is the use and purpose of this number.

Offering/MULUC: Also known as the sign of water. Ceremonially, Maya use water as an offering in baptisms and purifications. These ceremonies are done to bring about a collective strength, adaptability and harmony. In sincere appreciation, Offering people gladly give more than they ask for themselves. Offering persons are dynamic communicators with great intelligence making them excellent employers. Like a shaken vessel of water, Offering people regain equilibrium quickly. Also like a body of water, there may be deep undercurrents of emotion and hidden dangers. Others perceive these as hidden agendas in offering people and so extend them little trust and may even slap blame on them.

A GOOD DAY TO: Offer appreciation for all of Creation.

Cherokee, The River/YUN’WI GUNNAHI’TA:  The River is symbolized by The Milky Way, the Gihli’Utsun’stanun’yi “Where the Dog Ran” to gather the souls for Heaven.  The River is the minion for Grandfather Moon.  Long Man is the personification of the River stretching from the mountains to the lowlands, speaking to those who can understand.  People of this sign find “sermons in the stones” and good in everything.  These souls march to a different drummer, driven by inner volcanic forces.  The Moon controls our fluid cycle, to clear and understand emotional issues.  When you take this step to clear the emotional body, then you are ready for transformational energies at the next level.  As humans, our actions are ruled by our emotions, the key is to understand the connection and honor the emotions.

[Text in italics was the primary source of inspiration for my journal. These are the sources that started my journey and they are the reference for interpretation each day. By providing the original text, I hope to offer a way to see what inspired my thoughts and by including all the aspects – allow for something more to inspire you. Mayan descriptions are those written by Ian Lungold. Cherokee descriptions came from multiple sources. Links to sources and other resources of study are offered on the Daykeeper Resources Page. ~Debra]

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