Page 106 - The Mirror of My Soul. Vol. 1
P. 106

Nicolai Levashov. The Mirror of My Soul. Vol. 1. Born in the USSR

           radiation. The thermal radiation of a candle, a bulb or a central heating radiator, etc. also

           affects all those zones of Zaharin-Ged, but it renders no healing influence on a patient.

                 Infra-red radiation occupies a certain range of electromagnetic vibrations, and the
           intensity of the radiation can vary from very small to very powerful, but radiation of the
           same intensity and frequency from different sources must render the identical influence
           on the Zaharin-Ged zones. This is not observed, which must mean that the conclusion

           given in the newspaper is fallacious.
                Therefore I was curious, whether this information was intentional misinformation
           of  the  populace  or  the  absolute  blindness  and  ignorance  of  the  “scientists”.  It  was
           important for me to find out on my own, what it actually was — the first or the second!

                It turned out that just before that New Year’s Eve I was sent to Moscow to deliver
           some  materials  to  the  main  office  of  our  institute.  I  arrived  in  Moscow  on  Friday
           morning, December the 25th, quickly found the office, gave in the reports from the
           Kharkov branch and began to look for the Institute of Radio physics and Electronics of
           the AS of the USSR. There I succeeded in meeting academician Guliaev, who supervised
           a laboratory which carried out the study of individuals with extrasensory abilities. For
           obvious reasons the address of this laboratory was not specified in the article.

                                                         * * *
                I introduced myself as a young radio-physicist who studied extrasensory influence
           and said that I would like to visit the laboratory, which studied these phenomena, and to
           consult  with  the  scientists  there.  To  avoid questions,  I  decided  not to  specify  that I
           studied  the  extrasensory  influence  on  my  own.  Academician  Guliaev  gave  me  the
           address of this laboratory and I found out that it would be open on Saturday morning
           because they were expecting a delegation.

                Next morning I barely succeeded in finding the address of the laboratory. It was not
           far  from  the  subway,  in  one  of  the  countless  Moscow  side-streets.  There  was  no
           signboard to show that there was a scientific laboratory there. This fact perplexed me a

           little, but, nevertheless, I pushed the bell-button. To my joy the man, who opened the
           door, confirmed that I was not mistaken. I said that academician Guliaev gave me this
           address and I would like to meet an employee of the laboratory. I was guided to the
           office of Professor Godik, the head of the laboratory.

                I told him the same thing—that I was also studying extrasensory influence and I
           would like to get, if it was possible, some information about what they did and what
           conclusions they came to. If I had said that I studied and conducted my own experiments
           upon myself, they would possibly have considered me to be mentally sick. I needed to
           get an objective picture of the phenomena, in which I was interested, and not the reaction
           they may have to a person “off his head”.

                Professor Godik told me that one of their experiments was as follows—they placed
           a glass screen between Djuna and a patient. In this case no Djuna’s influence on a patient
           was  observed.  Hence,  they  drew  the  conclusion  that  the  nature  of  the  extrasensory
           individual’s influence was thermal, because the glass prevented it from passing to the

           patient.  When  I  revealed  to  him  that  in  my  experiments  an  extrasensory  individual
           affected a patient at a distance of thousands of kilometers and also through walls, etc.,




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