Page 137 - The Mirror of My Soul. Vol. 1
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Nicolai Levashov. The Mirror of My Soul. Vol. 1. Born in the USSR

           all that was necessary. And I had neither time nor special necessity. I spent my money

           mainly on keeping my new family until we divorced.


                15. Study is light

                Gradually I began to heal patients from Moscow. People visited me in Vidnoe to
           get both treatment and knowledge. I gladly shared my understanding of the essence of
           existent processes with people. At the insistence of some of them I began to teach. One
           of  my  new  students  was  Vladislaw  Dolgushin,  the  chief  medical  officer  at  one  of
           Moscow’s maternity hospitals. He was interested in extrasensory phenomena and was
           acquainted with Mzia Solomonia, who did not have the least desire to teach him, or
           anyone  else,  anything;  because  she  considered  it  to  be  impossible.  That  is  why  he
           appealed to me with such a request. After my testing him, I determined that he was
           genetically pretty inert, and to modify his brain using my method would require time.

                He noticed positive signs pretty quickly, which inspired him greatly. After that he

           introduced me to Vadim Belozerov, a TV reporter. We met and pretty soon had the idea
           of making a one-hour documentary. At the meeting there was also Vladimir Dmitrievich
           Sergeev, a deputy of the editor-in-chief of the documentary films department of Soviet
           Television. From that moment on he visited me almost every day independent of where
           I lived, be it in Vidnoe, in one of my friend’s apartment in Novo-Gireevo or in my aunt’s
           apartment in Butovo, etc. In the morning he was usually at work and by two o’clock he
           joined me and very often he left late at night

                Vladimir  Sergeev  was  sincerely  interested  in  my  work  and  my  concepts.  I
           understood that an official of such rank did not do it out of idle curiosity. But also I
           perfectly understood that he or some other person would be around me anyway. I liked
           him and thought that if someone had to be near me all the same, I would rather have him.

                He treated me quite well in his own way.  At least, I saw no falseness in him,
           although, I could assume that he was an excellent actor or I was somewhat blind and saw
           no game. Vladimir Sergeev was one of the creators of several famous popular science

           broadcasts. He received the Oscar as the director of the Soviet-American film “Peter the
           Great”. One way or another, he was a very sociable and intelligent man. He had been
           around me for more than two years and I could pass, through him, any information which
           I considered necessary, to certain establishments. Sometimes, Vladimir spilled the beans
           involuntarily, but about that—later; in the meantime I’ve just met him...

                Sometimes I received groups of people. Usually, I had no idea who those people
           were. They gave their names and that was all. That is why, from time to time there were
           amusing situations. One day I began my talk with the statement that modern science had
           reached a deadlock and had no chance of finding the way out if it continued to adhere to
           old concepts. As an example I gave the information that modern medicine and biology
           were unable to explain the nature of the human embryo’s development, and wanted to
           go on further, unfolding the subject, when suddenly a middle-aged man, whose name I
           unfortunately did not memorize, asked me a question:

                — Young man, what is your education!?
                When  I  answered  him  that  I  had  graduated  from  Kharkov  University,  the
           department of theoretical physics in the radio physics faculty, he said:



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