Nikola Tesla knew this secret of Egyptian pyramids: He believed that pyramids were energy generators capable of producing free, limitless energy.
No doubt, the inventions of Nikola Tesla changed the world. There are many mysteries and myths associated with him, discussing some bizarre technologies that may have been developed by Tesla. Even though he had hundreds of patents, Tesla had other interests. His ideas and creations gave the world smartphones, wi-fi, AC electrical supply systems, and more.
Among the most unusual things was his preoccupation with Egyptian pyramids, one of humanity’s most mysterious and magnificent constructions.
According to Tesla, pyramids served a higher purpose than just mesmerizing giant stone sculptures. Throughout his life, he investigated pyramids and found some alluring things about them. He wondered if they were not giant transmitters of energy: a thought that coincided with his investigation into how to send energy wirelessly.
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In 1905, Tesla filed a patent in the U.S. titled “The art of transmitting electrical energy through the natural medium,” outlining designs for a series of generators around the world that would tap the ionosphere for energy collections.
He saw planet Earth itself, with its two poles, as a giant electrical generator of limitless energy. His triangle-shaped design became known as Tesla’s electromagnetic pyramid.
Nikola Tesla explained that the location of the Egyptian pyramid was responsible for the power.
He built a tower facility known as the Tesla Experimental Station in Colorado Springs and Wardenclyffe Tower or Tesla Tower on the East Coast that sought to take advantage of the Earth’s energy field.
The locations were chosen according to the laws of where the Pyramids of Giza were built, related to the relationship between the elliptical orbit of the planet and the equator. The design was intended for wireless transmission of energy.”
Tesla’s tower was also believed to have been built upon aquifers, which means that the electric technology used by Tesla is nearly identical to that applied in the construction of the Great Pyramid. Both the Great Pyramid of Giza and Tesla’s magnificent Wardenclyffe tower were the systems that generated negative ions and were capable of transmitting them without the need for electric cables, a completely free and wireless energy that powered other electrical components through vast distances.
In 2015, Archaeologists and Geophysical Researchers from the University of Mexico announced the discovery of a large cenote, or sinkhole cave, underneath the famous Maya temple pyramid at Chichen Itza. The pyramid is known as Kukulkan or El Castillo. It is renowned as one of the ‘new’ seven wonders of the world for its perfect astronomical geometry.
Experts found out that it is connected to other caverns and lakes in the area. The water filling the cavern is thought to run from North to South. This means that the Pyramid of Chichen Itza sits upon a subterranean water source just as Tesla’s Wardenclyffe Tower, and the Great Pyramid of Giza.
Interestingly, the outer casing of the Great Pyramid of Giza was covered by ‘white tufa limestone,’ put together in such a way that nothing could fit in between the stones. It is noteworthy to mention that the ‘white tufa limestone’ used in the outer casing of the Great Pyramid of Giza does not contain magnesium and has very high insulating properties. It is believed that this sophisticated insulation property allowed the ancient Egyptians to fully control the release of energy from within the Pyramid.
In addition to the outer casing, the stone blocks used in the inner parts of the Great Pyramid were made from another form of limestone, which contains small amounts of crystals and metals which are believed to be two important properties that allowed maximum power transmission. Interestingly, the shafts built inside the Great pyramid were made of granite, and there is a slightly radioactive substance permitting the ionization of the air inside the air shafts of the Great Pyramid, similar characteristics can be found in a conductive insulating cable.
Another aspect of Tesla was his affection for numbers. He was obsessed with numbers “3,” “6,” “9” which he believed were the key to the universe. He is alleged to have stated: “If you only knew the magnificence of the 3, 6, and 9, then you would have a key to the universe.”
Some believe Tesla’s obsessions with these numbers connected to his preference for pyramidal shapes and the belief that there was some fundamental mathematical law and ratios that are part of a universal math language.
In his book “Pharaoh’s Pump” (1973), Edward J. Kunkel proposed that Great Pyramid worked like a hydraulic ram pump, forcing water up through the structure and out the small shafts via changes in air pressure. Later, Engineer John Cadman tested and modified Kunkel’s theory, discovering that the pyramid could work as a vibrational “pulse generator,” via changes in air and water pressure. He argued that as water flooded into the subterranean chamber via the descending passageway, the pressure would have increased via granite check valves until a vibrational pulse was released. These “pulses” translated to a steady rhythm of vertical compression waves that would have propagated up through the structure.
Some people thought Tesla was eccentric for coming up with these theories. But his ideas have actually had a huge impact on the way we think about the pyramids today. Researchers and scholars have been digging into his theories for years and using them to uncover some of the biggest mysteries surrounding these ancient structures.
For example, recently scientists have used theoretical physics to investigate how the Great Pyramid of Egypt would react to certain radio waves. They found out that if the radio waves were a certain length, the pyramid could concentrate the energy inside its rooms and focus it under its base. The scientists did lots of calculations to figure this out.
They first thought about what radio wavelengths would work best. Then they made a model of how the pyramid would react to the waves. They figured out how much of the energy from the waves would get absorbed or spread out. Lastly, they checked how the energy would move around inside the pyramid when the waves hit it.
To help explain all of this, the scientists used something called multipole analysis. This is when you take a complicated object and break it down into simpler parts. Then you can see how each part interacts with the energy that’s coming in. It’s like taking apart a puzzle to see how each piece fits together.
But the Pyramid study is not the only proof that Tesla was ahead of his time. There are more Tesla’s projects that seemed unrealistic at the time, but that scientists and enthusiasts re-evaluate and try to implement today.
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Dr. Karla Turner claimed There Are Entities who can take our consciousness – out of our physical bodies, disable our control of our bodies, install one of their own entities, and use our bodies as vehicles for their own activities before returning our consciousness to our bodies. She died of Cancer within a year after her work was published.
Karla Turner was one of the few America's alien abductees who found a respectable position in UFOlogy after she had made some strong claims about alien abductions.
Her extensive research into the subject revealed that aliens manipulate perception, control consciousness, cause unexplained illnesses and mental decline, and engage in gruesome activities in underground facilities.
Her findings highlight the alarming physical, psychological, and spiritual consequences faced by abductees, raising questions about the true nature and intentions of these extraterrestrial encounters.
This is going to be an interesting thread!
Dr. Turner had been involved in studying alien abductions since 1988.
In her books “Into the Fringe” and “Taken,” she shared her abduction experiences and the stories of other abductees, highlighting the disturbing nature of these events.
In “Masquerade of Angels,” she recounted the experiences of Ted Rice, who initially believed the aliens to be benevolent but later realized their predatory nature. One particular account involved Rice as an 8-year-old boy, witnessing his deceased grandfather transforming into a reptoid and demanding intimacy with him, resulting in the death of his grandmother shortly afterward.
It was discovered that abductions were transgenerational in her husband’s family, with accounts dating back to the early 1900s.
Turner and her family members, including her son, brother, sister-in-law, and their children, had all had experiences related to abductions. Some family members were initially hesitant to discuss their encounters until they learned about Turner’s experiences.
Hypnosis was used in their research, although it has been controversial, with some researchers suggesting that it can lead to false memories. Turner’s opinion on these issues is not stated in the given excerpt.
Karla Turner in this rare footage is talking about Lying NHIs & MILABs: Human agencies who (allegedly) abduct & intimidate, experiences. She says “There’s a lot of them out there & we know where they come from.”
Nina Kulagina: Russian Woman with Super Psychokinetic Power who could move objects with her mind, magnetize things, and affect internal organs & organic tissues. CIA declassified report says...
Nina Kulagina was particularly interesting to the United States government who possessed unbelievable telekinesis abilities. Stranger still, her supernatural achievements are detailed in multiple US federal reports.
Nina was born in St. Petersburg in 1926. At 14, she was recruited to fight against the Nazis in World War II. During her service in the Red Army, she was seriously injured, ending her military career. Afterward, she got married and had children. But soon, strange things started happening to her.
It's a thread journey...
One day, when she was particularly angry, Nina noticed objects around her moving on their own. She thought it might be a poltergeist. Over time, she realized that these movements were linked to her strong emotions.
Curious, Nina began practicing to control this strange ability, known as psychokinesis. At first, she struggled to move objects at will. But with persistence, she managed to move small items like matchsticks just by thinking about it.
As her confidence grew, she could move heavier objects and even developed other psychic abilities, like sensing what was in a stranger's pocket or identifying colors while blindfolded.
However, the intense mental training started to affect her health, and she ended up in the hospital for exhaustion. While there, medical staff witnessed her strange powers. Soon after, the state authorities took an interest in her.
Nina attracted the attention of parapsychologists and doctors across Russia. Many were doubtful about her supposed supernatural abilities.
Forty scientists, including two Nobel Prize winners, studied the mysterious housewife and conducted various strict experiments.
To the experts' surprise, she repeatedly succeeded in many tests under controlled conditions, showing impressive skill.
After confirming her telekinetic abilities, doctors examined her. They found that her heartbeat, brain waves, and electromagnetic field changed during psychokinesis. Each session was closely monitored by researchers.
Here are some of the intriguing paranormal accomplishments they recorded and filmed:
-Physically moving objects & altering their rotation.
-Cracking an egg then reassembling the shell fragments.
-Imprinting images on undeveloped film. Magnetizing or demagnetizing things.
-Altering living cells and organic tissue. Modifying essential physiological functions.
Paul Dienach: Man whose Consciousness Inexplicably Traveled to the Year 3906 AD due to a Strange, Time-Traveling Phenomenon during Coma.
Paul Amadeus Dienach born in 1884 near Zurich, was a simple professor of French and German, but what happened to him (regardless of the explanations that can be given) was truly incredible.
His story is based on his personal journal was originally published in 1972 in Greek. In his journal, he had written in extreme detail about how he lived in the year 3906 when he ended up in a coma for a year.
Paul Dienach was a Swiss-Austrian teacher with fragile health. His father was a German-speaking Swiss and his mother was an Austrian from Salzburg. Dienach travelled to Greece in the autumn of 1922, after having recovered from a one-year coma caused by a serious illness, hoping that the mild climate would improve his condition.
During his time in Greece, Dienach taught French and German language lessons in order to provide himself with a minimum income. Amongst his students was George Papahatzis, a student that Dienach appreciated more than any of the others. Papahatzis describes his teacher as a "very cautious and very modest man that used to emphasize the details.”
Dienach, according to Papahatzis, was born in a suburb of Zurich and spent his teenage years in a nearby village. He later studied subjects focused on helping people, with a particular interest in cultural history and classical languages. It's believed that he died of tuberculosis in Athens, Greece, or while returning home through Italy, likely in early 1924.
Before Paul Dienach died, he gave his diary to Papahatzis, asking him to translate it from German to Greek to improve his language skills. Papahatzis thought it was a novel, but as he translated, he discovered it was actually Dienach’s diary... from the future!
That's not him in the thumbnail; it is widely used on the internet to describe Dienach (you know, to catch the eye). We will discuss it later in the thread. So enjoy!
Dienach likely had a rare brain disease called encephalitis lethargica. The first time he fell asleep because of it, he was out for 15 minutes. The second time, he was in a coma for a year. While in a Geneva hospital, Dienach claimed his mind entered the body of a man named Andreas Northam, living in the year 3906 AD.
After waking up, Dienach didn't tell anyone about his experience, fearing they'd think he was crazy. Instead, he wrote down everything he remembered about the future. He even quit his job to focus on writing as much as possible.
Dienach described the world and people of 3906 AD based on what he could understand as a man from the 20th century. It was hard for him to grasp everything he saw since he wasn't familiar with their technology or way of life.
The amount of specific detail within the book has made many people think that he had actually lived in some sort of spiritual way in 3906 or a far futuristic world based on the amount of detail given. Again, 1921 wasn’t all that interesting in the sense that there weren’t many things to inspire writers or stimulate their imagination.
In his memoirs, Dienach says that people in the future understood his strange medical condition, which they called "conscious slide." They told him about the events from the 21st to the 39th century. However, they didn't tell him about the 20th century, fearing that if he returned to his time (which he did), knowing the future might change history or his life.
Papahatzis started to read the diary and also translate it from French to Greek. Within the 800 pages Dienach described how during his coma, his consciousness left his body and entered the body of a person from the year 3906. Throughout the diary, Dienach mentions that he is not a writer nor a man with a lot of imagination, and fine details.
Mike “Madman” Marcum: Man Who Stole Transformers, Built a Time Machine & Disappeared From Earth. Scientists said his technology was on Track.
In 1995, then 21-year-old Michael "Mad Man" Marcum stole six power transformers from a Missouri power station for use in a large-scale "time machine" he was attempting to construct. He wanted to do this so he could find out future lottery numthen-21-year-oldbers and become rich. While experimenting with a device called a Jacob's ladder, he said he saw something strange: a circular vortex.
Mike wanted to see what would happen if he threw a metal screw into his machine. The screw seemed to disappear and then reappear a few feet away after a second or two. Mike thought the screw had traveled through time. Excited by this, he decided to improve his machine, but it caught fire and was destroyed. Instead of giving up, he became even more determined. Since he needed $20,000 worth of transformers for his project, he broke into a power station in King City, Missouri, and stole six transformers.
Later, while testing some things, Mike caused a power outage in his neighborhood, which got the attention of the authorities. When they discovered he had stolen the transformers, he was arrested.
After being released a few months later, Art Bell invited him to discuss his time machine on Coast to Coast Radio. Mike talked about his plans in detail and earned the nickname "Madman" on the show. As more people heard about his project, he received donations to help him create a larger electromagnetic vortex that could fit a person.
Scientists
A year after his first radio appearance, Mike returned to Coast to Coast Radio in 1996. He claimed he was only about a month away from completing his legal time machine and planned to take just his phone with him when he tested it.
He claimed to still be experimenting with a now more sophisticated "time machine", even upping the anti to incredible proportions. Apparently the electro-magnetic "vortex" he had now generated was large enough for a man to walk through.
Art Bell compared what Mike was doing to the Philadelphia Experiment, and suggested that he throw an insect or animal through the vortex to test it before walking through it himself. The interview ended with Markham claiming to be on the cusp of generating the desired amount of voltage.
However, in 1997, he mysteriously disappeared without any warning, leaving everyone to wonder if his time machine actually worked or if something had gone wrong.
Links to three interviews of Mike with Art Bell: 1. Mad Man Marcum & His Time Machine Story - Art Bell - YouTube () 2. Time Travels | Art Bell interviews Michael "Mad Man" Marcum (Interview-2, 1996) () 3. Art Bell MITD - Mad Man Markum - Time Traveler ()archive.org youtube.com youtube.com
So many online sources and videos surfaced a story that Mike built his machine several feet in the air inside his Kansas City warehouse and began throwing guinea pigs inside the circular vortex as it formed.
He claimed the guinea pigs would disappear inside the vortex and reappear in the warehouse parking lot every time either on the east or west side of the building, never the north or south.
Mike decided to test the time machine on himself in 1998. He jumped into the arc and claimed to wake up in a farm field in Ohio, cold, hungry, and miles from the closest town.
He ended up making his way to a homeless shelter in Cincinnati and realized it was now the year 2000. He had somehow lost 2 years during his journey. Mike returned to his warehouse in Kansas City only to find it empty with no trace of his notes, records, or the time machine.
Ramanujan, The Great Genius, claimed all his mathematical formulae came to him in his subconscious mind by a supreme deity during sleep. He died at a very young age of 32.
Srinivasa Ramanujan was a great genius and a great mathematician. He was born in 1887 in the province of Tamil Nadu in India. He was fascinated by numbers. "Numbers," he said, "had personalities" for him.
What's amazing about Ramanujan's theories is that today they form the basis for astrophysics and also black hole studies as well as artificial intelligence. Nobody was talking about any of these subjects in the 1920s.
One of the most fascinating aspects of Ramanujan as a mathematician, was the visionary element in his work. He always insisted, and he was very adamant about this, that the mathematical discoveries he made came to him in dreams and visions provided by the goddess Namagiri.
Namagiri, historically, was the consort of a god whose emblem was drops of blood and so sometimes, he said, the formulae, the calculations, the numbers were written in drops of blood. He often talked about how, in these visions, he would see these fantastic, beautiful mathematical formulae unscrolling before him.
It is a thread...
It's interesting to note that many of the equations in the early notebooks of Ramanujan were actually a particular kind of equation called "magical squares." Magical squares have an interesting function in Hinduism.
They're actually used to invoke a particular deity. It's understood that certain deities can be embodied or represented in numbers, and that these magical squares have the power to generate the presence of that deity.
Author & Art Historian William Henry says," When we look at the stories of these visionaries, especially mathematical visionaries who are guiding our advanced science and physics today, you see a common denominator.
They have dreams of otherworldly beings, divine beings, even extraterrestrials, and it appears that these otherworldly beings are guiding humanity into a new age of super-advanced technology that will ultimately allow us to interface with the cosmos."
Zero sparked curiosity!
Even as a child, Ramanujan loved exploring and questioning math concepts that went beyond what was typically taught. One story from his childhood shows how curious he was and gives us an idea of his later approach to math.
When Ramanujan was a young student, he asked his math teacher an interesting question: “What is zero divided by zero?” The teacher didn’t have a clear answer because, in math, this question doesn’t have a defined answer, so he said, “It is undefined.” Ramanujan wasn’t satisfied with this response. He suggested that maybe zero divided by zero could be infinity, explaining that dividing a number by a smaller and smaller number results in a number that gets bigger and bigger.
This story highlights Ramanujan’s natural curiosity and his unique way of thinking about math, even as a child. His habit of questioning and challenging standard math ideas helped shape his future discoveries in mathematics.
This early question about zero divided by zero can also be seen as a hint of his later deep interest in exploring the ideas of zero and infinity. Ramanujan later developed theories about zero and infinity, suggesting that “Zero” represented absolute reality and “Infinity” represented the countless forms of that reality. According to him, multiplying infinity and zero resulted in all numbers, with each number representing a different act of creation. This idea links back to his childhood curiosity about zero divided by zero.
This Man created the model for Consciousness used by the CIA but was later killed in the deadliest plane crash in American history.
Itzhak Bentov, the Czechoslovakia-born Israeli-American scientist and inventor, who became an innovator in the field of bio-medical engineering in the USA, suggested that consciousness is the common uniting element of all creation, and that through this link all things are in permanent contact.
Bentov believed that our minds are not just in our heads, but are connected to everything around us and even to the universe. He thought that this connection is what makes us alive and aware. (Stalking the Wild Pendulum: On the mechanics of consciousness, Itzhak Bentov, Wildwood House, 1978).
For a long time, scientists didn't study consciousness because they didn't understand it. But in the 1990s, they started to learn more about it. Now, many scientists are working to understand consciousness, but it's still a mystery.
Think of consciousness like a big puzzle that we're trying to solve. We know some of the pieces, but we don't know how they all fit together yet. Bentov's idea was an important piece of the puzzle, and scientists are still building on his work today.
Keep scrolling there is more to read...
According to Bentov, consciousness evolves to the 'absolute' which is the source of all consciousness. Matter, composed of quanta of energy, is the vibrating, changing component of pure consciousness. The absolute is fixed, manifest and invisible.
Bentov proposed that the brain acts as a transducer, converting the energy of consciousness into the electrical and chemical signals that are used to communicate information within the body. He also believed that the brain has the ability to tune into different frequencies of consciousness, allowing individuals to experience different states of awareness.
Bentov's theory is based on the idea that consciousness is a fundamental aspect of the universe and is not limited to the brain or the body. He argued that consciousness is non-local, meaning it is not bound by space and time and can exist independently of the physical body.
Bentov's theory has been influential in the field of consciousness studies, but it remains a subject of debate and is not widely accepted by mainstream science.
Mystics and sages have spoken for long of an interconnecting cosmic field behind everyday appearances — for example, the Akashic record, after the Sanskrit and Vedic term for space — that conserves and conveys information, and information is implicitly intelligible, otherwise we would not be able to perceive it as being able to 'inform'.
Quantum science, meanwhile, has come up with the idea that we live in a holographic universe, the implication of which is that all information is everywhere at the same time, in a state of 'zero separation'. A field of information as the essence of the universe has been posited by Ervin Laszlo, the Hungarian philosopher of science and systems theorist and, indeed, named by him the Akashic field, or 'A-field'.
Laszlo (b1932) sees the fundamental energy and information-carrying field as arising from the quantum 'vacuum', and having its equivalent in a zero-point field that underlies space itself. This field comprises a subtle flow of fluctuating energies from which everything in the universe arises, including consciousness. Laszlo regards the Akashic field as the original source of all things arising in time and space and also the continuous and enduring memory of the universe, holding the record of everything that has ever happened and relating it to all that is yet to happen.
How is such a record, such a higher consciousness, accessed? Most of us have no inkling of a higher 'cosmic' mind, except in moments of 'breakthrough consciousness', fleeting mystical experience, or during meditation or undergoing other altered states of consciousness (ASCs).
Such moments, says the English philosopher and novelist Colin Wilson (1931–2013) in Super Consciousness (2009), his study of the phenomenon, are capable of leading to a sustained experience of 'sheer perception of meaning' which for the human race would be 'the decisive step to becoming something closer to gods'.