Where Do Monsters Come From - Alternative View

Where Do Monsters Come From - Alternative View
Where Do Monsters Come From - Alternative View

Video: Where Do Monsters Come From - Alternative View

Video: Where Do Monsters Come From - Alternative View
Video: Where do Monsters come from? 2024, May
Anonim

The notorious Kevin Roberts from Idaho (a man with a "dark past" who is not afraid of reputational losses) easily admits alternative versions in many scientific fields: history, anthropology, zoology … This researcher has long been an outcast even among cryptozoologists - his bold "assumptions" are so implausible … It is known that "the sleep of the mind gives rise to monsters." Kevin finds some literal meaning in this.

Every year it is reported about encounters with creatures unknown, or even so fabulous that the "greeters" are often suspected of deception or are considered victims of hallucinations. Most of these meetings are characterized by the absence of pictures, or the pictures look extremely doubtful. The "feeling of sleep" is also characteristic of eyewitnesses. It would seem that if a person sees something terrible and even implausible, then he should have slightly different sensations, although the psychologist will say that sleep is also a form of protection. Be that as it may, it is obvious that when meeting a monster sometimes drowsiness sets in.

Roberts' associates make conclusions that go even beyond the framework of cryptozoology … What if there are life forms on earth, the reproduction of which depends on certain factors, so to speak, of the "subtle plan": perhaps human consciousness is a kind of nutrient medium for such creatures. Scrolling over and over again in his head what he saw and struck, a person, under the constant influence of this impressive creature, willy-nilly creates a thought-form, which, as you know, can find material embodiment.

Alexandra David-Neil wrote about the possibility of such an embodiment. She lived one hundred and one years (1868-1969), and such an amazing life. She was born in Paris. She studied at the Sorbonne and, in addition, studied music, sang at the opera. Traveled in India, Burma, Japan. She was awarded the gold medal of the Paris Holographic Society. She has written several books, for example, "The Magic and Secrets of Tibet." Received the title of "Knight of the Order of the Legion of Honor" in France. In Tibet, where she spent fourteen years, she received the title of Lama, which is incredible for a European woman.

Having studied the practice of Tibetan monks, she managed, as she writes, to create by an effort of will and thought a tulpa, a creature that gradually acquired even character traits … In the end, she was afraid that the tulpa was getting out of control and decided to "disperse" the creature. This was done with great difficulty. The thought-form turned out to be stable.

Is it any wonder that human ability to materialize thought forms, perhaps, uses "something from the outside", reproduced through the human consciousness, and the resulting creature can be both stable and ephemeral enough, ready to incarnate if the habitat turns out to be unsuitable for material states.

Researchers Janet and Colin Board compiled a special review. The most strange is the abundance of lake monsters on the planet. There are more than three hundred lake monsters in Africa, Australia, Russia and America. Irish Lakes (especially in Galway). "Compacted" by monsters and about twenty Scottish lakes, not counting Loch Ness.

Here fishermen in August 1969 on Lake Loch Morar could not part with the monster. A humpbacked creature about twenty-five feet (7.5 m) in length attacked the boat. One of the fishermen, Duncan McDonnell, broke an oar while trying to drive off the monster. Another fisherman, Bill Simpson, fired a gun, after which this strange creature slowly went to a depth of more than three hundred meters in Loch Morar. About thirty testimonies have been collected about such meetings in this lake over the past hundred years.

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Professor F. W. Holiday, examining reports of Irish water monsters, heard such "colorful" testimony. Mary O'Kelly, a botanist, spoke of a creature she saw in Loch Fudds in 1954 while collecting herbarium from a lake. According to her, the head rose above the water, like "on a thick, living stem." With such a bud, as if ready to bloom, this creature remained for a long time in her nightmares.

According to the adherents of the hypothesis Kevin Roberts, the psychic energy of impressionable botany could well create a new creature. Perhaps for a monster, this is a kind of "budding" when the secret forces of human consciousness are used. While Mary tossed about in her sleep, somewhere in the lake, a new creature, hitherto unseen by anyone, was gradually taking on material embodiment.

No less "nightmarish" impressions were shared by a certain Gabriella Bock, who even managed to photograph (not too successfully), "her" monster from Falmouth Bay. Like Nesi, it already had a proper name - Morgor. The woman was fortunate enough to see "old Morgor" on the shore. "He was crawling towards the water, his terrible humps twitching." Doesn't it sound like someone's nightmare?

The mystery of the existence of such creatures is compounded by the obvious lack of food in the lakes where they live or where they have been seen. Kevin Roberts speaks about this with his characteristic directness: “Any sensible person is clear that the flesh of a huge creature in a small lake can only be temporary. Being originally ethereal, this creature, having acquired a material state with the help of the shocked fantasy of some onlooker and having devoured all the fish, returns to its usual ethereal state. Searching for it with radars is useless."

There are many known encounters with giant monster birds, and even "bird-men" - winged creatures with some human features. For example, the Jersey Devil (a flying creature with a long, thin tail) was seen in New Jersey throughout 1909. And the "Mole Man" (with red glowing eyes) met in West Virginia in 1966. It is characteristic that, judging by the descriptions, they are not alike, that is, they are probably from different nightmares.

But even more meetings than with bird-like people were recorded, as you know, with ape-like people. They are called differently. In the mountains of Tibet and Nepal-Yeti; in the western United States - bigfoot or sasquatch; in Scotland (they have few lake monsters) - in the Cairngorm mountains there is Ben McDhy (a big gray man). Less often mentioned is Australia, where, however, more than three thousand meetings were recorded with the "Bigfoot" (Yovi). Such a variety of huge humanoid creatures around the world, which, nevertheless, differ significantly, albeit in details, from each other, can be explained by their “unconventional appearance” into the world. A “tulpa” created by human consciousness may well have “details” characteristic of the fantasy of a particular person.

Probably, it is the materialization of the "ethereal essence" that can be traced from the entries in the logbook of the Spanish ship "Catalonia", following in 1829 to the shores of America.

Sailor Sancho Monto said he saw a mermaid. Probably, this sailor turned out to be more ready than others to perceive "subtle entities", since none of the comrades noticed anything at first. But Sancho claimed that from day to day he saw a woman with a fish tail in the sea, moreover, he saw her more and more clearly. A week later, the other sailors began to notice her. An entry appeared in the journal, from which it followed that, in the end, and the captain recognized the reality of a woman with a fish tail. According to the records, the mermaid accompanied the ship to the very shore.

From the point of view of Kevin Roberts, it can be considered that a certain "ethereal entity", wishing to incarnate, demonstrated itself to the impressionable Sancho Monto …