Please elaborate on this, I am keen looking for this kinda shit and it never happens. Except on youtube or in book's like the Tibetan of living and dying. The book describe's equally unusual things, unusual from the perspective of the unknowningly like me.
What happened in this case, 23. October 2018 in Vienna, was the woman sitting in a lotus position on the floor and a light bulb rolled about 10 cm and fell off the desk, a pencil rolled back and forth three times about 10 cm, and the speakerphone button on a telephone, I think made by AEG and I have no idea of a model number, turning on and off once and the dial tone ceasing a moment before the turning off of the switch hung up the telephone. After the end of the yoga session, she explained that she can cohere the energy fairly well now, but it is still like trying to steer a hot air balloon and this, like maybe 128 or 135 other things she referred to as siddhis, can be refined, but people can also get distracted by them and slow their progress towards the ultimate goals of yoga, and it is not unheard of for people to become very distracted, and the high intensity of subtle energies used and controlled by this form of yoga to have deleterious effects of all sorts if focus and discipline are lost. Her area of expertise academically and personally and through her family upbringing were both Tibetan Buddhism and Confucian philosophy, and she is very well versed in Hindu and Abrahamic and Zoroastrian traditions and some western occult traditions as well.
She shares my theory that clairvoyance could, for the most part, be wholly mundane, i.e. not praeternatural or supernatural at all and is paranormal only in the respect that mainstream science has not explained it, and with what is known about mind-body interaction, quantum mechanics, open systems theory and other things, it could be that science can explain it but does not want to for essentially political reasons. Which I find a compelling possibility -- what I find silly and irritating some times is that people who claim to stick to scientific method and that alone will readily say that someone they have never met hoaxed or hallucinated or misapprehended something like their grandmother's face appearing at the end of the bed minutes before she died because they are so certain of what they think they know. It also is a horrible way to treat fellow human beings. That is not scepticism. It is pseudo-scepticism and it has as its sources, inter alia, fear, repressed guilt, misanthropy, general disrespect, and egotism. See, it is not really scepticism if ones mind is made up beforehand.
Science has done a great job so far on what they have put their mind to, but it is
incomplete just like every other human endeavour -- most people have heard about such things as dark energy, dark matter, the fact that gravitation is not completely explained at all, nor the source of the charges of electrons and protons, or the fact that it appears that relativity, quantum mechanics, classical electrodynamics, vorticular physics and maybe other conceptions are all part of a highly unified physics that they haven't completely hashed out yet . . . a little humility never hurt anyone. "I honestly don't know" is actually a pretty wise thing to say if it is the case -- it was good enough for Socrates . . . sometimes we have to raise our hand and say "um, no, you don't know, and neither do I"
Something I read recently was the Kanjur, the 108-volume Tibetan sacred writings, actually have speculations about gravity and electromagnetism in them, though I am sure the terms are different.
Throughout history there have been people who were able to get very quick glimpses of the past, future, or remote locations after meditating, other such things, and even fucking sessions of extreme length and protracted bouts of shouting can do it too, so even bad folks like Hitler very well could have figured out things like "hey, if I march back into the Rhineland, nobody is going to do anything to me, And the Sudetenland. And I can really work over Chancellor von Schuschnigg too" I'm sure Satan gave him lots of help too, of course.
Telekinesis and apparitional experiences, of which there are dozens of types. she says could be one of several things and much like the above. Actual bilocation is probably a spectrum of things ranging from the almost mundane to the miraculous, with it being done intentionally or spontaneously by Tibetan Buddhists, Roman Catholic, Protestant, Evangelical, Orthodox and Latter Day Saint Christians, Wonder Rabbis and others, Sufis, Hindus, western occultists, and even non-spiritual people like Lenin