AntiGravity Invisibility

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    http://www.keelynet.com/greb/greb.htm

    http://www3.sympatico.ca/slavek.krepelka/

    The Natural Phenomena of AntiGravitation and Invisibility in Insectsdue to the Grebennikov Cavity Structure Effect (CSE)

    Introduction

    by Iu. N. Cherednichenko, Senior Researcher, Biophysics Laboratory, Institute ofHuman Pathology and Ecology, Russian Academy of Medical Science

    Viktor Stepanovich Grebennikov is a naturalist, a professional entomologist, an artist-

    simply put, an intellectual with a wie range of interests an pursuits. !e is known to

    many as the iscoverer of the "avernous Structures #ffect $"S#%. &ut very few peopleare familiar with his other iscovery, one that also borrows from 'ature an its innermost

    secrets.

    &ack in ()** he iscovere anti-gravitational effects of the chitin shell of certain insects.&ut the most impressive concomitant phenomenon iscovere at the same time was that

    of complete or partial invisibility or of istorte perception of material ob+ects entering

    the one of compensate gravity. &ase on this iscovery, the author use bionic

    principles to esign an buil an anti-gravitational platform for irigible flights at thespee of up to km/min. Since ())(-) he has use this evice for fast transportation.

    &io-gravitational effects are a wie spectrum of natural phenomena, apparently notconfine to +ust a few species of insects. here is much empirical ata to support thepossibility of a lowere weight or complete levitation of material ob+ects as a result of

    irecte psycho-physical human action $psychokinesis%-e. g. levitation of yogi practicing

    transcenental meitation accoring to the 0aharishi metho. here are known cases of

    meiums levitating uring spiritistic sessions. !owever, it woul be a mistake to thinkthat such abilities are only foun in people who are gifte by nature.

    1 am convince that these abilities are an unerstuie biological regularity. 2s is known,

    human weight significantly rops in the state of somnambulistic automatism

    $sleepwalking%. uring their nocturnal +ourneys, *4-)4 kg sleepwalkers are able to trea

    on thin planks, or step on people sleeping ne5t to them without causing the latter anyphysical iscomfort $other than fright%. Some clinical cases of non-spasmoic epileptic

    fits often result in a short-term reversible transformation of personality $people in suchstate are commonly referre to as 6possesse6%, whereby a skinny, e5hauste girl or a ten-

    year-ol boy ac7uire the physical prowess of a traine athlete.

    "urrently this psychological phenomenon is known as multiple-personality synrome

    because it significantly iffers from the classical comple5 of epileptic symptoms. Such

    (

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    clinical cases are well-known an well-ocumente. !owever, phenomena accompanie

    by a change in the weight of humans or of material ob+ects are not confine to functional

    pathologies of the organism.

    !ealthy people in the state of acute psychological stress cause by a life-threatening

    situation or an overpowering motivation to achieve a vitally important goal have theability to spontaneously overcome obstacles insurmountable in their normal conition-e.

    g. to lift enormous weights, etc. hese phenomena are commonly e5plaine by ane5treme mobiliation of muscular strength, but precise calculations o not agree with

    such hypotheses. 2pparently, athletes $high +umpers, weightlifters, runners% have

    particularly evelope bio-antigravitational mechanisms.

    heir athletic performance is mostly $if not wholly% etermine not so much by the rigor

    of their training as by their psychological prepareness. 1f an accurate scientific task of

    stuying the anomalies of the human weight in various psycho-physiological states were

    ever set up an technical means of ynamic weight monitoring create, we woul then

    have ob+ective ata on this unusual phenomenon. here is also evience of otherphenomena of short-term mass increase in biological ob+ects, incluing humans, that are

    not relate to mass transfer.

    V. S. Grebennikov8s book has high literary merit an inclues the author8s ownillustrations. 1t is a kin of a 6actylogram6 for his system of spiritual values, his

    environmental outlook, an his entomological autobiography. 0any reaers are likely to

    perceive the book as nothing more than a popularie summary of the entomologist8s 94-year e5perience of scientific observations, peppere with some elements of science

    fiction. &ut such a conclusion woul be eeply erroneous. 2s Viktor Stepanovich8s frien

    an as someone with an intimate knowlege of his work $our homes are only (4km

    apart%, 1 can vouch 1 have never met a more careful, conscientious, honest, an talentee5perimental scientist.

    Grebennikov is also wiely known in the so-calle scientific unergroun $i. e. the

    branch of avance ussian science constantly persecute by the official scientificestablishment%. hus, a committee for combating pseuoscience, create in 'ovosibirsk

    ivision of the ussian 2caemy, has victimie many talente members of our local

    scientific community. he situation is much the same at the ussian 2gricultural2caemy. 1t is very easy to lose one8s +ob at a lab $even as its hea, regarless of one8s

    egree an title%. ;ne only nees to publish an article on, for e5ample, the evolutionary

    significance of antigravitational mechanisms in insects.

    &ut 1 am convince that iscoveries of such proportions must not be burie inmanuscripts +ust because pragmatism still rules science.

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    the sense of =avel >lorensky8s pneumatosphere% woul not be possible

    without breaking ol stereotypes in the process of mastering the

    wisom an e5perience of oler generations.

    Flight - Chapter V of V. S. Grebennikov'sMy World

    "!2=# V. FLIGHT

    2 7uiet evening in the steppe. he sun8s re isk has alreay touche the faraway, mistyhorion. 1t is too late to get back home-18ve staye too long here with my insects an am

    preparing to spen the night in the fiel. hank gooness 1 still have water in the flask

    an some mos7uito repellent-one nees it here, what with hosts of gnats on the steepshore of this salty lake.

    1 am in the steppes, in ?amyshlovo valley. 1t use to be a mighty tributary of the 1rtysh,

    but the ploughing of the steppes an eforestation turne the river into a eep, broa

    gully with a string of salty lakes, like this one. here is no win. =os of ucks gleam

    over the evening lake, sanpipers are also hear in the istance.

    3

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    he high, pearl-colore sky stretches over the calming worl of the

    steppe. !ow goo it is to be out here, in the open country@

    1 settle for the night on the very ege of the steep, on a grassy glae. 1sprea out my coat, put my backpack uner the hea, an before lying

    own, collect a few ry cakes of cow manure, an light them up. heromantic, unforgettable smell of bluish smoke slowly spreas across the

    oing steppe. 1 lie own on my simple be, stretch my tire legs ananticipate yet another wonerful night in the country.

    he blue smoke 7uietly takes me to the airy alesA sleep comes

    fast. 1 become very small, the sie of an ant, then enormous, like the sky,an am about to fall asleep. &ut why is it that toay these 6pre-sleep

    transformations6 of my boily imensions are somewhat unusual, too

    strongB 2 new sensation has mi5e in-a sensation of falling, as though

    the high cliff has been snatche away from uner my boy, an 1 am

    falling into an unknown, terrible abyss@

    Suenly 1 see flashes. 1 open my eyes, but they on8t go away-they are ancing on the

    pearl-an-sliver evening sky an on the grass. 1 get a strong, metallic taste in my mouth,

    as though 1 presse my tongue to the contact plates of a small electric battery. 0y earsstart ringing, 1 istinctly hear the ouble beats of my own heart.

    !ow can one sleep when such things are going on@

    1 sit up an try to rive away these unpleasant sensations, but nothing comes out of my

    efforts. he only result is that the flashes are no longer wie an blurre but sharp an

    clear, like sparks or perhaps small chainsA they make it har to look aroun. hen 1remember: 1 ha very similar sensations a few years ago in

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    inee a 6ba spot6, some nasty anomaly, then there woul be no grass here, an large

    bees woul not be nesting in the loamy steppe.

    0eanwhile, their nests are all over it-in fact, 1 wastrying to make my be right above their

    unergroun 6bee city6 in whose epths there is ofcourse a multitue of tunnels, chambers, lots of

    larvae, cocoons-all of them alive an healthy. 1unerstoo nothing that time.

    1 got up with a heaache even before sunrise an,

    tire, hobble off towar the roa to get a hitch to1silkul.

    hat summer 1 visite the 6#nchante ive meters away, 1 ha none... 2n there was the same ol

    bewilerment: why, why o these bees feel so goo here that the entire steppe is applewith their holes like Swiss cheese, an in places, almost like a spongeB

    he solution came many years later, when the bee city in ?amyshlovo valley ie: the

    tillage came to the very ege which conse7uently fell off.

    'ow instea of grass an bee holes, there is nothing therebut an atrocious heap of mu.

    1 only ha a hanful of ol clay lumps-fragments of those

    nests, with multiple chamber cells. he cells were sie bysie an remine of small thimbles, or little +ugs withnarrowing necks.

    1 alreay knew that these bees were of the 7uaruple ring

    species-that was the number of light rings on their elongate

    bellies. ;n my esk, packe with e7uipment, ant- angrasshopper-houses, bottles with chemicals, an other stuff,

    1 ha a wie receptacle fille with these spongy clay lumps.

    1 was about to pick something up an move my han overthese porous fragments.

    2 miracle happene: 1 suenly felt warmth emanating

    from them. 1 touche the lumps with my han-they werecol, but above them 1 felt a clear thermal sensation.

    &esies, in my fingers 1 felt some hitherto unknown +erks,

    some sort of 6tick6 as it were. 2n when 1 pushe the bowlwith the nests to the en of the esk an leane over it, 1 felt

    the same sensation as on the lake-my hea was getting

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    lighter an bigger, the boy was falling own, the eyes saw rapi flashes, an the mouth

    taste an electric battery. 1 was feeling slightly nauseous...

    1 put a sheet of carboar on top of the bowl-the sensation in8t change. 2 pot lichange nothing eitherA it was as if the 6something6 was cutting right through it. 1 ha to

    stuy the phenomenon at once. &ut what coul 1 o at home, without the necessaryphysical instrumentsB 1 got assistance from many research scientists of various institutes

    of the 2gricultural 2caemy in 'ovosibirsk.

    &ut alas, the instruments-either thermometers, or ultrasoun etectors, magnetometers

    an electrometers-i not respon to them in the slightest.

    Fe conucte a precise chemical analysis of the clay-nothing special. he raiometerwas also silent... &ut orinary human hans, an not +ust mine, istinctly felt either

    warmth or a col raft an a tingle, or sometimes a thicker, stickier environment.

    Some people8s hans got heavier, others felt theirs were pushe upA some people8s fingers

    an arm muscles got numb, they felt giy an ha profuse salivation.

    Similar phenomena coul be observe in a bunch of paper tubesinhabite by leaf-cutting bees. #ach tunnel ha a soli row of

    multi-layere cans of torn leaves, covere with concave lis $alsoof leaves%. 1nsie the cans there were silk, oval cocoons with

    larvae an chrysalies.

    1 aske people who knew nothing of my iscovery to hol theirhans or faces over the leaf-cutter nests, an took a etaile

    recor of the e5periment. he results may be foun in my article

    6;n the physical an biological properties of pollinator bee nests6

    publishe in the Siberian Bulletin of Agricultural Science, no.3,()*E.

    he same article contains the formula of the iscovery-a brief

    physical escription of this wonerful phenomenon. &ase on thestructure of bee nests, 1 create a few oen artificial

    honeycombs-of plastic, paper, metal, an woo. 1t turne out that the cause of all those

    unusual sensations was not a biological fiel, but the sie, shape, number, an the

    arrangement of caverns forme by any soli ob+ects. 2n as before, the organism felt it,while the instruments were silent.

    9

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    1 calle the iscovery

    the "avernous

    Structures #ffect$"S#% an carrie on

    with my e5periments.

    'ature continue toreveal its innermost

    secrets one after

    another...1t turne out that the

    "S# one inhibits the

    growth of saprophytic

    soil bacteria, of yeastan other cultures, as

    well as wheat grain

    germination. 1t also

    changes the behaviorof microscopic algea

    chlamyospores.

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    1t turne out that clocks-both mechanical an electronic-place in a strong "S# fiel

    starte running inaccurately-ime must also have a part in it. 2ll this was the

    manifestation of the Fill of 0atter, constantly moving, transforming, an eternallye5isting. 1t turne out that back in the 4s the >rench physicist

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    he same museum isplays an always-active honeycomb painkiller. 1t is a chair with

    an overhea cap that has a few empty, but intact combs of the honeybee $6ry6

    honeycombs, in the beekeeper vocab% in it. 2nyone who sits in this chair will after afew minutes almost certainly feel something $please write to me what e5actly you

    feel, 18ll be grateful%, while those with a heaache will in +ust a few minutes say

    goobye to the pain-at least for a few hours. 0y painkillers are successfully use inmany parts of the country-1 mae no secret of my

    iscovery.

    he han will clearly sense the emanation if you take it

    from below, palm up, to the cap with bee honeycombs.he cap coul be mae of carboar, veneer, or better

    still, of tin plate with tightly seale seams.

    Het another gift from insects...

    his was my reasoning at first: people have been ealingwith the honeybee for thousans of years, no one has ever

    complaine of anything unpleasant, e5cept of course stings.

    1 hel a ry honeycomb over my hea-it was working@

    1 ecie to use a set of si5 frames. Such was the story ofmy rather simple iscovery. 2n ol wasp nest works 7uite

    ifferently, even though the sie an shape of its cells are

    very close to those of bees.

    he important ifference was that the honeycomb material,

    unlike that of wa5, is more crumbly an micro-porous: it ispaper-like $by the way, it was wasps that invente paper, not people: they scrape ol

    woo fiber an mi5 it with their sticky saliva%.

    Falls of the wasp honeycomb are much thinner than those of bees, the cell sie anpattern are also ifferent, as is the outer shell, also mae of multi-layere, loosely

    wrappe paper. 1 ha reports of a highly unpleasant effect of a few wasp nests in an attic.

    2n besies, most multi-cell evices an ob+ects that will manifest "S# in the first fewminutes have a far from beneficial effect on humans. !oneybee combs are a rare

    e5ception. 2n when in the ()94s we ha bumblebees living in our 1silkul apartment, 1

    often observe the following.

    2 young bumblebee on its first trip away from the hive i not take the trouble toremember the entrance an woul spen hours wanering aroun the winows of our

    house an of a similar-looking house nearby. 2n in the evening, giving up on its poor

    visual memory, it woul lan on the brick wall, precisely outsie the hive an woul tryto break right through it. !ow i the insect know that right there, four meters away from

    the entrance, an a meter an a half below, behin the thick, half-meter wall was its home

    )

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    nestB 2t the time 1 was lost in con+ectures, but now 1 know e5actly why the bumblebee

    behave like that. 2n amaing fin, wouln8t you agreeB

    'ow let us remember the e5periment in which hunter wasps returne not +ust to a givenlocation, but to an entirely ifferent place where the lump of soil with their nest ha been

    move: no oubt, they were able to fin it because of a wave beacon create by the nestcavern. 2n there was another mystery reveale to me by my insect friens. 1t turne out

    that to attract their pollinators, flowers use not only color, oor, an nectar, but also asimilar wave beacon, powerful an unstoppable.

    1 iscovere it with a rawing coal-a burnt twig-by passing it

    over large, bell-shape flowers $tulips, lilies, amaryllises,mallows, pumpkins%.

    2lreay at a istance 1 coul feel a 6braking6, as it were, of this

    etector. Soon 1 was able to fin a flower in a ark room staning

    one or two meters away from it-but only if it ha not been

    move, because a 6false target6 woul be left in its ol place-the6resiual phantom6 1 alreay mentione.

    1 o not possess any supersensory abilities, an any person aftersome training woul be able to o the same. 1nstea of coal one

    coul use a (4-cm-long piece of a yellow sorghum stem, or a

    short pencil whose rear en shoul be facing the flower.Some people woul be able to feel the flower $a 6warm6, 6col6, or 6shivering6 sensation

    emanating from it% with their bare hans, tongues, or even faces. 2s many e5periments

    emonstrate, chilren an aolescents are particularly sensitive to Faves of 0atter.

    2s for bees that nest unergroun, their 6knowlege6 of the "S# is vital for them first of

    all, because it enables the builer of a new gallery to stay away from a neighboring nest.;therwise the entire bee-city cut through with intersecting holes woul simply collapse.

    Seconly, plant roots cannot be allowe to grow own into the

    galleries an honeycombs. hus roots stop a few centimeters awayfrom the honeycomb, or else, feeling that nests are near, they start

    growing asie.

    he latter conclusion wasconfirme by my many

    e5periments on sprouting

    wheat sees in a strong "S#

    fiel, as compare to seesgerminating in the same

    climatic conitions but in the

    absence of the "S#.=hotographs an rawings

    show both the ying of roots

    (4

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    in the e5perimental batch an their sharp eviation in a irection away from my 6artificial

    honeycomb6.

    hus bees an wees back at the lake ha long ago mae a pact-another e5ample of thehighest ecological e5peiency of all &eing. 2n in that same spot on the globe we see yet

    another e5ample of people8s mercilessly ignorant attitue to 'ature...

    he bee-city is now goneA every spring thick streams of fertile black earth soil run own,

    between filthy heaps of trash, to the lifeless, salty pules that not too long ago were astring of lakes with countless flocks of sanpipers an ucks, white swans, an hovering

    fish-hawks. 2n by the steppe thinne out by bee holes, one use to hear the hum of

    hunres of thousans of bees that for the first time le me into the Inknown.

    1 must have tire the reaer with all these honeycombs of mine... 2 separate thick bookwoul be re7uire to escribe all my e5periments. herefore 1 will only mention one

    thing: my pocket, battery-powere calculator often malfunctione in the "S# fiel: it

    either erre, or sometimes its isplay winow woul fail to light up for hours. 1 use thefiel of a wasp nest combine with that of my two palms. 'one of these structures ha

    any effect in isolation.

    1 will also note that hans with their tubular phalan5es, +oints, ligaments, bloo vessels,

    an nails are intensive "S# emanators capable of giving a powerful push to the straw orcoal inicator of my little instrument from a couple of meters8 istance. =ractically

    anyone coul o it. his is why 1 am convince that there are no people with

    supersensory abilities, or rather that all the people have them... 2n the number of thosewho from a istance can move light-weight ob+ects on a table, hol them suspene in

    the air or 6magnetically6 attache to the han is far greater than is usually thought. ry it

    yourself@ 1 look forwar to your letters.

    here once was an ancient folk game: one man sits on a chair, an over his hea, four ofhis friens 6buil6 a gri of horiontally stretche palms with slightly sprea fingers-first

    right hans, then left, with cm gaps between them. 1n (4-( secons, all four

    synchronously put their presse-together ine5 an mile fingers uner the armpits an

    uner the knees of the sitting man, an then they energetically toss him up in the air. hetime between 6collapsing6 the gri an tossing the man must not e5cee two seconsA the

    synchronicity is also very important. 1f everything is one right, a (44-kilo man flies up

    almost to the ceiling, while the ones who tosse him claim he was light as a feather.

    2 strict reaer may ask me how it is possible. oesn8t it all contraict laws of natureB2n if so, am 1 not propagating mysticismB 'othing of the sort@ here is no mysticism,

    the thing is simply that we, humans, still know little of the Iniverse which, as we see, not

    always 6accepts6 our, all too human rules, assumptions, an orers... ;nce it awne onme: the results of my e5periments with insect nests bear too much similarity to the

    reports of people who happene to be in the vicinity of... I>;s. hink an compare:

    temporary malfunctioning of electronic evices, isrupte clocks-i. e., time, an invisible,resilient 6obstacle6, a temporary rop in the weight of ob+ects, the sensation of a rop in

    ((

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    human weight, phosphenes-moving, colore flashes in the eyes, a 6galvanic6 taste in the

    mouth...

    1 am sure you have rea about all this in I>; +ournals. 1 am now telling you it can all bee5perience in our 0useum. "ome visit@ Fas 1 staning on the threshol of yet another

    mysteryB Juite so. 2n again 1 was helpe by chance, or rather by my ol insect friens.2n again there were sleepless nights, failures, oubts, breakowns, even accients...

    2n 1 ha no one to turn to for avice-they woul have +ust laughe, or worse...

    &ut 1 can say this, my reaer: he is happy who has a more or less ae7uate use of his

    eyes, hea, an hans-skillful hans are particularly important@-an trust me, the +oy of

    creative work, even of work that ens in failure, is far higher an brighter than earningany iplomas, meals, or patents.

    Flying an Anti-gravitational latfor!

    $excerpts from a diary)

    Kuge it for yourself from my iary e5cerpts-obviously simplifie an aapte for thisbook. =ictures an rawings will help you to evaluate my story... 2 hot summer ay. >ar-

    away e5panses rown in a bluish-lilac haeA the sky8s gigantic cupola with fluffy clous

    stretches above the fiels an coppices. 1 am flying about 344 meters above groun, witha istant lake-a light, elongate spot in the hae-as my reference point.

    &lue, intricate tree contours slowly receeA between them, there are

    fiels. hose, bluish-green ones are fiels of oatsA the whitishrectangles with a strange, rhythmic twinkling are those of buckwheat.

    Straight ahea of me is a fiel of alfalfa-its green color is familiar, itresembles the oil paint 6cobalt meium-green6. Green oceans ofwheat on the right are of a enser shae an resemble the 6chrome

    o5ie6 paint. 2n enormous, multi-colore palette floats further an

    further backwars.

    >ootpaths meaner between fiels an coppices. hey +oin gravelroas which it turn stretch further out, towar the highway, still

    invisible from here for the hae, but 1 know that if 1 flew on the right

    sie of the lake, 1 woul see it-a smooth, gray strip without a

    beginning or an en, on which cars-small bo5es-are slowly crawling.

    1sometric, flat shaows of cumulus clous are pictures7uely sprea

    aroun the sunny forest-steppe. hey are eep-blue where they cover

    coppices, an are various shaes of light blue over fiels. 'ow 1 amin the shaow of one such clou: 1 accelerate-it8s 7uite easy for me to

    o that-an leave the shaow.

    1 lean forwar slightly an feel a warm, taut win coming far own below, from the sun-

    warme groun an plants. 1t comes not from the sie, as on the groun, but strangely

    (

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    ;ne person observe a

    6flat, non-transparent

    s7uare, about one hectarein sie6-coul it have been

    the optically enlarge little

    platform of my eviceB0ost people see nothing at

    all, an 1 am for the

    moment please with it-1can8t be too careful@

    &esies, 1 still haven8t

    etermine what my

    visibility or invisibilityepens on.

    herefore 1 confess that 1

    consciously avoi people

    in my flight an for thatpurpose bypass cities an

    towns, an even crossroas an footpaths at high

    spee, after making sure

    there is no one on them.1n these e5cursions-no

    oubt, fictional for the reaer, but for me alreay almost casual-1 trust only my insect

    friens epicte on these pages.

    he first practical use of my iscovery was-an still is-entomological: to e5amine mysecret places, to take a picture of them from above, to fin new, still une5amine 1nsect

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    hus it is possible to fly not +ust in space but also-or so it seems-in time as well. 1 cannot

    make the latter claim with a (44L guarantee, e5cept perhaps that in flight, particularly at

    its beginning, a watch runs too slow an then too fast, but at the en of the e5cursionstarts running accurately again.

    his is why 1 stay away from people uring my +ourneys: if time is involve alongsiegravitation, 1 might perhaps accientally isrupt cause-an-effect relations an someone

    might get hurt.his is where my fears were coming from: insects

    capture 6there6 isappear from test tubes, bo5es, an

    other receptacles.hey isappear mostly without a trace. ;nce a test tube in

    my pocket was crushe to tiny bits, another time there

    was an oval hole in the glass, with brown, as though6chitin6 eges-you can see it in the picture.

    0any times 1 felt a kin of burning or an electric shock

    insie my pocket-perhaps at the moment of my prisoner8s6isappearance6.

    ;nly once i 1 fin a capture insect in the test tube, but it wasn8t the ault ichneumon

    with white rings on its feelers, but its... chrysalis, i. e. its earlier stage. 1t was alive-it

    move its belly when touche. 0uch to my ismay, it ie a week later.

    1t is best to fly on clear summer ays. >lying is much more ifficult when it rains, analmost impossible in winter-not because of the col. 1 coul have aapte my evice

    accoringly, but since 1 am an entomologist, 1 simply o not nee winter flights.

    !ow an why i 1 come to this iscoveryB 1n the summer of ()**, as 1 was e5amininguner a microscope the chitin shells of insects, their pinnate $feathery% feelers, an thethinnest structure of butterflies8 wings, 1 got intereste in an amaingly rhythmical

    microstructure of one large insect etail.

    1t was an e5tremely well-orere composition, as though presse on a comple5 machine

    accoring to special blueprints an calculations. 2s 1 saw it, the intricate sponginess wasclearly not necessary either for the urability of the etail, or for its ecoration. 1 ha

    never observe anything like this unusual micro-ornament either in nature, in technology,

    or in art.

    &ecause its structure is three-imensional, so far 1 have been unable to capture it in arawing, or a photograph. Fhy oes an insect nee itB &esies, other than in flight, this

    structure at the bottom of the wing case is always hien from the eye-no one woul ever

    see it properly. Fas it perhaps the wave beacon with 6my6 multiple cavernous structureseffectB hat truly lucky summer there were very many insects of this species, an 1 woul

    capture them at night: neither before, nor after was 1 able to observe these insects.

    (

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    1 put the small, concave chitin plate on the microscope shelf in orer again to e5amine

    uner strong magnification its strangely star-shape cells. 1 again amire this

    masterpiece of nature, an almost purposelessly place it on top of another, ienticalplate that ha the same unusual cells on one of its sies.

    &ut no@-the etail broke loose from my tweeersA for a few secons it hung suspeneabove the other plate on the microscope shelf, turne a few egrees clockwise, sli to the

    right, turne counterclockwise, swung, an only then abruptly fell on the esk.

    Hou can imagine what 1 felt at that moment... Fhen 1 came to my senses, 1 tie a few

    panels with a wire-it wasn8t an easy thing to o, an 1 only succeee when 1 positione

    them vertically. Fhat 1 got was a multi-layere chitin block. 1 put it on the esk.

    #ven a relatively large ob+ect-such as a paper tack-coul not fall on it-something pusheit up an asie. Fhen 1 attache the tack on top of the 6block6, 1 witnesse such

    increible, impossible things $for e5ample, the tack for a few moments was lost from

    sight% that 1 realie it was no beacon, but something else entirely.

    2n again 1 got so e5cite that all the ob+ects aroun me became foggy an shaky. 1t waswith a huge effort that 1 manage to pull myself together in a couple of hours an

    continue working.

    So, this is how it starte. ;f course, much still remains to be unerstoo, verifie, an

    teste. 1 will certainly tell my reaers about the finer etails of my machine, about itspropulsion principles, about istances, heights, spees, e7uipment, an all the rest-but in

    my ne5t book.

    ...1 conucte my first, very unsuccessful an highly angerous flight on the night of0arch (, ())4. 1 in8t have the patience to wait till the warm season an neglecte togo to a eserte area. 1 alreay knew that night was the most angerous time for this kin

    of work.

    1 ha ba luck from the very beginning: the panel blocks of the right part of the bearingplatform perioically got stuck. 1 shoul have fi5e the problem immeiately, but

    neglecte to o so. 1 took off right in the mile of the 2gricultural 2caemy campus,

    erroneously assuming that at ( 20 everyone was asleep, an noboy woul see me.

    he lift-off went well, but in a few secons, when the lit winows of builings sankbeneath me, 1 felt iy. 1 shoul have lane right then but remaine airborne, which

    was wrong because a powerful force snatche away my control over the movement anweight, an it pulle me in the irection of the city.

    rawn by this une5pecte, uncontrollable power, 1 crosse the secon circle of nine-storybuilings in the city8s resiential area $they are lai out in two huge circles with five-story

    builings, incluing ours, insie them%, then 1 crosse a snow-covere, narrow fiel, an

    the 2caemy "ity highway... he ark immensity of 'ovosibirsk was closing in upon

    (9

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    me, an it was closing in fast. 1 was alreay near a bunch of tall factory chimneys many

    of which fume thick smoke-night shift was on. 1 ha to o something 7uickly.

    1 got on top of the situation only with a great effort. >inally 1 manage to conuct anemergency a+ustment of the panel blocks. 0y horiontal movement slowe own, but

    then 1 again felt sick.

    ;nly at fourth try i 1 succee in stopping the horiontal movement, at which point my

    platform was hanging over Matulinka, the city8s inustrial istrict. he sinister chimneyssilently continue to fume right unerneath me.

    1 reste for a few minutes-if one coul call hanging over a lighte factory fence rest-an

    after 1 mae sure the 6evil power6 has passe, 1 glie back-yet not in the irection of our2gricultural 2caemy campus but to the right from it, towar the airport. 1 i this to

    foul the trail, in case someone ha seen me.

    ;nly about halfway to the airport, over some ark, night fiels where there was clearly

    no one aroun, 1 abruptly turne home... 'e5t ay 1 naturally couln8t get out of be.

    'ews on V an in newspapers was more than alarming. !ealines, such as 6I>; overMatulinka6 an 62liens againB6 meant that my flight ha been etecte. &ut how@ Some

    perceive the 6phenomenon6 as glowing spheres or isks-many actually saw not one

    sphere but two@ ;thers claime they ha seen a 6real saucer6 with winows an rays.

    1 am not iscounting the possibility that some Matulino resients saw not my near-emergency evolutions, but something else entirely that ha nothing to o with those.

    &esies, 0arch of ())4 was particularly rich in I>; sightings in Siberia, near 'alchik,

    an especially in &elgium where, accoring toPravda, on 0arch 3( the engineer 0arcel

    2lferlane took a two-minute film of the flight of a huge triangular craft which, accoringto &elgian scientists, were none other than 6material ob+ects with a capacity no

    civiliation can currently create.6

    1s it really soB 2s for me, 1 woul suggest that the gravitational filter platforms $or as 1call them, panel blocks% of these machines were in fact small, triangular, an mae here

    on #arth-but with more sophistication than my half-wooen contraption.

    1 too wante to make the platform triangular-it is

    much safer an more efficient that way-but 1 chosea rectangular esign because it is easier to fol, an

    when fole, it resembles a suitcase, a painter8scase, or a briefcase that can be thus isguise so asnot to arouse suspicion. 1, naturally, isguise it as

    a painter8s case.

    1 ha nothing to o with the sightings in 'alchik or

    &elgium. &esies, as it may appear, 1 am veryimpractical in the use of my iscovery-1 only fly to

    (

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    my entomological preserves. hese are far more important to me than any technological

    fins.

    2t the moment, 1 have eleven such preserves: eight in ;msk region, one in Voronehregion, an one near 'ovosibirsk. here use to be si5 of them in 'ovosibirsk region, all

    of them create, or rather salvage by me an my family, but they on8t like them here.'either the 2gricultural 2caemy $still more obsesse with 6chemistry6 than with

    anything else%, nor the #nvironmental =rotection "ommittee were willing to help mesalvage these little preserves from evil, ignorant people.

    hus 1 am continuing my +ourney westwar uner the magnificent, fluffy clous at noon.

    he blue shaows of the clous, the intricately shape coppices, an the multicolorerectangles of fiels float backwars below me.

    he spee of my flight is 7uite high, but there is no win in my ears-the platform8s force

    fiel has 6carve out6 from space an upwar-iverging, invisible column that cuts the

    platform off the earth8s gravitational pull. &ut it left me an the air insie the columnintact. 1 think that all this, as it were, parts space in flight, an then closes it behin me.

    his must be the reason for the invisibility, or the istorte visibility, of the evice an its

    6rier6-as was the case with my flight over 'ovosibirsk8s Matulinka suburb.

    &ut the protection from gravity is regulate, even though it is incomplete: if you move

    your hea forwar, you alreay feel the turbulence of the win that clearly smells eitherof sweet clover, of buckwheat, or of the colore wees of Siberian meaows.

    1 leave 1silkul with its huge grain elevator on my right an graually begin to escen

    over the highway, making sure that 1 am invisible to rivers, passengers, an peopleworking in the fiel.

    0y platform an 1 cast no shaow $although the shaow occasionally appears%: 1 see

    three kis on the ege of a forest, go own, rop my spee, an fly right near them. hey

    show no reaction, which means that everything is fine-neither 1, nor my shaow arevisible. ;r hear: the propulsion principle of my evice is such that the platform makes

    no soun whatsoever, because there is practically no air friction.

    0y +ourney was long-at least forty minutes from 'ovosibirsk. 0y hans are tire as 1

    can8t take them off the controls, so are my legs an boy-1 have to stan up straight, tieto the vertical pole with a belt. 2n even though 1 can travel faster, 1 am still afrai to o

    so-my han-mae machine is still too small an fragile.

    (*

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    1 again go up an ahea, an soon 1 see the familiar lanmarks-a roa intersection, a

    passenger terminal on the right sie of the highway. 2nother five kilometers, an finally 1see orange columns of the =reserve fence. he =reserve is this year-come to think of it-

    ()

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    twenty years ol@ !ow many times 1 save this chil of mine from trouble an

    bureaucrats, from chemicals-loae aircraft, from fires, an many other evil ees. 2n

    the

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    alive, intersperse with ark, intricate islans of coppices, clouy shaows, light, clear

    spots of lakes.

    he huge isk of the #arth with all this for some reason appears more an more concave-1 still haven8t iscovere the reason for this alreay familiar illusion. 1 go up higher, the

    rare, white clou masses sink lower, an the sky is arker than below-it is ark blue. hefiels visible between the clous are alreay covere with a thickening blue hae, an it

    is more an more ifficult to make them out. oo ba 1 can8t take my four-year-olgranson 2nrei with meA the platform coul easily lift us both. Het one can8t be too

    careful...

    ... Gooness, what am 1 oingB 1 cast a shaow back on the Glae, in8t 1B his means 1can be seen by thousans, as on that memorable night in 0arch. 1t is ay now, an 1 may

    again appear as a isk, s7uare, or worse, my own person... here is also a cargo plane,

    still sounless, coming straight at me, 7uickly growing in sieA 1 alreay see the col

    shimmer of its boy an the pulsation of its unnaturally re blinker.

    own, 7uick@ 1 brake abruptly, make a turnA the sun is at my backA my shaow shoul be

    across from me, on the gigantic, conve5 wall of a white clou. &ut there is none, only a

    multicolore glory, an iriescent, bright ring familiar to all pilots has brushe the clou

    ahea of me.

    1 sigh with relief-this means noboy saw either me, or my 6ouble6 in the guise of a

    triangle, s7uare, or a 6banal6 saucer... 2 thought occurs to me $1 must say that espite the

    esperate technical an physical inconvenience, imagination works much better anfaster in a 6falling6 flight%: what if 1 am not the only one out of five billion people to have

    mae my iscoveryA what if flying evices base on the same principle-both home-mae

    an professional-have long been constructe an testeB

    &ut all screening platforms have the same 7uality: sometimes they become visible toother peopleA pilots too are 6transforme6-they are seen as 6humanois6 in silver

    costumes, either short an green, or flat as if mae of carboar $Voroneh, ()*)%, etc.

    hus it may very well be that these are not alien I>; crewmen, but 6temporarily

    eforme6-of course to outsie observers-earthly pilots an builers of little platforms,such as mine, who have mae their inventions reliable.

    0y avice to those who in their stuy of insects comes across the same phenomenon an

    begin making an testing a 6gravitoplane6 $by the way, 1 am convince that one can8t

    make the iscovery without insects% is this: to fly only on fine summer ays, to avoiworking in thunerstorms or rain, not to get too far or too high, not take a thing with you

    from the laning area, to make all assembly units ma5imally strong, an to avoi testing

    the evice in the vicinity of any power lines, towns $let alone cities%, transport, or people.

    he best site for testing is a istant forest glae, as far away from human habitation as

    possibleA otherwise a phenomenon known as poltergeist coul occur in the raius of a few

    (

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    oen meters-6une5plaine6 movements of househol ob+ects, switching off, or on, of

    househol electric appliances, an even fires.

    1 myself have no e5planation for all this, but it seems that these phenomena are theconse7uence of temporal isruptions, a complicate an treacherous thing. 'ot a single,

    even tiniest fragment or particle shoul be roppe either uring the flight, or in thelaning area.

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    1 know personally some of the !igh =riests of Science, an 1 am certain that were 1 ever

    to get an auience with one such person $which is now practically impossible%, were 1

    ever toA

    open my painter8s case,

    attach the pole,

    turn the hanle, an soar to the ceiling,

    he wouln8t be a bit impresse-or worse still, woul orer the trickster out of the office. 1look forwar to times when young people will replace these 6priests6.

    he secon reason for my 6non-isclosure6 is more ob+ective. 1 foun these

    antigravitational structures only in one species of Siberian insects. 1 am not even namingthe class to which this insect belongs-it seems to be on the verge of e5tinction, an the

    population surge 1 registere back then was possibly local an final.

    hus, if 1 were to name the genus an the species, what is the guarantee that ishonestpeople, half-way competent in biology, woul not rush out to ravines, meaows, anforests to catch perhaps the very last samples of this 0iracle of 'atureB

    Fhat are the guarantees that they woul not plough up hunres of glaes, cut own

    oens of forests to get to this potentially lucrative preyB herefore, let all 1 have relate

    in this chapter an in the aenum remain science fictionA may 'ature herself neverreveal this secret to them-it woul take a lot of effort, an they woul never be able to get

    it by force as there are still several million insect species living on the planet.

    Spen at least an hour on the morphological stuy of each of them, then calculate theos of encountering the Inusual, an 1 will sincerely wish you iligence an a very long

    life, for even if you took no ays off, working eight hours a ay, you woul nee a

    thousan years of life.

    1 hope 1 will be unerstoo an forgiven by those of my reaers who wante immeiateinformation about my iscovery not for selfish ens, but simply out of curiosity. 1nee,

    what woul you o in my place if you were to act in the best interests of

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    1 loosen the screws on the control pole, then shorten it like an antenna of a portable raio,

    an remove it from the platform which 1 fol in half. 'ow it looks like a painter8s case, a

    bo5 for paints, if only a bit thicker. 1 put the case, some foo, an a few tools forrepairing the fence in my backpack an make my way for the 0ile Glae between

    aspens an short og-rose bushes. #ven before 1 leave the forest, 1 see a goo omen-a

    family of fire-re toastools that have line up on the forest being in a wie curve, or,as it use to be calle in folklore, a 6witch8s ring6.

    Fhy 6witch8s6B 2n in general, why oes one have to break, knock off, trample this

    beautiful mushroom of Siberian forestsB 1 often aske mushroom-pickers why they o it.

    he answer was, 6because it8s ineible@6 &ut turf, clay, twigs, tree stumps, an stones areineible too.

    1f there were rocks lying in the forest instea of mushrooms, no one woul be knocking

    them off. 1t seems that ineible mushrooms are knocke off because they are aliveA they

    are knocke off only in orer to kill them@ Fhat is this thenB

    o people really have this in their bloo-to knock off a mushroom, to crush a bug, toshoot a bir, a hare, or a bisonB 2n is this not where boorishness, saism, pogroms, an

    wars originateB ;ne really wants not to believe it, but 1 put myself in the shoes of analien: 1 come to #arth to visit humans an see them knock off mushrooms, crush insects,

    shoot birs an each other.

    Fhat woul 1 oB 1 woul immeiately turn my spacecraft aroun an go back. 1wouln8t return for at least 44 earth years... Fhat woul you o, my reaer, if you were

    an alienB

    1t8s a goo thing at least that this little family of toastools is hien from evil eyes an

    cruel feet. #very summer it gives me +oy to see its special life, its cinnabar-re, moist

    caps with large, whitish scales. &ut here is the Glae. 1 step on it, as usual, with my heartsinking with a constant longing for this ear, faraway nature of 1silkul, with a fear that

    some 6master6 might ecie to plough it up, an with a +oy that it is still unploughe,uncut, an untrample...

    2n it really means nothing that in my backpack 1 have a fole, i. e. neutralie

    platform with gravitational, micro-cellular filter blocks, an between them, a fole pole

    with fiel regulators an a belt with which 1 fasten myself to the pole.

    Fhat ifference oes it make that 1 got about fifty years ahea of contemporary sciencewith my iscoveryB =eople are still going to master this an many other mysteries of

    0atter, Space, Gravitation, an ime.

    &ut no superciviliation on any planet of any Supergala5y is going to re-create this very

    Glae with its comple5, fragile, trembling

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    anceB ;n what other planet woul a nearly tame blue butterfly lan on your outstretche

    han to have a taste of something salty-sausage, cheese, or a pickleB ;r else, +ust to walk

    up an own your palm, opening an closing its gray wings on whose backsie there is afine ornament of roun eye-shape spotsB

    ...1t hasn8t been too long since we, humans, starte flying-first air balloons, then airplanes,an now powerful rockets that we sen to other heavenly boies. Fhat ne5tB 'e5t we are

    going to fly to other stars at a spee close to that of lightA but even the closest gala5ywoul still be out of reach.

    Het !umankin-if it earns the name of 1ntelligent-will solve many riles of the Iniverse

    an will then overcome that hurle too. hen any worls of the Iniverse will becomeaccessible, close-even if they are trillions of light years away. 1t8ll happen, for it is all a

    matter of eason, Science, an technology. &ut of nothing else. ;nly this Glae may

    isappear if 1-an there is no one else to rely on-am not going to preserve it for my close

    an istant escenants.

    So what is more valuable to !umanity at this time-the insect preserve or the home-mae

    evice capable of eveloping the enithal pull of at least (44 kg an the horiontal spee

    of 34-E4 km/minB 1 am askingyou, my reaer. &ut think har before you give a serious,

    responsible answer.

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    ...1 on8t know whether 1 have persuae you, my reaer, that similar evices will soon be

    available to practically everyone, while

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    impatiently wait. 1f the cocoon8s inhabitant +umps by hitting the lower wall, making the

    cocoon to bounce off its support, this time it won8t work because the impact will be

    absorbe by the thin, pay fibrils of the cotton wool. heoretically, the cocoon shouln8teven move. &ut no: it takes off from its motionless pa-up an asie, as it i before.

    1 measure the broa +ump: E mm, i. e. as before. he insect must have been hitting notthe bottom, but the top part of the cocoon-at any rate, it must have been oing something

    that cause the capsule to move.

    >rankly speaking, it is as 1 write these notes that 1 feel agitationA back then, in ()*(, 1

    foun nothing supernatural in the +umps of my prisoner. his was because 1 knew that,

    accoring to physics, there are an there can be no unsupporte movers. ;therwise 1woul have bre a couple of hunre of those insects-thankfully, they were 7uite

    common-an woul have stuie the phenomenon thoroughly.

    'ow let us fantasie a little: what if the batiplectes wante to leave the #arthB 2n ault,

    winge insect woul have no luck-our atmosphere is 7uite rarefie at the top, wings are

    no match for it. 2 larva in a cocoon is an entirely ifferent matter. 1t coul, in theory,after lifting its capsule cm in a +ump, take it up even further while in the air, then again

    an again...2n if the cocoon were airtight-1 mean the air reserve for the pilot8s breathing-then the

    evice woul be able to leave the atmosphere an woul have no obstacles to a limitless

    buil-up of spee. Such is the alluring, increible value of unsupporte movers, eclare,alas, a prouct of empty fantasy. &ut even if you are no physicist, you still have a har

    time imagining what a tiny larva oes in there if its vessel soars cm high. 1t simply can8t

    be-an yet it +umps@

    =hysicists say that this is 6beyon science6 as it 6contraicts the laws of nature.6 he only

    problem is that theBatiplectes anurus oesn8t know it. he physicists8 ban must also havebeen unknown to the leaing, e5perience biologists who honestly wrote the following

    on page 9 of the acaemicRegister of Insects of uropean !SSR$vol. 111, pt. 3%: 6thecocoon +umps up as a result of abrupt movements of the larva insie the cocoon.6 1n a

    wor, it is a working-an teste-e5ample of a safe, unsupporte mover. 1 am giving it to

    you, my reaer: invent, esign, buil, an Gospee@ &ut hurry@

    0assive chemical warfare has been wage against the alfalfa pest snout-beetle$phitonomus%. !umanity may actually win it. &ut the price may be too great: with the

    estruction of theP"itonomus varnabilisbeetle, our planet8s fauna may also lose the

    ichneumonBatiplectes anurusas it parasities only this kin of weevil an cannot

    survive without it.0eanwhile, any proposals on using biological weapons against the pest-such as our very

    ichneumon an other insect preators are completely re+ecte by the bosses of ussian

    agriculture an agricultural science. 1 have been fighting them on this for years, but so farwith little success.

    !owever, one coul unerstan those in charge too-how can one stop e5pensive chemical

    factoriesB 2n why o agrarian scientists care about some unsupporte mover that

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    oesn8t allow alfalfa to be treate with poisonB !urry up,

    biologists, engineers, physicists@ >or if "hemistry wins, this

    0ystery-an with, a host of other 0ysteries relate to it-willleave people for ever. Fithout insects, people won8t invent it

    themselves. =lease trust me, an entomologist with 94-year

    e5perience.

    2t the en of my first book,A#illion Riddles, publishe in

    'ovosibirsk in ()9*, there is a

    rawing that 1 am reproucingagain: a man is flying over

    'ovosibirsk8s 2caemic "ity.

    !e is flying a evice base on a huge pair of insect wings.2t the time 1 reame of inventing such a machine.

    Strangely, the ream came true precisely because of my

    frienship with insects-yet not by blinly copying the mostnoticeable parts-for e5ample wings that only make me smile

    now-but through careful stuy of living 'ature.

    'othing woul have been possible without my si5-legge

    friens. 'o one woul be able to o without them either.hus safeguar their worl, the ancient, wonerful worl of 1nsect, for it is an infinite,

    uni7ue treasure of 'ature8s mysteries@ 1 beg you all, take care of it@

    F"#$ TH% T%##( #F A &AT)"ALIST

    Artifi*ial honey*o!b.

    ake a oen an a half papier-machet supermarket egg cases $34-egg variety%, tie them

    up or glue them together $one on top of another% in such a way as to +oin the 6teeth6 toone another, not to the hollow spots.

    Hou will have large cells, similar to multi-cellular combs of a certain 6paper6 wasp,

    e5cept many times larger. >i5 the whole set $it can be enclose in a case% over the hea ofa person sitting in a chair, with the bottom 6comb6 is (4-4 cm above the hea.

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    "ut apart-longways- sheets of office

    paper an fol each of them accorion-like

    so as to get (4 eges an 4 surfaces.S7ueee the accorions to make them

    s7uare an glue them on top of one

    another, turning each horiontally 34egrees clockwise against the bottom one.

    Glue together, preferably out of ark

    paper, a conical, multi-layere 6flower6with a few oen petalsA fluff up the petals.

    est the emanators with by putting your

    palmon above the 6flower6 an unerneath

    the suspene 6accorion6. =lace themabove the hea of the sitting person,

    marking his sensations.

    Foa! plasti*. Fe are use to the fact thatthis e5cellent thermal insulator 6reflects6 the warmth of the han even at a istance. &ut

    even if you cover it with ark paper, carboar, or a tin plate, it woul still o the same.

    his happens ue to the work of multiple vesicular caverns of the material that prouce

    the "S#.

    Foa! r,bber. 1t is wiely known that a person use to sleeping on, say, a cotton wool

    mattress oesn8t sleep well at first on a rubber foam one, or else is unable to

    sleep at all. his is a typical manifestation of the "S#.

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    in/-fallen trees.;ne of my test sub+ects, a geographer, sai to me after

    e5periencing the effect of one of my 6gris6 that he ha once ha a similar sensation

    many years before, when he was passing a win-fallen section of a forest. !is hea,ears, mouth, an the entire boy felt something particularly unpleasant-the same

    thing he felt uner my gri. his means that the abruptly isrupte shape of the

    normal multi-cavernous space of the forest for some time emanate wavesunpleasant for humans.

    efore the rain. =lace a shower nole on a tap an run col water. Slowly move

    your han towar the rops coming from the sies: most people feel 6warmth6. 1n

    reality, this is the "S# reinforce by the movement of ever new elements of the6multi-layere6 gri-water rops an gaps between them. 2fter practicing in the

    bathroom or kitchen, pick up an even stronger "S# from fountains an waterfalls.

    #ven when the atmospheric pressure is high, the shrou of a istant rain creates apowerful "S# fiel that has its impact on a large area. !ave you ever felt sleepy before

    the rain even in enclose premisesB he "S# cannot be screene.

    +The CS% of a book+.

    ake a thick, preferably well-rea book an place it upright on the ege of a esk with its

    back facing the irection of the sun $e.g. facing north at night%.;pen the book an fluff up its pages as evenly as possible. 1n a few minutes $the "S#

    oes not appear immeiately, as it oesn8t isappear immeiately ether%, pick up with

    your palm, tongue, or back of your hea some of the sensations mentione in this chapter.his 6tail6, after some practice, can be picke up at a -3 meters8 istance. 1t is also easy

    to verify that the 6book "S#6 is also non-screenable-ask someone to stan between the

    han an the book.

    +A large *one+ ith an artifi*ial *o!b filling an/ three !agnets at the ba*k.

    wo cones of this sort, positione against each other taking into account the position of

    the sun, were in the morning of 2pril 3, ())(, thrown apart an isfigure. ;ne ha

    been place in 1silkul, the other near 'ovosibirsk $the secon one was unfole an

    presse into the wall of an unergroun hiing placeA its magnets isappeare%.2t the same moment, resients of an ;msk apartment e5perience a series of strangest

    6poltergeists6 $see $ec"ernii %mskfor 2pril 9 an ;msk an 0oscow V broacasts%.

    &ecause of this coincience, on 2ugust , ())(, the same paper calle the evice in thepicture 6a Grebennikov8s hyperboloi6.

    2ctually, one of the 6beams6 of the upright electronic waves between the two structures

    may have been forme precisely there, on the 1rtysh embankment in ;msk.

    +A !e/i,! *one+.

    ightly insert a oen plastic househol funnels into each other an fi5 the structure on

    any support with the noles turne towar the sun. "over the bell en of the top funnel

    with a net or light blue cloth $so that the teste sub+ects not anticipate heat%.

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    +A s!all *one+. ightly roll up two unusable rolls of film,

    tie them up with string or threa an make a bell-shape

    cavity in the mile of the top roll. "S# emanations can beeasily picke up by the palm, particularly in a counter-solar

    position. Hou will get interesting sensations if you press this

    6microcone6 to your forehea.

    +erpet,,! !obile+.

    1 surroune my above escribe evice Cfor registering "S#

    emanationsA a straw inicator suspene on a cobweb threaD

    with seven funnel-shape rolls of film Csee aboveD.Slowly leaving the one of impact of one roll, the straw woul

    enter the power fiel of another, then the thir, an so on...

    his e5periment is most successful in a soun-insulate

    chamber, away from wires, pipes, sources of heat, col, an bright light. here is no

    miracle here: matter is eternal in its enless movement.

    A solar ether- an/ bea! ra/iator.

    his intricate name was evise by the

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    The CS% in /aily life. =erceivable waves of matter are emanate by piles of pipes, some

    caves, unergroun tunnels, tree crownsA the shape of premises is also significant $roun,

    cornere, cupolae%. he wall an furniture material also emanates a "S# of certainparameters.

    +$i*ro-CS%+. he "S# effect may be manifeste not +ust in galactic or householscales, but also in micro-worl, in substances whose molecules have caverns of certain

    shapes. >or e5ample, in naphthalene. 1 fille a one-liter +ar with it, seale it, ansuspene it from the ceiling. =eople beneath it felt with their palms a whole system of

    power fiel 6clots6. $more son if the receptacle was suspene above the top of the hea%.

    2ctivate charcoal is also a multi-cavernous structure. !ol -3 tabletsof such charcoal in your fingers as emonstrate in the picture an for

    a few minutes move your hans slightly up an own, or parting an

    +oining them. Frite to me about the results.

    Tefelin.

    1 have so far isolate E "S# emanators beneficial for humans: bee

    honeycombs, a gri of +oine hans $more about it in the ne5t chapter%,

    a sieve, a phylactery otherwise known as tefelin.

    Fhat is itB 2n ol evice: a tightly sown leather cube attache to aleather platform with two bans. 1nsie the cube there are four strips of

    parchment-tightly rolle, bleache, soft kiskin with almuic

    inscriptions. 2 worshippers attache the evice to his forehea, withthe a5es of parchment rolls perpenicular to the forehea an their

    outer ens facing #ast. 1t turns out, the inscriptions were unimportantA

    what matters is the material, shape, an imensions.

    0ae of ifferent materials, the evice only causes unpleasantsensations, while a leather tefelin prouces a beneficial physiological

    effect-besies the shape an other factors, the microstructure of thematerial must have a part in it too.

    Thot's S*epter.

    he ancient #gyptian eity hoth is a go of science, sorcery, an an

    6accountant6 of the ea8s earthly ees. his is the esign of his staff:

    - or 3mm copper wire is twiste at the en in the shape of a flat spiral, with 3-E coils,each (4 cm in iameter8A closer to the hanle there are coils of transverse, 3-

    imensional spiral, each cm in iameter.

    he wire is inserte in the (9-cm-long s7uare-sectione hanle of ense woo, E cmthick at base an (. cm thick at its enA the entire staff with the wire is E( cm long. he

    narrow en of the hanle has (3 eep accorion-shape cuts.

    he staff works even without the wire $albeit not as strongly%A the wire is thin an coulbe of any material but works best if thickly insulate-two layers increases its effect.

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    1f you hol the staff as emonstrate in the picture, the total

    raiation emanating from the center of the large spiral,

    perpenicular to its surface, are very well-perceivable by thehuman palm on both sies.

    1 never foun out for what purpose ancient #gyptians use this

    6ouble-beam6 emanator.

    The yra!i/ of Cheops.

    0ake a pyrami of 3-E layers of thick, porous wrapping paper:

    454 cm s7uare base, ascening eges ()cm each. Glue it

    only at the eges, the tighter the better, but in a thin line.0ake a -9 cm hole in the mile of one of the sie facets.

    !ol a (4 cm-long piece of rawing coal in your fingers, or

    simply a pencil, an insert this inicator into the hole, slanting

    the other en towar the bottom of the pyrami. 6Stir6 the

    space insie the pyrami with the inicator, take it out, thenrepeat the proceure about 34 times.

    Hou will soon pick up an active one-a 6clot6-where the#gyptians ha their tombs. 2nother active one, above the top

    of the pyrami, is also well-perceive by the inicator if you

    rag its en over he top. 2fter some practice, the 6clot6 an the6torch6 are well-felt by the finger inserte into he pyrami, or a

    palm move above it.

    he pyrami effect that generate over the centuries many

    scary, mysterious stories is one of the "S# manifestations.

    The pyra!i/ skeleton.

    Similar interesting 7ualities are isplaye by pyramis of the same imensions but only

    skeletal, without facets-a skeleton glue together of * smooth, firm straws. !ere we get

    the effect of the total "S# of the straws with their comple5 capillary structure an theeffect of the entire cavern. Such pyramis can also be mae in other sies, with a

    proportional increase in the length of the eges.

    !ol such a pyrami above the hea of your frien, bottom own, for about min, thenbottom up. "onuct aitional e5periments with insects $bumblebees, eveloping

    caterpillars, etc.%, house plants, an perishable foos by placing the latter within the

    pyrami, above an unerneath it $always checking your e5periments by ientical ones

    but without the "S# effect%. 2n you will see that ancient #gyptians ha their reason tobuil pyramis...

    Telekinesis.

    his is the name for a contactless movement of light ob+ects of which the so-calle gifte

    people are capable-i. e. moving a match bo5 on a table without touching it, holing atennis ball in the air...

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    1 submit that everyone has this ability. Suspen the escribe

    skeletal pyrami by its top from the ceiling on a thin, artificial

    threa, or better still on a long shre of elastic torn from astocking. "hoose a spot with the lowest convection $air

    circulation%.

    1n a few hours, when the pyrami stops rotating, from a -meter

    istance point at it a 6tube6 mae up of two hans $see picture%.1n a few minutes $o not lose your 6target6%, the pyrami will

    start rotating clockwise uner the pressure of this beam of "S#

    energy. Stop the rotation by moving the 6tube6 to the right sieof the skeleton-it will start rotating counter-clockwise.

    "onuct e5periments of various uration, after various time

    intervals an at various istance. Hou will see that telekinesis is

    no miracle, but only one of the manifestations of the Fill of

    0atter that is available to a chosen few but to everyone. hething is that the palm is also a multi-cavernous structure that

    clearly repels the inicator of the straw-cobweb evice escribe in this chapter. &y usingit an the skeletal pyrami, you can practice an evelop your 6telekinetic6 abilities,

    significantly increasing them.

    +The CS% of *ereals+.

    >asten a bunch of 34-E4 ripe wheat ears, better with short stems, insie a low cone ofark paper-as in the picture.

    !an-perceivable emanations repel the straw inicator of the same evice through anyscreens-even sharper than some honeycombs.

    his effect is prouce by multiple wege-shape sinuses between ear scales that are

    irecte at an acute angle towar the bottom of the ear.

    Hay!aking ith +!ira*les+.

    1n my youth, 1 was shown the following: a fragment of a cut stem, the length of a short

    pencil, was place on the blae of a scythe, ne5t to its blunt egeA another stem fragment

    of the same length, place on the blae in the same manner but at some istance, waspushe by the han to the first one.

    2t about *cm, the first stem got moving, 6ran away6 from the secon stem along the rim.

    h e5periment wasn8t always successfulA it usually occurre right after the cutting a largeamount of grass from the same spotA 1 forgot some elements or conitions of the

    e5periment.

    1 think the following factors were at work here: an abrupt change of the total "S# fielon the 6eforme6 meaow $let us remember the winfall case%, the gri of the reaper8s

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    fingers, the multi-cavernous properties of the stem itself, an perhaps its position against

    the morning sun. Static electricity is e5clue as everything at that hour is wet.

    I/entifie/ Flying #b0e*ts. 2 long time ago, in a remote "aucasus village, 1 wassurprise that people walk aroun the mountains at night, through ense forests. hey all

    ha lit cigarettes in their mouths, are all waving their hans, an their cigarette lights fora secon isappear behin their boies.... 1t turne out those weren8t cigarettes, but local

    fireflies,*uceola mingredicaA their light twinkle in this manner. 0eanwhile, I>; reportsan letters from my reaers tell of ark flying saucers that turn out either a flock of birs

    or a compact swarm of insects . 1 myself saw in Siberia not +ust 6columns6 of insects but

    also 6balls6 , 3 or E meters in iameter: in one case those were some mos7uito-like fliers,in another, winge ants of the#irmicagenus. >rom afar this swarm coul by taken by an

    ignorant person for a huge, roun plasmoi.

    2 etaile escription of the "S# effect may be foun in my book#ysteries of t"e

    +orld of Insects$'ovosibirsk, ())4%, in the +ournals Sibirskii vestnik

    selskok"o,iastvennoi nauki, no.3, ()*E, anPc"lovodstvo, no. (, ()*E. he physicalnature of "S# is escribe in&on-periodic .alloping P"enomena in t"e nvironment,

    vol. 111 $omsk, ()**%. 2ll in all 1 have publishe over three oen articles on the "S#.

    2s promise, 1 will escribe the rest in my ne5t book. 1 will call it as 1 calle this chapter:/lig"t.

    T% fro! 1erry 2e*ker 3 Vi*tor S. Grebennikov /ie/ at the age of 45 in

    April 6778 as reporte/ to (eely&et in to phone *alls to his

    s,rviving son Sergei.

    This all *a!e abo,t fro! an e!ail fro! a frien/ in ",ssia by the na!e of 9o,lain

    ho sent in the )"L so!e to years ago. hen I sa the pi*t,res of the

    platfor!: espe*ially the one hovering over the gro,n/ I tho,ght it as a

    hoa;: b,t I *o,l/n't stop thinking abo,t it so translate/ the ebpage in

    se*tions beginning ith the te*hni*al /es*riptions.

    As *orrelations began to fall into pla*e: I hesitate/ reporting it be*a,se his riting

    in/i*ate/ psy*hogeni* effe*ts asso*iate/ ith these str,*t,res: !eaning it

    *o,l/ be hall,*inations: /el,sions or /ay/rea!s perpetrate/ ith 0,!ping

    into the air hile on the platfor! as hat the T$ers 677 to 9,ri ith the instr,*tions being to take o,t the *ost of the

    book an/ shipping: give the rest to the rofessor. I /i/ re*eive the book

    4.77 )S b,t he lives in ",ssia.=

    3

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    $eanhile: I ha/ !a/e a 'se*ret' page on (eely&et hose )"L I !aile/ o,t to long

    ti!e tr,ste/ *onfi/ants to see hat they tho,ght abo,t it sin*e I val,e/

    their insights: opinions an/ knole/ge: asking the! to keep it on the ?T

    ,ntil I hear/ fro! the professor /ire*t: if possible. Fro! their responses:

    ne infor!ation as a//e/.

    Hoever: one of these long ti!e *onfi/ants ho over the years sin*e the S /ays:share/ !,*h ,sef,l infor!ation: ha/ no be*o!e infat,ate/ ith p,bli*

    attention an/ so poste/ the )"L an/ *lai!e/ I as 'hi/ing' infor!ation in

    or/er to f,rther his nefo,n/ *areer of p,bli* speaker an/ a,thor. Very

    sa/ to see this b,t ego 0,st took hi! over: so he's gone.

    In the !eanti!e: 9,ri ha/ kin/ly provi/e/ !e ith the rofessors !ailing a//ress

    an/ I i!!e/iately rote to hi! in ",ssian: sen/ing at least @ pa*kets over

    the ne;t year of *orrelate/ infor!ation to hi! an/ all translate/ into

    ",ssian.

    In all that ti!e I re*eive/ only one letter fro! the rofessor hi*h state/ he ha/

    s,ffere/ a stroke: that he ha/ no /egree an/ ha/ learne/ hat he kne

    fro! his e;perien*es in 'g,lags'

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    gen,s: it *o,l/ be a beetle: a b,tterfly: a bee: a asp: a lo*,st: a

    grasshopper: a /,ng beetle. There are so!e 8877 spe*ies of beetles in

    ",ssia.

    rofessor Grebennikov as a great e*ologist as yo, *an tell by his prote*tive

    attit,/e toar/ the environ!ent. He as afrai/ if the na!e of the inse*t

    ere reveale/: people o,l/ r,sh to the area an/ kill off all of the!. I rotehi! in to separate letters that it as not ne*essary to kno the inse*t

    na!e or gen,s.

    In or/er to allo verifi*ation: all e nee/e/ ere T# of the inse*t *overs hi*h

    *o,l/ be analye/ ,n/er an ele*tron !i*ros*ope to /eter!ine geo!etry an/

    /i!ensions: fro! that point: it sho,l/ be possible to /,pli*ate it artifi*ially

    an/ the inse*t o,l/ be forever safe.

    I offere/ the rofessor >8:777 )S in *ash if he *o,l/ sen/ !e to of the *overs

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    s*ien*e: philosophy an/ theosophy: she//ing ,ite ne an/ novel vies on

    the nat,re of gravity: ti!e an/ paranor!al e;perien*es.

    e ill *ontin,e to *orrelate infor!ation an/ try to pin /on e;peri!ents that *an

    verify vario,s aspe*ts of his *lai!s. He has *ertainly provi/e/ !any

    e;peri!ents that see! to rely !ostly on h,!an per*eptions.

    e nee/ to fin/ ays to /ete*t these e!anations ith instr,!entation: e;a*tly thesa!e proble! e have ith Aether%: e nee/ a kin/ of atta*h!ent for

    a FL)(% !eter an/ a s*ope to be able to ,alify an/ ?)A&TIF9 these

    kin/s of energies.

    I o,l/ like to a// one f,rther *o!!ent: please /o not *onf,se ti!e /ilation ith

    ti!e travel. They are not re!otely the sa!e. Ti!e /ilation si!ply slos

    /on the lo*al te!poral fiel/ of an ob0e*t: kin/ of like a 'stasis' fiel/ on Star

    Trek so that anything o,tsi/e this lo*al area !oves at the nor!al spee/:

    hile anything insi/e this fiel/ ages at a sloer rate. "efer to the Ti!e

    2ilation file.

    The rofessors' frien/ an/ asso*iate is 9,ri &. Chere/ni*henko.

    If yo, have *o!!ents: i/eas or infor!ation relevant to the above: please post it tothe(eely&et /is*,ssion listor sen/ it to 1erry 2e*kerfor posting to the list:

    thanks

    A//itional fas*inating infor!ation relating to eight loss in sleepalkers as

    provi/e/ by Slavek (rapelka an/ ith f,ll /etails poste/ at his ebsite atJ

    A!aing Sleepalking %;peri!ents

    3*

    http://www.keelynet.com/time/tdilation.htmhttp://www.keelynet.com/time/tdilation.htmmailto:[email protected]://www.keelynet.com/discuss.htmhttp://www.keelynet.com/discuss.htmmailto:[email protected]?subject=Grebennikov%20commentshttp://www3.sympatico.ca/slavek.krepelka/exper/sleepw.htmhttp://www3.sympatico.ca/slavek.krepelka/exper/sleepw.htmhttp://www.keelynet.com/time/tdilation.htmhttp://www.keelynet.com/time/tdilation.htmmailto:[email protected]://www.keelynet.com/discuss.htmmailto:[email protected]?subject=Grebennikov%20commentshttp://www3.sympatico.ca/slavek.krepelka/exper/sleepw.htm
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    Again: e ant to p,bli*ly a*knole/ge the efforts of Slavek (rapelkaan/ "energh,isfor spen/ing the >B77.77 to get the Chapter @ file translate/ an/

    passing it on.

    If yo, o,l/ like to *ontrib,te so!ething to help the! re*over their *osts: please

    sen/ an e!ail to "en ergh,is for infor!ation on ho to /o so.

    THA&(S

    So F% people a*t,ally *ontrib,te ith anything !ore than *o!!ents or looking

    for free !aterial resear*he/ or vali/ate/ by others.

    There is !ore infor!ation hi*h ill be a//e/ to this page or linke/ in f,t,re.

    A//itional infor!ation fro! o,r translator that !ight be of ,seJ

    +The only spe*ifi* inse*t I've seen !entione/ th,s far of possibly interest as the

    one I i/entifie/ in the portion of the 'Flight' *hapter yo, sa: the bee:

    'Hali*t,s ,a/ri*in*t,s'. It see!s that parti*,lar s,bspe*ies is native to

    Siberia: altho,gh !ost of the other referen*es so,n/ fairly generi*.+

    A pi*t,re of the !,/nest an/ the Hali*t,s ?,a/ri*in*t,s photos I fo,n/ on the ebJ

    8. Trigona

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    5. Trigona

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