Page 249 - The Final Appeal to Mankind
P. 249
«The Final Appeal to Mankind» by Nicolai Levashov
Furthermore, it is no accident that – universally – down through the ages a physical
body is described as reverting to human, once a werewolf is destroyed. The truth
behind the legend is that an astral creature cannot remain in a dead, destroyed physical
body.
Let us now examine other situations which lead to the collapse or exhaustion of the
human protective psi-field.
Alcohol – ethyl alcohol to be more precise – possesses a powerful negative energy.
The etheric structure of ethyl alcohol is very dynamic and exerts a powerful influence
on the human etheric body. This is one of the reasons why a person in a drunken state
is so much weaker than when he is sober. Alcoholic beverages have one feature that
happens to be the precise source of their addictive properties: they contain, among other
ingredients, the simplest sugars, glucose and fructose, which undergo rapid absorption
directly into the bloodstream, producing thereby a surge of positive energy.
But ethyl alcohol actually has the effect of producing inertia in an organism. Its
negative structure becomes activated only several hours after ingestion in cases where
the subject's liver can no longer neutralize it.
The liver itself produces fermentation which breaks down ethyl alcohol, and also
contains a certain amount of fermentation naturally. Actually, ethyl alcohol itself is a
by-product of complex sugar fermentation, and that is what triggers the liver to produce
ferments – though not, of course, for the specific purpose of breaking down the alcohol
which a person consumes.
Ultimately, after several hours of concentrated work, the human liver becomes
exhausted in the process of producing fermentation as described above. The
unprocessed residue has a very adverse effect on the subject's etheric body,
flooding it with negative energy and disrupting the harmony of the spirit's
structural foundation. This leads to a severe reduction in the protective psi-field's
density.
Very often, after an all-night binge, a person is totally depleted, knocked-out, dizzy and
nauseated and suffers from an intermittent urge to vomit. (Vomiting happens to be still
another defense reaction of the organism, activated when the liver is no longer capable
of breaking down the alcohol. The brain then triggers stomach and intestinal spasms
aimed at cleaning out whatever remains.) Thanks to this mechanism a certain portion
of the residual alcohol is expelled.
A psychological factor also plays a role here: In the throes of a morning hangover, the
imbiber recalls how well he felt after taking a drink; so his natural inclination is to
reach for more alcohol. Thus a vicious cycle begins – everything is repeated over and
over again. If this persists indefinitely (different time periods for different users), a
state of severe alcoholic intoxication ensues.
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