lilies
The Living Force
'Never Trust Wikipedia' says:
"Divine winds", on both occasions, 'precision striking' the invaders. Uh-huh, sure.. I thought wikipedia editors were making up history as usual, turning reality into a fantastic fable, but then, I found this independent link and you won't believe it, they corroborate the wikipedia-editors, about what they think happened. Their more objective-appearing account is even more unreal, - you'll see what I mean in a moment. Read the passages about the war, they are quite dramatic. How weak Japan - mired in internal disputes - was only able to muster a puny, squabbling samurai army using outdated battle customs and low-level military technology, compared to Kublai Khan's hi-tech invaders.
The invaders had 3 times as many soldiers, their immense fleet used catapult-launched hi-tech bombs, poisoned arrowheads with shorter bows that were able to shoot twice as far as samurai bows, plus superior, drum-signal-based troops coordination. Yet these mighty invaders were repelled with the help of two storms. Still, even with this supernatural help, the samurais in Japan were almost destroyed.
Now, you could say, its just coincidence. Two isn't really that big of a number. As the Mongol invaders simply massacred entire villages in their way, probably large amounts of negative human creative energy was trashing around feeding the storms. Maybe the Japanese - witnessing their slain people - were hating the Mongols so much that their hate-energy fed the storms.
Anyway - and this is the surreal element here - the account even uses the words describing the extremely violent weather as:
But this surreal taste of the unbelievable is exactly what characterizes the phenomenon I was describing on numerous occasions.
Normally and as a cautionary measure here on the forum we usually emphasize our explanation as speculation, when we hear about a tall tale and suspect it a complete fantasy. But if its actually happening in your village and people are commenting about the event, can you call it speculation? Doesn't matter. For the sake of keeping up Objectivity, we shall use the word anyway.
What could have happened?
So going with this forum's rules, here is my - s p e c u l a t i o n - about what might have happened:
I think it was a similar operator. Probably not too old, full of libido with most of his/her mitochondria working at full intensity. A single such person or even better a group in 13th century Japan gathered ample info about the incoming Mongol invasion, heard the signals, counted the dead, witnessed the wailing relatives of slain villagers and decided, its time to act.
Modus Operandi:
Its really the easiest job is to amplify psychic "charges" in an already storm-prone area. A land that lays where there is frequent violent storms, to make it unnaturally strong and become super devastating. Make it so its rooting up trees, destroying houses and when out on the sea, triple the waves trashing strength so the sea destroys any ship. You can imagine what kind of thoughts must be amplified in order to create such scale of destruction. If you ever heard "Speaking in languages" during some Christian gatherings that cannot approach this. The wailing and swearing of an evil spirit through the possessed during an exorcism might be too long and incoherent, lacking focus for this purpose. Nah.. How you create such a devastating storm is a focused and relatively short speech without language, vocalizing the violent energy of the storm, building up a feeling what might be called hate - felt toward the Mongols in this case -, but its no hate really, rather its directed into Nature as an extremely violent psychic energy giving it the purpose of total destruction. The result is usually a destructive storm. Understandable the personal hate-feelings toward the Mongols must have been very strong then, so you can imagine the psychic energy that was shot UP there to do its work. The result was pretty much what could be expected. Two large storms on each occasion, saving Japan from the Mongol invasion. Again the results are so surreal and unbelievable, but real, that even if this Operator / or Group was famous and the story "went viral", historians wouldn't have believed it anyway and would have told it exactly as they did. Using the word in the quote above. Because this is how the limits of the Human Condition and its limited mind operating on closed-shut, short-circuited principles.
The thunderstorms of 1274 and the typhoon of 1281 helped the samurai defenders of Japan repel the Mongol invaders despite being vastly outnumbered. These winds became known as kami-no-Kaze, which literally translates as "wind of the gods". This is often given a simplified translation as "divine wind". The kami-no-Kaze lent credence to the Japanese belief that their lands were indeed divine and under supernatural protection.
"Divine winds", on both occasions, 'precision striking' the invaders. Uh-huh, sure.. I thought wikipedia editors were making up history as usual, turning reality into a fantastic fable, but then, I found this independent link and you won't believe it, they corroborate the wikipedia-editors, about what they think happened. Their more objective-appearing account is even more unreal, - you'll see what I mean in a moment. Read the passages about the war, they are quite dramatic. How weak Japan - mired in internal disputes - was only able to muster a puny, squabbling samurai army using outdated battle customs and low-level military technology, compared to Kublai Khan's hi-tech invaders.
The invaders had 3 times as many soldiers, their immense fleet used catapult-launched hi-tech bombs, poisoned arrowheads with shorter bows that were able to shoot twice as far as samurai bows, plus superior, drum-signal-based troops coordination. Yet these mighty invaders were repelled with the help of two storms. Still, even with this supernatural help, the samurais in Japan were almost destroyed.
Now, you could say, its just coincidence. Two isn't really that big of a number. As the Mongol invaders simply massacred entire villages in their way, probably large amounts of negative human creative energy was trashing around feeding the storms. Maybe the Japanese - witnessing their slain people - were hating the Mongols so much that their hate-energy fed the storms.
Anyway - and this is the surreal element here - the account even uses the words describing the extremely violent weather as:
e.g. the mighty storms came.Japan's Miracle
They say that truth is stranger than fiction, and in this case, it's certainly true. Just when it appeared that the samurai would be exterminated and Japan crushed under the Mongol yoke, an incredible, miraculous event took place.
But this surreal taste of the unbelievable is exactly what characterizes the phenomenon I was describing on numerous occasions.
Normally and as a cautionary measure here on the forum we usually emphasize our explanation as speculation, when we hear about a tall tale and suspect it a complete fantasy. But if its actually happening in your village and people are commenting about the event, can you call it speculation? Doesn't matter. For the sake of keeping up Objectivity, we shall use the word anyway.
What could have happened?
So going with this forum's rules, here is my - s p e c u l a t i o n - about what might have happened:
I think it was a similar operator. Probably not too old, full of libido with most of his/her mitochondria working at full intensity. A single such person or even better a group in 13th century Japan gathered ample info about the incoming Mongol invasion, heard the signals, counted the dead, witnessed the wailing relatives of slain villagers and decided, its time to act.
Modus Operandi:
Its really the easiest job is to amplify psychic "charges" in an already storm-prone area. A land that lays where there is frequent violent storms, to make it unnaturally strong and become super devastating. Make it so its rooting up trees, destroying houses and when out on the sea, triple the waves trashing strength so the sea destroys any ship. You can imagine what kind of thoughts must be amplified in order to create such scale of destruction. If you ever heard "Speaking in languages" during some Christian gatherings that cannot approach this. The wailing and swearing of an evil spirit through the possessed during an exorcism might be too long and incoherent, lacking focus for this purpose. Nah.. How you create such a devastating storm is a focused and relatively short speech without language, vocalizing the violent energy of the storm, building up a feeling what might be called hate - felt toward the Mongols in this case -, but its no hate really, rather its directed into Nature as an extremely violent psychic energy giving it the purpose of total destruction. The result is usually a destructive storm. Understandable the personal hate-feelings toward the Mongols must have been very strong then, so you can imagine the psychic energy that was shot UP there to do its work. The result was pretty much what could be expected. Two large storms on each occasion, saving Japan from the Mongol invasion. Again the results are so surreal and unbelievable, but real, that even if this Operator / or Group was famous and the story "went viral", historians wouldn't have believed it anyway and would have told it exactly as they did. Using the word in the quote above. Because this is how the limits of the Human Condition and its limited mind operating on closed-shut, short-circuited principles.
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