Let The Bullets Pass Me By - Alternative View

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Let The Bullets Pass Me By - Alternative View
Let The Bullets Pass Me By - Alternative View

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Video: Let The Bullets Pass Me By - Alternative View
Video: Let The Bullets Fly 讓子彈飛 2024, May
Anonim

The fact that ancient characters, Russian heroes and American Indians were inaccessible to the enemy can be considered myths. But was invulnerability just an eternal dream, like immortality, or is there a reason for it?

Wooden Foot Scrapbook

History describes hundreds of cases when, among a huge number of soldiers, a few always left the battle without a single scratch.

Let's start with what seems funny at first.

The 19th century Indian chronicler Wooden Leg left evidence of the untouchability of some leaders: “In battle … he rode slowly on horseback in front of a line of whites. The soldiers fired at him, but the bullets either flew past or bounced off. He was wearing a sacred headdress that possessed magical powers …"

The same author describes the Mad Mule Cheyenne shaman: “Four Cheyenne came up to him, and each shot him. He stood with his back against a tree. After the fourth shot, the shaman bent down, took off his moccasins and poured four bullets out of them …"

One might not believe it right away, but the specific picture is described - "poured out of moccasins" …

Promotional video:

The Black Elk, the holy prophet of the Sioux tribe, was famous for its superhuman properties. He once led his battle group, armed only with bows. She emerged from the continuous shelling unharmed.

The Sioux tribe was famous for its warriors with magical powers. They were called "wakans" - mysterious. They wore only loincloths, but the body was brightly painted with special patterns. Lined up in a chain, the wakans went to the enemy, who was shooting at point-blank range. But the enemy's arrows bent and broke, and the bullets fell to the ground flattened.

Who keeps them?

Any skeptic will notice that the biographers of many great military leaders emphasize their irresistibility in battle.

Start with Suvorov. That's who was not a hero - contemporaries describe him as a frail, short man. (In fairness, we note that the weapon in his time was so imperfect that it was almost impossible to get into a person from it as a moving target.)

Having once come under a hail-fire, Suvorov left the battle safe and sound. He described his terrible state in those minutes as follows: "I did not hear any sounds … as if he had died in the afterlife."

After this incident, the commander began to wear a cupronickel icon on his chest. Surprisingly: if the shots overtook him, then they fell just on the small icon, and the cupronickel plate "became impersonal from the impact of bullets." Therefore, Suvorov believed that "something protects him from the outside."

Legend or not, but the lucky one was Napoleon, who could defiantly ride a horse literally in front of enemy fire. He had more than twenty wounds, but it was not in battle that he ended his life.

Where Napoleon is, there is Kutuzov. Wounded twice in the head in his youth, he partially lost sight in his left eye (the bullet went right through "between the eye and the temple").

But subsequently the bullets, hundreds of bullets, strangely, no longer touched him. And Mikhail Illarionovich himself believed that he was born in a shirt.

Luck of blind kittens?

Did the amulet, crosses, icons that were hung on their chests by grandmothers and village mothers help our soldiers during the Patriotic War? After all, the vast majority of Soviet soldiers were atheists.

So why did the bullet find some at once, while others survived under the merciless fire?

One of the most convincing evidence of this phenomenon belongs to the designer of space technology Dmitry Kozlov, who, while participating in battles in Myasnoy Bor, or Death Valley (Novgorod Region), where tens of thousands of Soviet, German and Spanish soldiers perished in a small area, was not the only one he was wounded and was only "shaking out bullets and shrapnel from a riddled shirt and shredded boots" (remember here Indian moccasins).

In folk legends, an invisible force protected Zhukov and Budyonny, Voroshilov and Rokossovsky from death. But here is what Budyonny himself said: “I don’t believe in priest’s tales, but I believe that the entire term allotted to me is safe and sound only thanks to the patronage and protection of something or someone, before whom or what we are blind helpless kittens.

From experience, the military know: the safest place during a battle is next to the commander; the most dangerous thing is two meters away.

In an impenetrable bag

Quite widely known is the story that happened during the capture of the German city of Breslau in 1945. The battles were extremely fierce.

To correct the shelling, it was necessary to take the church, which stood in the middle of a neat flat area. Under the cover of a smokescreen, the goal was achieved, and a wire was pulled to the church.

Unfortunately, he was immediately killed, and the signalman was beveled by an enemy bullet. It was the turn of his partner Antonov, who understood that death was inevitable.

He crawled, and the stones around him knocked out an endless uneven shot - the aimed fire did not subside all 50 meters, which Antonov still managed to crawl to the church. That was incredible! With skillful hands, he connected the wire, but, finally finding himself behind the armor-piercing walls of the church, instantly collapsed into a swoon from overstrain.

All the servicemen who came under such shelling and were not injured testify (see above the impression of A. V. Suvorov): in these terrible moments they found themselves as if in an isolated space, in some kind of impenetrable bag for bullets.

Subdue space and time

However, everything might have remained beyond human understanding if it had not been for the discovery of the impermanence of the speed of light.

Several years ago, a hypothesis was born that one and a half billion years ago the speed of light was different - slower than today. This suggested that time in general can be unstable in its course. And - which is especially important for us - it may sometimes come into resonance with the energy radiation of the human brain. Let's say, especially strong, strong-willed, emotionally passionate people, steadily reaching the intended goal. Such as if crushing time under themselves, subjecting it to their unconscious orders.

The largest, most powerful emission of this radiation, if you like, a person's special energy, occurs at the most critical moments of his life.

Participants of the Great Patriotic War have repeatedly recalled how the irresistible desire, devoid of any selfishness, to save a wounded comrade made bullets whistle nearby! Flying a hair's breadth from the target, they still did not touch it.

The nurses often talked about this, heroically bearing the soldiers half-dead from wounds.

Of course, it is impossible to change the trajectory of a bullet: only in anecdotes is it said that if the cannon, the projectile of which flies in a parabola, is put on its side, it can shoot around the corner. And ballistics only laugh when you ask them about the effect of a strong human aura on the trajectory of a projectile.

However, miracle or not miracle - but it should be admitted that the complex organism of the assembled, highly heroic person somehow self-organizes for protection.

Protector Aura

Our body is more complex than the visible. It has long been proven that, in addition to the bodily shell, a person also has etheric and astral (some researchers count up to seven "bodies"). This aura invisible to the ordinary eye is called a biofield.

The discoverers of the biofield - a multitude of light rays emanating from human skin - were Semyon and Valentina Kirlian from Krasnodar. Discovered by them in 1939 (and documented thousands of times by photographing in high-frequency discharge), it became world heritage only 30 years later! Until then, it was under the yoke of scientific prejudices and a vulgar materialistic approach to objective phenomena.

It was the Kirlians who established that powerful outbursts of emotions, energy, impulses, passionate, even unconscious desire, similar to excitement, cause changes in the color of the aura and its intensity.

That is, it can be assumed that consciousness or superconsciousness (desire not realized by a person) is capable of changing the trajectory of a bullet.

Indeed: after all, it flies in a straight line only in relation to itself, and if the space around a person (or, let's say, gravitational mass) is somehow curved, it goes around him.

And if a person is consciously or unconsciously capable of controlling his field, he may well become invulnerable.

So much for the tales of the Wooden Leg!