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The painting "Heroes" by the Russian painter Viktor Vasnetsov. Ilya Muromets is in the middle of the group |
The last time I was in Kiev, in 2008 (and I'm sure it won't be the last), my family and I spent a lot of time every day at the Kiev Pechersk Lavra. It was like a magnet.
I will never forget the most delicious mushroom soup and carrot salad in the Lavra refectory.
But it's about something else. The place that attracted me was the caves. Who knows, there, in the Nearby Caves, lie the relics of great Russian saints, including Ilya of the Caves (according to legend, Ilya Muromets), the great epic hero who saved Russia from adversity more than once.
And there's an interesting energy there. Many people know that you can't stop in caves, there's a narrow passage and pilgrims with candles are streaming in, one after the other.
I really wanted to slow down, feel, stay there longer. And I quietly leaned against a narrow niche and stopped, as it turned out, right next to the relics of Ilya Muromets.
Firstly, the giant (or rather, his powers) are not so gigantic, but the "pins" near them are very noticeable.
It seemed as if something had provoked movement from within, from the center of myself. It was like turning an ignition key.
It was as if I had entered into some kind of resonance, as if I had been "turned on" and it felt like a tremor and a force of such power, as if I were a sports car and a racer at the same time.
It was even a little scary. Because if you have such power inside you, it's hard to just continue living your life like that, messing around in the middle of your everyday life, this power, this force must be directed somewhere, otherwise it will burst like a frog.
Over time, these feelings subsided, but were not forgotten.
And then I wondered why Ilya Muromets had been lying on the stove for 30 years (with paralysis as a result of a spinal fracture, which is important) and then he got up and it started.…
He felt weak, feeble, sick, and HABITUALLY treated himself as a victim of circumstances.
And then some passers-by (elders) came to him and asked for water. He refused, citing infirmity. Then the guests repeated the request. And not only did they ask for water, but he was also ordered to drink 3 sips (plus one fortifying one).
And Ilya, suddenly feeling a "great power," got back on his feet for the first time.
Those who knew his power came to break his program of infirmity. Then he realized his power, too. She "turned on" him.
If I have a heroic fight now
, I could fight a thousand.”
“You know, Ilya, the Russian hero,
Russian Russian hero, Ilya Muromsky:
To protect the Russian land for you.
And death is not written for you in battle.”
And if we look at what is happening in Russia from a different level now, discard all the political and other fables, the concept of external enemies and geopolitical conflicts (paralysis and a fractured spine in all departments), were they not sent so that people in Russia would turn on. They realized their power.
And you won't be able to turn them off anymore.
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