Page 223 - The Mirror of My Soul. Vol. 1
P. 223

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

                Most likely the following happened. The column was waiting for my appearance.

           They probably were informed that I had already left the school and was moving on the
           route, but I man-aged to cover the distance quicker than they had expected, and they did
           not have time to give the order to move to the whole column. And only those, who were
           ordered to execute the accident, were forced to hurry up and jerk out of the column. But
           this manoeuvre did not rescue the situation. I succeeded in blocking the actions of the
           Ural’s driver; otherwise, you can imagine what would have happened, if this Ural had
           run into my car travelling at such a high speed.

                The second failure also did not calm them. In April there was the third attempt, yet
           more sophisticated. After that there was a lull at the “front” for some time. Probably the
           other “side” was thinking how, and with what, they could deal with me. Meanwhile my
           life went on...

                Vladimir Dmitrievich Sergeev introduced me to Victoria Mikhaylovna Zoob, who

           then was a director of one of the Russian TV channels. We conversed and she liked what
           she  heard.  As  a  result  of  our  conversations  she  had  an  idea  of  making  a  series  of
           broadcasts called “A portrait on the background of the Universe”. There were four thirty-
           minute broadcasts. The first one, which was just the interview with me, was filmed in
           the grounds of the Ostankino TV centre.

                When it concerned common concepts and views, a “talking head” was more or less
           accept-able, but when it came to concrete concepts and phenomena, I asked Victoria
           Mikhaylovna  to  add  to  our  “talking  heads”  some  topics  which  would  illustrate  the
           subject of the conversation. Next broadcasts began to be filled with more explanatory
           materials, when the audience could see on the screen what I was talking about. For
           example,  when  I  explained  cell  division  and  the  phenomenon  of  the  complete
           disappearance of the old cell and appearance of a new one with a time delay, Victoria
           Mikhaylovna succeeded in finding a fragment of the record of the cell division process

           observed through the tunnel of a microscope. When I watched this broadcast, I was very
           impressed!
                In  another  broadcast  we  used  an  episode  which  was  filmed  especially  for  this
           purpose.  It  was  my  experiment,  when  I  brought  a  person  into  a  state  of  changed
           consciousness. At the same time the encephalogram of his brain was taken. Being in this
           state, the person thought, answered questions, etc., while, according to the readings of
           the device, he should have been clinically dead or comatose! I enjoyed the process of
           working on broadcasts. It was very interesting, because Victoria Mikhaylovna did not,
           as the saying goes, “get me by the throat”. We discussed topics together; there was a
           good creative atmosphere. As a result of her approach, each following broadcast be-
           came more interesting.

                At the same time Albert Ignatenko invited me a couple of times to give lectures in
           his centre “The Phenomenon”. Besides Moscow, I also gave lectures in Nikolaev, his
           native town. At the end I was invited to give lectures with Albert Ignatenko in Donetsk.
           In  this  capital  of  miners  there  was  a  course  of  lectures  for  physicians  and  I  did
           approximately half the lectures and Ignatenko did the other half.

                In fact, this ten -day course was based solely on his and my lectures. When it was
           completed, several organizers of the course came to me and said that with all due respect
           to Albert Ignatenko they would like me to conduct my own course in Donetsk. I thought


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