Venus
Cities
Venus
Lander Photos

Color image of the surface of Venus from
the Venera 13 Land

Color image of the surface of Venus from
the Russian Venera 13 Lander

Color image of the surface of Venus from
the Russian Venera 13 Lander
They say that
it is 900F degrees on Venus, if that is so, why aren’t the surfaced melted???? There is
No melting of the surface of Venus here in the Photo from NASA of Venus
Surface. Notice
the ground is wet! 800 degrees would melt lead, do you see the photo of Venus
Surface melting and boiling; NO!

Russian Venera landers in mid-1970s and early 1980s show a landscape
of rock composed of basalt, a common and familiar volcanic rock. Stroll along
any beach along Lake Superior and you'll find some.

Pioneer 12 – Venus Radar Map

Russian Photos of Surface of Venus Map


Venus Plate Tectonics
The blue is lower elevation and the other colors are higher
elevations.

Venus
– Southern Hemisphere - European Space
Agency

Venus Ufo's Around This
Planet

Young Volcanoes On Venus

Young Volcanoes On Venus


Human Looking Aliens say this planet is lush and green and full of their civilization, you can see that is another lie when they speak


Venus Ufo's Around This Planet
Dr. T Lobsang Rampa - My Visit to Venus


Venus
– Southern Hemisphere - European Space Agency
Venus Lander Photos

Color
image of the surface of Venus from the Venera 13 Land

Color
image of the surface of Venus from the Russian Venera 13 Lander

Color image
of the surface of Venus from the Russian Venera 13 Lander
Dr. T. Lobsang Rampa visit to the Moon, and Venus with
the high lama masters of Tibet, and also saw the Earth’s History of Atlantis
and Lemuria in the Hall of Records on Venus. These were people who were human
and ate food, and had children. They travel to Earth in Starships, and have the
complete history of the past, present and future of Earth all recorded on
computers from time travel.
In
1956, London publishers Secker and Warburg brought out what they thought was a
very good occult book. Never did they, nor Doubleday and Company the
New York publishers, foresee that the book would suddenly capture the
imagination of two nations as the general public read the most fascinating book
on Tibet ever published.
The
book was autobiographic and told the strange and inspiring story of a Tibetan
monk who had progressed from neophyte to lamahood, and had eventually attained
a certain occult faculty, which comprised the title of the book. “THE THIRD
EYE,” by Tuesday Lobsang Rampa was not only a recounting of his initiations and
monastery doings, but it also proved to be a highly lively account of everyday
Tibetan life. We read the book from cover to cover one night, every bit as
fascinated as everybody else. But we couldn’t help wondering how an
Easterner could have mastered the English language so vivaciously.
The
reason was soon to come in the furor over the book, which took place in London
when some Tibetan scholars challenged the authenticity of Rampa and averred he
was not a Tibetan and had never been to Tibet!
Then
T. Lobsang Rampa’s side of the story was revealed. No he had indeed never
been to Tibet, in his present body. The spirit of a Tibetan lama had, however
entered his body, under unusual circumstances. In reply to his critics,
Rampa stated: “THE THIRD EYE is absolutely true and all that I write in
that book is fact. I, a Tibetan lama, now occupy what was originally the
body of a Western man, and I occupy it to the permanent and total exclusion of
the former occupant. He gave his willing consent, being glad to escape
from life on this earth in view of my urgent need.
“The
actual change-over occurred on the l3th of June, 1949, but the way had to be
prepared some time before that. I know that I have a special task to do,
and I became aware that it would be necessary to come to England for various
reasons connected with it. In the latter part of 1947, I was able to by
telepathy send impressions to a suitable person. In February, 1946, he
changed his name by legal Deed Poll.
“To
make the change-over easier he altered his address a number of times and lost
contact with all friends and relations. On the l3th of June 1949, he had a
slight accident which resulted in concussion and which ‘knocked him out of
himself.’ This enabled me to take over.
“I
tried very hard indeed to obtain employment in Eng- land, but for various
reasons there was no assistance from the Employment Exchange. For years I
visited Employment Exchanges and the Appointment
Bureau is Tavistock Square, London. I was also registered
with a number of private Employment Agencies and paid quite a considerable
amount to them in fees, but none of them did anything for me.
“For
some time we lived on capital which had been saved and upon anything which I
was able to earn from doing free- lance writing or advertising.
“I
have a special task to do because during my life in Tibet I had been to the Chang Tang Highlands where I had
seen a device which enables people to see the human aura. I
am clairvoyant and can see the aura as I have demonstrated to many people at
many times, but I am aware that if doctors and surgeons could see the human aura then they could
determine the illness afflicting a human body before it was at
all serious. It was not possible for me to come to England in the body,
which I then had. I tried but to no avail.
“The aura is merely a corona discharge of the body, of the life
force. It
is similar to the corona discharge from a high tension cable which can be seen
by almost anyone on a misty night, and if money would be spent on research,
medical science would have one of the most potent tools for the cure of
disease. I had to have money in order to carry out my own research, but, I have
never taken money for curing people’s illnesses or for taking their troubles
off their shoulders as has been misrepresented in a certain paper!
“And
how did The Third Eye come to be written? I certainly did not want to
write it but I was desperate to get a job so I could get on with my allotted
task. I tried for job after job without avail, until eventually a friend
offered to put me in touch with a gentleman who might be able to use my
service. Mr. Brooks said I should write a book. I insisted that I
did not want to write a book and so we parted. Mr. Brooks wrote me
again and once more suggested that I should write a book. In the interval
between seeing him and receiving his letter I had been for other interviews and
had been rejected. So with much reluctance I accepted Mr. Brooks’
offer to write such a book, and here again I repeat that everything said in
that book is true. Everything said in my second book, Doctor From Lhasa is
also true. One should not place too much credence in ‘experts’ or
‘Tibetan Scholars’ when it is seen how one “expert” contradicts the other, when
they cannot agree on what is right and what is wrong, and after all how many of
those ‘Tibetan scholars’ have entered a lamasery at the age of seven, and
worked all the way through life as a Tibetan, and then taken over the body of a
Westerner? I have!”
What
about the man whose body Rampa took over?
What
of his former life before the transformation? Following are some remarkable
statements by his wife: “Many people will wonder about the one who occupied
that Western body before it was taken over by a Tibetan and I, as the
wife, would like to tell something of events leading to the change of
personality. “At the first indication of something different I was more than a
little startled. We were leading a quiet life in Surrey, my husband being on
the staff of a correspondence college, in an advisory capacity, and the war had
been over for two years. Out of the blue came
his remark toward the end of 1947; sitting quietly for some time, he startled
me by suddenly saying, “I am going to change my name.” I
looked at him aghast for I failed to see any point in doing such a thing.
We had nothing to hide, nothing from which to run away. It took me some
time to recover after he continued, “Yes, we will change our name by Deed
Poll.”
“By
February, 1948, all the legal formalities had been completed, and we had no
further right to our previous name. My husband’s employer was not
pleased, but there was little he could do about it, especially as at about that
time one of the firm’s directors had made an alteration to his own name.
“Of course
everyone thought we had at last taken leave of our senses, but that never
bothered me. I had lived with my husband for eight years and knew that if
he had a hunch to do anything at all there was always a good reason for
it. Soon, however, we noticed people were not saying our name when
addressing us, and even after seeing it written they didn’t seem able to spell
it; for that reason we later shortened it. I want to clarify this point
to show that we have at no time used an alias as has been mistakenly suggested.
“At about this time my husband
talked a great deal about the East and on occasions he did in fact wear
Eastern dress; he often seemed to be very preoccupied in his manner, and
I have known him to fall into a trance state and speak in
an unfamiliar tongue, which I now believe to be a language
of the East. In July 1949, he again made a sudden decision; this time to
give up his job! This he did to the consternation of his employer who had
always found him to be a very useful and conscientious member of his staff.
“The
idea behind this was so that we could leave the district and lose all contact
with the past, which we did. Within a year we had completely lost touch with previous
acquaintances and with our former life. We managed to exist on what we
had saved, together with what we could earn from various forms of writing.
“The day I happened to look out the window and see my husband lying at the foot
of a tree in the garden is something I shall never forget. I hurried out
to find he was recovered, but to me, a trained nurse, he seemed to be stunned
or something. When eventually he regained
consciousness he seemed to act differently, and in ways I did not understand.
“After
getting him indoors and upstairs to our flat to rest, the main thought in my
mind was to get a doctor as quickly as possible, but I was reckoning without
him; he seemed to sense my alarm and implored me not to do so, assuring me that
he was quite all right.
Certainly his speech seemed different, more halting; as if he was unfamiliar with the language, and his voice appeared deeper than before.
“For
some time I was quite concerned, for something seemed to have happened to his
memory. Before speaking or moving he appeared to be making calculations; much later I learned that he was “tuning in to my mind” to
see what was expected of him. I do not mind admitting that in
the early stages I was very worried, but now it seems quite natural. I
have never ceased to wonder that such an ordinary individual as myself should
be so closely associated with such a remarkable occurrence as the advent of a
Tibetan lama to the Western World”
Although the so-called “Tibetan
Scholars” grabbed most of the press copy, there were those who felt that they
were not so scholarly after all. Consider the following letter, received by Gray
Barker from a Buddhist, when Barker announced that he would publish Rampa’s
second book in the United States and discuss the controversy in print.
Dear
Mr. Barker:
After
reading your remarks on Lobsang Rampa’s The Third Eye, I am prompted to
add a few of my own. During 1957, I had occasion to write a review of the book for the North
Indian Buddhist Quarterly, and most especially to discuss the
theological and philosophical material contained within the text. At the
time I wrote the review, I was, as were so many others, trying to find fault
with the accuracy of the information given. I had already heard that some
of the descriptions of costume and garb did not accord with the reports of
academic anthropology, and, in my ignorance of the divergences of Tibetan
religion from orthodox Buddhism, I was shocked to find that one who called
himself a monk should embrace views which, from the standpoint of Aryan
doctrine, were all but heretical.
Imagine
my surprise, then, when I received letters from Tibetan phoongi, complimenting
the succinct description of dbuchan theology contained in my review. This
description was composed exclusively of paraphrases on the Lobsang Rampa book
under review.
The
greatest point of discussion was that which had to do with the order of
discipline within the itinerant communities of Tibetan monks. The Western
correspondents, and Indian observers all told me that Rampa was wrong; but the Tibetans wrote complaining that he had divulged secret
knowledge, which was the property of the arcane schools of their country, and
which “a closed brother, in physical form, or etheric, did poorly to publish in
the far lands to the West, where it lay open to the gaze of the Uninitiate.”
Sincerely
yours,
Ganesha,
Mahaguru,
at Bodhi
Sangha Sat America
New York, N.Y.
Prologue by Gray Barker
Even
though “exposed” by “Tibetan scholars,” the public continued to believe in
Rampa; and to buy his books. Lobsang Rampa's subsequent books give more details
of experiences, which he encountered after the period, covered by The Third Eye.
Some of them consist of practical occult teachings from which the ordinary
person can profit. Rampa kept the subject of flying saucers and space travel
out of his books, evidently afraid that these accounts might not be
believed. Some of these writing, included in this book, have been
published by the “saucer press,” and some of them have been circulated
privately in a mimeographed manuscript edition.
Public
awareness of the UFO phenomena, however, has come a long way since the 1950's.
We think it is time to put together Rampa's flying saucer writings in book form
so that the public can read of these remarkable experiences.
And
so this limited edition has been prepared and published. We predict that
it will be much sought after, and that once this original edition is gone it
will become a prize collector's item. The copy you hold will become much worn
and dog-eared before its demise. We hope it gives pleasure to the owner,
and to those who borrow it!
Gray
Barker
"My
Visit to Venus" by T.Lobsang
Rampa
.
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|
PART ONE THE HOME OF THE GODS
Flying
saucers? Of course there are flying saucers! I have even been for a
trip in one Tibet is the most convenient country of all for flying saucers. It
is remote from the bustle of the everyday world, and is peopled by those who
place religion and scientific concepts before material gain. Throughout the centuries the people of Tibet have known the truth
about flying saucers, what they are, why they are, how they work, and the
purpose behind it all. We know of the flying saucer people as the
gods in the sky in their fiery chariots. But let me relate an incident which certainly has never been
told before in any country outside of Tibet, and which is utterly true.
The
day was bitter. Frozen pellets of ice driven by the howling gale hammered
like bullets into our flapping robes and tore the skin off any exposed
surface. The sky was a vivid purple with patches of startlingly white
clouds, which raced off into the hinterland. Here, nearly thirty thousand feet
above the sea, in the Chang Tang Highlands of Tibet, we were toiling upwards,
upwards.
At
out last resting place, some five miles behind us, a voice had come into our
consciousness: “Strive on, my brothers. Strive on, and enter the fog
belt again, for there is much for you to see.” The seven of us, all high lamas
from the lama-series of Tibet, had had much telepathic communication with the
Gods of the Skies. From them we had learned the secret of the chariots,
which sped swiftly across our land and which; some- times alighted in remote
districts.
Onwards
we climbed, higher, and higher, clawing a foothold in the hard earth, forcing
our fingers into the slightest crevice in the rocks. At last we reached
the mysterious fog belt again, and entered. Soon we were through it and
into the wonderfully heated land of a bygone age.
“A
day’s march more, my brothers,” said the voice, “and you shall see a chariot of
old.”
For
that night we rested in the warmth and comfort of the Hidden Land. We
found ease and relaxation on a soft bed of moss, and in the morning we
gratefully bathed in a warm, broad river before setting out on another day’s
march. Here in this land there were pleasant fruits, which we took with
us for our meal, a satisfactory change indeed from the eternal tsampa!
Throughout
that day we journeyed upwards through pleasant trees of rhododendron and
walnut, and other the like of which we had not seen before. All the time
we were rising upwards, and all the time we were in this pleasant warm
land. With nightfall upon us we made our camp beneath some trees, and lit
our fire, then rolled ourselves in our robes, and fell asleep. With the
first light of dawn we were again ready to continue our journey.
For
perhaps another two to two and a half miles we marched, and then came to an
open clearing. Here we were stopped, dumfounded with amazement; the
clearing before us was vast, and incredible.
The
open plain we saw was perhaps five miles across and the scene was so strange
that even now I hesitate to write because of the knowledge that I shall be
disbelieved. The plain was about five miles across and at its distant
side there was a vast sheet of ice extending upwards, like a sheet of glass
reaching toward the heavens. But that was not the strangest thing before us, for the plain contained
a ruined city, and yet some buildings were quite intact. Some buildings,
in fact, looked almost new.
Nearby, in a
spacious courtyard, there was an immense metal structure, which reminded me of
two of our temple dishes, clamped together, and it was clearly a vehicle of
some sort.
My
guide, the Lama Mingyar Dondup, broke our awed silence, saying. “This was the home of the Gods
half a million years ago. During those days men strove against the Gods,
and invented a device to shatter an atom, which wrought disaster on the earth,
causing lands to rise and lands to sink, destroying mountains and creating anew. This was a mighty
city, the metropolis, and here was once the seashore. The convulsion of the earth,
which followed an explosion, raised this land thousands of feet, and the shock
of that explosion altered the rotation of the earth. We shall
go closer, and we shall see other parts of the city embedded in the ice of the
glacier, a glacier which, in this hot valley, was gently melted, leaving intact
these ancient buildings.”

We
listened in fascinated silence, and then, as if by one common impulse, we moved
forward. Only as we came close to the buildings did it become apparent to
us that the people who had lived here must have been not less than twelve feet
tall. Everything was on a giant scale, and I was forcibly reminded of
those huge figures, which I had seen deep in the hidden vaults of the Potala.
We
approached the strange vehicle of metal. It was immense. Perhaps fifty
or sixty feet across and now dulled with age. We saw a ladder extending
up into a dark opening and, feeling as if we trod sacred ground, we crept up,
one by one. The Lama Mingyar Dondup went first and soon disappeared into
the dark hole. I was next, and as I reached the top of the ladder and
stepped inside the metal hull I saw my guide bending over what looked to be a
sloping table in this large metal room. He touched something, a bluish
light came on, and there was a faint hum. To our horrified amazement, at the
far end of the room figures appeared and walked toward us and spoke to us.
Our
first impulse was to turn and run, to flee this house of magic, but a voice in
our brains stopped us. “Be
not afraid,” it said, “for we were aware of your coming and have been so aware this last hundred years.
We made provisions so that those who were intrepid enough to enter this vessel
should know the past.” We were held as if hypnotized, powerless to move, powerless
to obey our animal instincts and escape. “Be seated,” said the voice, “for this
will be long, and tired men do not listen well.”
We
sat, the seven of us in a row, facing the end of the room, and waited.
For some seconds the buzzing continued. The light in the room faded, and
we were in a darkness so profound that we could not see our hands before
us. Some seconds later the buzzing stopped and there was a faint click,
then upon the wall appeared pictures, pictures so utterly strange that they were
almost beyond our comprehension. Pictures of a mighty city among whose
ruins we now sat, a city beside the sea upon which rode many strange
craft. Overhead, disc-like vehicles soared through the air, soundlessly,
effortlessly.
Upon
the shore of golden sands giant figures strode amongst waving palm trees.
We could hear the sound of happy voices of children at play as they splashed in
the surf. We saw scenes in the streets, in the houses, in the public
buildings. Without warning, we saw as if from some craft in the
air. It reminded me so vividly of my kite flying that I almost clutched a
non-existent crossbar. Then there was a dreadful boom, and from afar a mushroom-shaped
cloud soared miles to the heavens, a cloud shot with crimson and yellow, as if
the very breath of the gods was afire.
ENGULFED
From
our vantage point we saw buildings topple, and people fleeing for their
lives. Then, from out of the distance roared a huge wave of the sea,
perhaps fifty feet, perhaps a hundred feet high. It struck the land and
engulfed the houses, the once stately metropolis. The earth shook, the
picture swirled, and spinning, and all was blackness. For what seemed to
be a long time we sat wonderingly in the darkness. A picture came on the
wall again, but this time a different picture. We saw the clearing, and
in it were strange craft, such as that in which we now sat. Men seemed to
be doing maintenance work, servicing.
Craft were
continually arriving and departing. There seemed to be many different
types of people, ranging from those about fifteen feet tall to some about five
feet tall.
The
picture changed and we saw views outside the earth, and a view of the dark side
of the moon. The voice of the screen gave us an explanation throughout
the picture. We learned that there was an Association, a White Brotherhood, composed
of incarnate and discarnate entities. Those who were incarnate came from
many different planets, and they had as their one aim the
safeguarding of life. Man, we were told, was certainly not the highest
form of evolution, and these people, these guardians, worked for creatures of
all kinds, not merely for man.
INVASION
We
were told Tibet was to be invaded, and that the invaders, Communists, would be
as a disease on the body of the earth. Communism, we were told, would be
eradicated and in the age to follow creatures of all kinds would commune
together as in the days of long ago.
Tibet
was to be invaded. But even Tibet would play her part with telepathic lamas who could so easily
contact space ships. Earth, they said, was a colony, and these
people of outer space supervised the earth so that they could mitigate the
effects of atomic radiation and, it was hoped, save the people of earth from
blowing their world to pieces. We, the seven telepathic lamas, were taken in a
space ship, and up into the air. \
We
saw, in half an hour, our land of Tibet; a land, which it would take three
months for a man on a fast horse to cross. Then with no increase in
gravity, with no sensation of speed, we were taken out of the atmosphere and
into space. We know how these space ships work. We know why they can turn
so quickly, and why those within them are not affected by centrifugal force,
but that is for another occasion.
|
|
PART TWO INSIDE THE SHIP
The
vivid purple of the afternoon sky was suddenly cut by a snow white line as if a
finger of a god had swept aside the dark to show a light beneath. The
glittering silver at the head of the growing line sped across the sky almost
too fast for the eye to follow. A sudden flash of light, and the silver was
gone, heading for the blackness of space.
We lamas lay upon our backs upon
the soft green sward of the hidden valley some twenty-five thousand feet above
the level of the sea. Higher still towered the jagged peaks which
surrounded the warm and pleasant land and protected larger than the British
Isles, has many mysteries but none so strange as this, a valley of tropical
splendor amid the subbing back to the time of the Flood, and stranger still,
where the Gods of the Sky had a base.
For centuries past
telepathic lamas of high degree had been in communication with these Gods, and
had learned much from them. Now we, highly favored men, were meeting them.
We
lay upon our backs, thinking of the wonders we had seen. To our right, in
an immense clearing, stood strange machines, machines which would be strange
even to the highly merchandised world beyond our land. Men of other worlds
than Earth walked about, some moving with lithe grace, breathing the air we
breathed, and others stumbling a little in strange clothing which, transparent,
covered even their heads, and allowed them to breathe a different atmosphere.
For
some hours we had lain thus, watching, marveling and following by telepathy the
purpose of these activities. Our close concentration was suddenly
shattered by a deep humming, which came from just above us. Turning our heads we
saw a spinning disc approaching. As it passed over us we
were flattened to the earth as if by a very strong wind, as if our weight had
surprisingly doubled on the instant. Then it was over, and we raised up, resting
upon an elbow to watch the landing of the machine.
It
resembled two very shallow Tibetan bowls placed edge to edge, one resting upon
the other, and through the center of both was a transparent dome, or perhaps
translucent would be a better description, because, while it was obviously
transparent, we could not see clearly into it. Now the whole machine was
rotating above the dome, and making a “swish-swish-swish” noise, reminding us
of Prayer Flags fluttering in a strong breeze.
The
deep humming had stopped as the machine hovered above what was quite obviously
a landing ground. Gradually the machine sank, lower and lower, until it
was obscured from the view by | much larger tubular vessel. From a nearby
building a pear-shaped vehicle sped to the newly arrived machine. Some
minutes later it came into view again, going in the opposite direction, and
returning to the building.
Our
intent watching was interrupted by a man who came towards us and said: “Come now, my
brothers, for we have much to show you.” We rose to our feet,
and once again we felt ashamed of our lack of stature; the Lama Mingyar Dondup was six
feet tall, and we were all within three inches of that, but this man was twice
as tall as Mingyar Dondup! I felt as if we were a
seven-year-old about to enter a lamasery for the first time. The Tall One had apparently
guessed my thoughts, or read them telepathically, for he said:
“It is not the size of the body which matters, my brother, but the size of the
aura, and the soul which is within. Here we have people ranging from
those smaller than you to taller than I.”
He
led us across the green, moss-covered earth. This was as hard as rock,
smooth without mark or blemish, yet it did not jar our feet as we walked across
it as rock did. I looked about me in fascination, wondering at all the strange
alien activities going on around us. The Tall One was evidently a man of much importance, for
all those working nearby touched their heart to him as he passed, a greeting
which we in our ignorance thought was our Eastern method. We
felt very self-conscious in our shabby robes, torn and threadbare through the
hard journey from Lhasa.
As
we walked, the Tall One amplified the remarks of the day before, telling us the Earth was a colony,
a colony which was afflicted with a dread disease which made most of the
inhabitants behave like mad dogs. For centuries the Earth
has been observed so that all at the right time people could be helped. That
time was near. Certain of us, of Tibet, were more developed telepathically
and esoterically, so we were being given special information and special
experience. “Now,” he said, “we are going to show you your world from
beyond its atmosphere. For this it will be better if you are in a craft manned by those of
your own stature.”
INSIDE THE SHIP
We were standing before a vessel
of tubular shape, some three hundred and fifty feet long by about sixty feet
wide. A
broad platform led from the ground to the interior. As we approached, a man of medium
height, but very broad, came down to meet us. He touched
his heart to the Tall One, and for a moment they looked at each other while a
message passed between them. Then the Broad One turned to us and beckoned
for us to follow him. We, following the example of my Guide, the Lama
Mingyar Dondup, turned first to the Tall One, touching our right hand to our
heart before bowing and turning away to follow the Broad One.
The
unknown is always fearsome. My own heartbeat increased in tempo as we walked up
the sloping ramp, paused a moment, and entered that alien doorway. Inside
was a long corridor, pale restful green in color, and the walls appeared to be
luminous. The light was uniform, and there were no shadows. The Broad One
led us along the corridor for several yards, then stopping, he raised his hands
and a portion of the wall slid aside to reveal a pleasant room of which one
side and the floor appeared to be so transparent that we were almost afraid to
enter.
“Have
no fear,” he said. “The floor is very solid and will bear you safely. What you actually see is
a special screen, which shows all outside. There are no windows here.” We
gasped, and entered
hesitatingly: it was as if we were walking on nothing and I certainly had the
impression that I would fall through to the ground.
The
Broad One faced a wall and seemed to become remote from us as if he were deep
in thought for a time. I stood idly gazing through what I had thought was a
transparent floor,
but now knew to be a special screen. I watched other vessels nearby, and
people working on them. Suddenly my knees felt weak with terror.
Things were moving further away: the ground was dropping beneath us, and I
expected us to fall as well, but there was no sign, no sensation of motion.
The
Broad One came out of his seeming reverie and spoke. “We are going to take
you off the earth,” he said. “We are going to show you your earth from
afar.” I replied, “But we are not moving. If we were we would feel
something. When I swung at the end of a rope, or when I flew in a kite I
certainly felt. But here there is no sensation.” The Broad One
replied, “No, there is no sensation, but we maneuver at speeds beyond the
ability of any flesh and blood to withstand, and we have special devices which automatically
neutralize the effect of sudden turns or of too high speed stops. You will
feel nothing whatever in this ship, nor is there anything for you to worry
about. We
have long ago mastered the science of gravity. Later
you shall see through this ship, but first” He gestured with his hands
toward the screens. We looked.
NO SENSATION OF MOTION
Far
beneath us the rugged land that was Tibet was sinking. The mighty mountains,
some towering higher than the much-vaulted Everest, were becoming flattened by
the distance, becoming just pimples on a plain surface. We rose higher
and higher until at last we could see our Happy River (as we Tibetans call it)
swelling out into the mighty sacred river of India, out into the ocean, which
we had not seen before. We saw the outline of the coast and could easily
distinguish the Bay of Bengal, and see far into China. We could even see
the Great Wall of China as a thin crack across the ground.
The
sun seemed to be below us, huge, swollen by the refraction of the air, glowing
red like the open mouth of a lamasery furnace. Still there was no motion, no
impression of anything. We stood and watched, and thought how utterly
remote was all this from our normal life upon the arid earth.
The
Broad One gestured to a wall. He touched some-thing and bench-like
seats sprang from the previously smooth surface. “Sit down,” he
said. “You can see more comfortably sitting.”
We
sat, rather gingerly and rather embarrassed, because as we sat down we seemed
to sink into something, which gripped our shrinking forms through our thin
robes. “Form-fitting seats,” said the Broad One, “very comfortable.
They prevent you from slipping off yet they yield to every
movement.” “Form-fitting indeed,” thought I. Certainly I am not
used to being held in this manner. Still, I supposed I shall
get used to it. Now safely seated, I gazed again at the
screens and held my breath in sheer amazement. I had been taught
that the earth was flat, now I knew better because I could see myself that the
earth was round globe like the ball with which I used to play. Here we
were, far up above the earth, going higher and higher, until at last we were
completely free of the atmosphere. The earth turned slowly beneath us, a huge
globe largely covered by the grey-green of the ocean. The land masses
appeared insignificant, with splotches of green and russet. Large areas of it
were covered with white fleecy clouds obscuring much of the surface. Through
gaps we could see the outline of continents and islands. We could see inland
lakes, but of cities there was no sign. From height there was no
indication whatsoever that there was life upon Earth.
VIEW OF THE UNIVERSE
Surrounding
the Earth was a faint bluish haze, fairly dense close in, but fading out
altogether after a few miles. The Earth rolled on, turning lazily like a hawk
wheeling slowly in the sky. The Broad One said. “You are intent upon
Earth, yet the whole of your Universe is before you. Is it not worth a
glance?” It brought us to
life with a start, and we looked up. Above us was utter blackness
interrupted with startlingly vivid points of light. Distant planets
appeared sharply round and of many different hues, while on those nearer we
could distinguish features of their surface. So that we could gaze upon
the sun, the Broad One caused a dark shield to cover part of the
screen. We saw the sun huge and clear, and the sight struck us with terror
because we thought it was on fire. Vast tongues of flame leapt from its
circumference, while its surface presented itself to us as a writhing mass,
freely marked with dark blobs.
“We have a
base on what you call the Moon,” said the Broad One. “The Moon always presents one side to the Earth.
Our base is on the other side and we are going there now.” The filter was swung
aside and we were able to gaze upon the blindingly brilliant face of the Moon, that
airless world which still contains life deep beneath its surface.
We approached it at a speed, which was so fast as to be quite incomprehensible
to us, but there was no sensation of speed. “You have learned much about
us,” said the Broad One.
“Yet, upon Earth people are
taught that we do not exist. They have to be taught so because of the
religious teaching that Man is made in the image of God, and the people of the
Earth think that Man is the Earth human. Today to admit the possibility of Man on other planets
would be to prove the various religions wrong.
Again,
those who hold the power of life and death over nations dare not let it be
known that there is even a greater power, for to do so would be to lessen their
hold upon their enslaved people.”
PROPULSION
Later
we were taken on a tour of the space ship and were introduced to the large
crew. We felt very ignorant in their presence, but they did everything possible
to answer our questions and set us at ease. The problem of propulsion
interested me greatly, and I was given an answer in much detail. There
were a number of methods used, ships for different purposes had the appropriate
method of propulsion. That on which we were traveling had a form of magnetism, which was
repelling to Earth’s magnetism. The electricity used on Earth, we were
told, was most crude. That used elsewhere was a form of magnetism based on
cosmic energy. The force was picked up from the cosmos by
special collectors on the surface of the ship and conducted to the “engine
room.” Here it was fed through induction coils to the two halves of the
ship. The half facing the Earth was strongly repelling to Earth, and the
half facing the planet of destination, in this case the Moon, was strongly
attracted to that planet.
On
a planet the repelling force could be adjusted so that the machine could hover,
rise or sink. The whole interior of the ship was lined with a network of
conductors so that no matter what attitude a ship adopted, the force of gravity
was at all times that most suitable for the occupants. We were shown the
remarkable simple device, which automatically adjusted the gravitational force.
But there is no more space to go into greater detail. It is indeed a
tragedy that Western peoples are so skeptical, for there is such a lot to tell,
and it is a waste of time to even start when one KNOWS that one will be
disbelieved. Flying saucers are real. Very real.
|
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PART THREE MY VISIT TO VENUS
The evening winds sighed gently
through the trees of the Hidden Valley. There was an atmosphere of peace, of
harmony, of Beings working for good. We lay by the side of our campfire, the Lama
Mingyar Dondup and three companions, five of us in all. We had journeyed
far from Lhasa, from the frozen slopes of mountains and barren land. Now
there were but five of us though eleven of us had started out. Our
companions had fallen by the wayside, victims of avalanches, victims of
privation and of the bitter, freezing cold.
Now,
though, in the warmth of this Hidden Valley we lay at peace. Marvels had indeed befallen us since
we had first communed with the Gods from other worlds, the Gods who looked
after the Earth and kept it from self-destruction. Tonight,
we thought, we will retire early. We had earned our sleep, our rest, for
throughout the day we had been seeing the secrets of the immense city, which
was half buried in the glacier. We had learned much but; we were to
learn more.
We
looked at each other, wondering who was speaking, because a gentle but
insistent thought kept coming into our minds. “Brothers, brothers, come
this way for we are waiting.”
Hesitantly,
one after the other, we got to our feet and looked about us. There was no
one in sight, but again came the insistent command, “Brothers, this way, we are
waiting.”
So we followed our intuition and
made our way to the bustling camp where the machines from other worlds lay,
where Beings of many other worlds swarmed about doing their multitudinous
tasks. As we approached one of the larger ships a man, the Broad One,
descended from it and came to meet us with his hand upon his heart in a gesture
of peace and of greeting.
“Ah,
brothers, so you have come at last. We have been calling you for the past
hour. We thought perhaps that your brains slept.”
We
bowed humbly before him, bowed to the Superior Being from outer space; he
turned and led the way to the vessel. We stood on a certain spot beside
the ship; it felt as if we were caught by some strong force and wafted
upwards. “Yes,” he said to our unspoken thoughts, “that is an antigravity
beam, a levitator we call it. It saves one climbing.”
Inside
the vessel he led us to a room with seats along the wall. It was a round
room, and it reminded us of the ship in which we had recently had a trip. We
looked about, and we could see out as if there were no walls at all, and yet we
knew that those walls were as solid as metal, a metal harder than anything we
knew.
“My
brothers you have traveled far according to your standards, and you have
endured much according to any standards. This night we are going to take you far away from your
own Earth, we are going to take you to a planet, which you call Venus.
Take
you there just to show you
that there are civilizations beyond anything that you know on Earth, take you so that your days
of life upon Earth may be brightened by the knowledge of what is, and what can
be. First let us eat. You were, as I am aware, about to partake of
your evening meal.”
He
gave a telepathic command, and attendants entered bearing dishes. One went
to a wall and pressed various buttons. A section of the floor rose up as a
table, and with it appeared seats upon which we could recline in the old
fashioned Eastern way, and not be cooped up in the Western style.
The
covers of the gleaming dishes; dishes which appeared to be made of purest crystal; were removed, and
we were helped to food. The food to us was truly amazing. Fruits of
various colors, and then pastes in crystal jars. Our hosts
were very attentive to our wants. The Broad One said, “Here
we eat only that which nature provides. These are fruits
such as you know not on Earth, fruits which to us supply bread, meat, everything. These
pastes which you will find truly delicious are compounded of nuts from other
planets of this system.” They were, as he said, “truly delicious,” and we
ate very well indeed.
The
flavors were most strange to us, but wholly pleasant, and the liquors which we
drank were again the juices of fruits. These people were, we thought, even
more humane than we of Tibet. They killed nothing, nor did they restrain
animals in order that their milk could be taken.
At
the conclusion of our meal the dishes were removed and the table and dining
seats disappeared again into the floor. The Broad One said, “This time I shall
go with you. We are moving now.” We turned and looked through the
wall. There was no sense of movement, no sound, yet we were
rising. We rose faster and faster, leaving the darkening Earth and going
out so that looking down we could again see the sun gleaming over the horizon,
gleaming over the curvature of the Earth in the far, far distance.
As
we rose higher and higher, we could see the continents of the Earth in various
hues and colors, green and browns; we could see the white of the clouds, and
the bluish-grey of the turbulent waters of the seas, but of the works of man
there was no sign, no sign at all from our height that anything lived upon the
Earth. As we
went higher we found that the strange lights were playing about outside the
windows as if the rainbow had come in sheets, undulating sheets, but here were
more colors than any rainbow ever possessed. It was an electric discharge
from the aurora. It looked as if the whole Earth was girded with
gold, red, green, and of deepest purple, waving as if in some invisible wind.
Showers of light, glinting and scintillating with all colors, flashed about
through the curtains as if those curtains were being pierced by the spears of
the Gods.
Higher
and higher we went, out into the deep blackness of space. The Earth was now
but the size of a small round fruit, gleaming with a blue-grey light, not at
all like the moon which had a yellowish light, but blue-grey, a strange
color indeed. We sped on and on into space, and the stars ahead of us
changed color, the sun ahead of us turned from its golden rays to blood
red. Behind us the Earth had disappeared. Behind us, to our amazed
stupefaction, there was nothing at all save darkness, blackness, the blackness
of an utter void.
I
turned with a gasp of amazement to the Broad One, but he just laughed and said,
“Oh, my brother, we are going faster than light, and so behind us there is no light
because we are outstripping it, and ahead of us we are catching up on light,
so the whole visible spectrum is deranged. Thus, instead of the white
glare of a planet you see red, and darker red until the red turns purple, and
the purple to black, and the light which you see is not light at all but an
illusion of the senses.”
FASTER THAN LIGHT
This
indeed was fascinating, but on we sped without feeling any sensation,
outstripping light itself. I could not under- stand how they could
navigate at such a speed, but the answer to that was that it was all done by
robotic controls. We were spellbound in our seats
watching outside. Instead of pinpoints of light we saw streaks as if some
clumsy artist had daubed a black wall with glowing colors, which changed as we
looked at them.
At
last the colors began to appear more normal. The black gave way to purple,
the purple to red-brown, and then to scarlet-red, and then behind us again we
saw pinpoints of light. Stars, though, behind us were green and blue, while ahead
of us they were red and yellow. As we slowed down still more the stars ahead
turned to their normal colors, as did those at the back.
Ahead
of us was a huge ball, turning lazily in the black sea of space, a ball completely
covered in white fleecy clouds, a ball which reminded me of
thistledown floating against a black sky. We circled two, three, perhaps
five times, and then the Broad One said, “We are about to enter the
atmosphere. Soon
we shall be down and you can walk upon a world which is not alien, but merely
strange to you.”
Slowly
the ship sank, slowly it became immersed in the fleecy white cloud, and
billowing fingers reached out and fled by our windows. The Broad One
touched a control, and it was as if magic fingers had swept aside the cloud,
swept aside everything that obscured the view.
We
looked out in awe. The clouds by some magic of the Gods had been made
invisible, and beneath
us we saw this glittering world, this world filled by superior beings. As
we sank lower and lower we saw fairy cities reaching up
into the sky, immense structures, ethereal, almost unbelievable in the
delicate tracing of their buildings.
Tall spires and bulbous cupolas,
and from tower to tower stretched bridges like spider’s webs, and like spider’s
webs they gleamed with living colors, reds and blues, mauves and purples, and
gold, and yet what a curious thought, there was no sunlight. This whole
world was covered in cloud. I looked about me as we flashed over city after city,
and it seemed to me that the whole atmosphere was luminous, everything in the sky
gave light, there was no shadow, but also there was no central point of light. It
seemed as if the whole cloud structure radiated light evenly, unobtrusively, a
light of such a quality as I had never believed existed. It was pure and
clean.
At last we left the cities and came to a beautiful sparkling
sea, a sea of purest blue. There were a few little craft upon the water, and the
Broad One smiled benevolently as I pointed to them, and said, “Oh, they are
merely pleasure craft. We do not use anything so slow as ships on this
world.” After some minutes we crossed the ocean and came to another
gleaming city, even better than the ones we had seen before, and in the very
heart of the city there was a clearing to which we approached. For some
minutes we hovered perhaps half a mile above the city, above the clearing, and
then, as if in answer to some signal, we sank slowly, soundlessly, and
effortlessly. Gradually, imperceptibly almost, the ground came closer and
closer.
Soon we were level with the
topmost towers of that glittering city, that fabulous city, the like of which
no man from Tibet had ever seen before. We could not determine the nature of the
materials; they towered toward the stars, pointed, and from every window of
those immense buildings faces peered out. As we got closer and closer, and
lower and lower, we could discern those faces with startling clarity; they were
beautiful.
Throughout our stay on
Venus,
indeed, we saw no one who was not by earth standards startlingly
beautiful. Ugliness was unknown here on this world, whether it be ugliness
of mind or ugliness of body, both were absent. Almost before we were aware
of it we were on the ground.
Our
machine had descended without a tremor, without a jerk. The Broad One
turned to us and said, “It is time for us to alight, my brothers.” And
then he led the way out of the room. As we reached the ground we looked
about us for the first time. Before we had been too busy marveling at the
method of our descent. Now we found people waiting for us, officials obviously, tall men, grave faced, but with a dignity and presence
not known upon the turbulent Earth.
One
of them stepped forward and inclined his head in our direction. Into our
minds flooded thought, his thought, and telepathy. He was greeting us in the
universal language of thought. No sound was uttered in all
that gathering, no sound, that is, except perhaps our own involuntary gasps of
astonishment.
THE HALL OF KNOWLEDGE
For
some minutes we all stood thus in telepathic communion, and then the spokesman
bowed to us and turned away with a telepathic instruction for us to follow
him. We did so for some fifty paces, and then we came to a most remarkable
vehicle. They
called it an air car. It was a vehicle perhaps thirty feet long and it was
floating two or three inches above the ground. A section of
clear plastic slid aside and we were shown inside. The Broad One and the
spokesman got in with us. We sat back on those very comfortable seats, and
then again we exclaimed in astonishment for without feeling motion we were
speeding along at a truly frightening speed. Buildings by us were blurred
with the velocity of our travel, and I certainly was quite
frightened. There were no controls in the vehicle. We were sitting
and the machine was taking us. The Broad One smiled benevolently at me, and
said, “Fear not, my brother, there is nothing to fear. This machine is
controlled from afar. Soon we shall be at our destination, The Hall of Knowledge, where you
will be greeted, where you will be shown the past of your Earth, the present of
your Earth, and the future of your Earth, the probable future,
my brother, that is, because man makes his own path, but probabilities are very strong
things indeed, and unless man changes his mind the probabilities
that you will see in The Hall of Knowledge will be facts.”
I
looked over the side and found that we were perhaps six feet above the ground,
which was absolutely flashing by. The vehicles passing on either side of
us seemed to come charging at us, and then at the last instant miss us. It
really frightened me, it sent chill shivers up and down my spine to think what
would happen if two of these vehicles traveling at such colossal speed met head
on. I became aware that the buildings were passing by more slowly. I
could think that the buildings were moving and not us, because we had no sensation of
moving nor of speed.
Gradually
the vehicle slowed, then it hovered, and turned in a half circle and went to
the left, to an immense building, which stood in a clearing. It was a huge
public building supported on glittering pillars. Wide stairs led up to it, and on
the stairs there were groups of young people, apparently just waiting to see us
visitors from Tibet. The machine continued on slowly,
perhaps at the speed of a man running. It rose to the level of the top of the
steps, and then slid inside the main doors of that magnificent
building. It came to a halt; attendants hurried to meet us, slid aside the
doors of our machine, and helped us to alight.
I
looked about me in absolute fascination. To one side was a green covered
table, and around it there were
what appeared to be a group of golden thrones in which a group of men sat. Soon
we were in telepathic communion with the group, the
Lords of Venus, the controllers of that particular sphere of activity.
It
does not matter what they told us, nor what we told them, but eventually one
man thought at us. “Now, my brothers, we have exchanged much knowledge of
interest. We will give you a sight of your world, a sight of the present
day conditions of your world as they are in all countries of that globe, and we
will show you the probable course of your world’s future.”
He
rose, and the others rose also. They lead the way along a corridor, and then we
of Tibet involuntarily stopped and held our breath in sheer shocked
amazement. Before us appeared the blackness of night, the utter blackness
of space, and floating, turning lazily, was our own Earth. We saw the
blue-grey of the continents, the brownish patches, the streaks of green, and
the white of the clouds. We saw the bluish haze of the atmosphere of the
Earth, extending round, girdling our world.
Our
great friend, the Broad One, touched me and whispered, whispered in
Tibetan, “Fear not, my brother, for this is but the simulacrus, this is
the Hall of
Memories, the Hall of all Knowledge of the Earth; be not afraid
of what is to happen, for
this is but science, the science of illusion, and that, too, is
but the world of illusion. You shall see, and what you shall see will be
the truth.”
We
sat down, and that seemed to be the signal. We gazed upon the Earth, and
then we seemed to be falling, gently falling. As we got nearer and nearer
to the Earth we saw
that it was a very different Earth. First we saw a molten
bowl, then before our startled eyes the molten bowl became solidified, cracks appeared,
gouts of flame rushed out, water came and spread across the face of the Earth. The land rose, parts of
it sank, countries were formed, and seas too; we saw the convulsions of the
Earth as it was at its birth, we saw the strange unbelievable
people which were the first people of Earth. We saw Poseidon, Lemuria, Atlantis.
We saw also the
mighty civilizations, which flourished unbelievable eons before Poseidon,
before Atlantis and Lemuria. By now we could accept anything without a flicker of
surprise. We had a surfeit of marvels; wonders had no power over us. So as the Earth grew older
before our gaze, and nations were swept and replaced by other nations it
evinced interest in us, but no more. Our potentialities of
being surprised had ended. Then we came to our own time.
We saw Tibet when the founder of
our religion first appeared in that country. We saw the buildings of the
Potala, of the sweeping aside of the old fortress, which had been put there
before by the bloodthirsty king of Tibet. We reached our present year, passed it, went
on and on
into the future, into the year 3,000. It was wonderful the
things we saw and heard. We seemed to be upon the Earth, as if we were
standing beside, or even slightly behind, the principal actors. We could
see all, hear all, but we could not touch, nor be touched. But eventually
these wondrous impressions faded into the year three thousand and something.
The
Broad One stirred and said, “Now you see, my brother, why it is that we guard the
Earth, for if man’s folly is allowed to go unchecked terrible things will
happen to the race of men. There are powers upon the Earth, human powers, who oppose
all thought of our ships, who say that there is nothing greater than the human
upon the Earth so there cannot be ships from other worlds. You,
my brothers, have been shown and told, and have experienced this so that you through
your telepathic knowledge, can contact others, so that you can bring influence
to bear.”
We
do not know how long we were there upon that planet, it might have been days,
it might have been weeks; we were almost blinded by the splendor of the sights
we saw people desiring only peace, desiring, as we of Tibet desired, to do
as we would be done by. And at last it was time again to return to the
Earth, which now to us seemed a tawdry place, and earth, which paled, into
insignificance against the glory of Venus.
Sadly
we got aboard this space ship, and sadly we returned to the Hidden Valley;
never again, I thought, shall I see such wonderful things. How mistaken I was,
for that was but the first of many trips.
Publishers Closing Note
Once
again, the late T. Lobsang Rampa has shared his experiences with us. Whether or
not we accept his claims as authentic is really quite irrelevant. One
cannot deny the knowledge, wisdom and true desire for the brotherhood of
humankind which his writings impart to all those willing to listen. In
this short book, as in all his other works, his descriptive words, be they of a
hidden valley in Tibet, the icy chill of the Tibetan mountains, or the
shimmering beauty of Venus, make each scene one of reality.
My
Trip To Venus is one of Rampa’s shortest works but well worth the reading.
There is wisdom to be gained as the little group of lamas is taken to the Hall
of Knowledge for a view of our world as it was, is now, and will be. As
the travelers return to Earth, the reader is left with much to ponder and
perhaps with a bit of longing for the peace and brotherhood achieved on other
worlds.
The
Publisher
Return to Home
http://www.livingtree.org/mars.html
http://www.livingtree.org/venus.html
http://www.livingtree.org/Titanhead.html
http://www.livingtree.org/UnderwaterCities.html
Earth Titled And Four Suns Over China
http://www.livingtree.org/earthchina.html
Moon Bases
http://www.livingtree.org/moonbases.html