Mel Gibson Claimed Qigong Master Levitated Him During Therapy

February 7th, 2025

You might think Mel Gibson’s claims sound like nonsense. I think they sound like nonsense.

Here’s something that happened to me that also sounds like nonsense:

About thirty years ago I was doing sales related work. I had a customer who owned a furniture shop in Huntington Beach, California. He had a bunch of pictures of him and other people doing some sort of martial art.

I asked, “What style of martial art are you into?”

I’m pretty sure he said that it was Judo and he was a 3rd dan black belt.

“But,” he said, “The style doesn’t matter and neither does the belt. What matters most is your mastery of qi.”

“What’s qi?” I asked.

“Hold up a hand,” he said.

“Are you going to hit me?” I asked.

“No,” he chuckled

I held up my right hand.

He held his right hand a few inches from mine.

“Ready?” he asked.

“Uhh, I’m ready.”

An instant later, I felt an intense burning sensation on the palm of my hand and immediately pulled it away.

“That’s qi,” he said.

Believe it or not. I don’t care. It happened.

Via: Video Advice:

13 Responses to “Mel Gibson Claimed Qigong Master Levitated Him During Therapy”

  1. pookie says:

    I viewed the Ring of Fire documentary many moons ago. I believe it.

  2. Snowman says:

    “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”

    If Chang wanted these things to be kept secret, why is Mel Gibson telling the world?

  3. brandon says:

    I believe you. That’s probably the stuff they’re trying to keep from everyone. Free easily accessible energy. People in the west were getting close right before WWI.

  4. djc says:

    Ha, this may sound like nonsense but it aint nonsense. Read “The Intention Experiment” and “The Power of Eight” by Lynne McTaggart and you’ll soon see how right pookie & Snowman are. In fact, I think the books, which are how to use thought to achieve physical, mental and emotional change, may be very useful in times of chaos and danger, which appear to be well on their way.

  5. Kevin says:

    @djc

    I don’t know how long I’m going to keep Cryptogon going, so this qi story is one of the things I planned on getting off my chest eventually.

    One of the other topics to address (before I go, so to speak) is Mind Psi. When I was nine years old (1980), my mother, along with my sister and I, took a class called Mind Psi Biotics. The instructor was a woman named Helen Bangs-Weygand. (She died many years ago.)

    This was a free introduction that people could attend to decide if they wanted to take her paid class or not:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdrLwpk_xEo

    To make a long story short, to “graduate” this class, one had to remote view an ill person using the protocol she taught in the class, correctly identify the “health challenge” that the person was having, and attempt to “correct the health challenge.”

    This graduation test was run on a one-on-one basis and the person conducting the test (someone who had already graduated) was not aware of the ill person’s condition or identity. That information was in a sealed envelope. They were probably concerned with the tester inadvertently “sending” the answer to the student. This is all well documented in remote viewing protocols now.

    I’m pretty sure that I was asked to describe the patient, if I could, as well as the organ or area of the body with the “challenge.”

    I told the tester that the person described in the sealed envelope was an old woman with a “health challenge” with her liver.

    The liver appeared red to me during the guided visualization of the subject, while everything else was green, meaning OK. The anatomy list was in the dozens long, head to toe.

    After the test concluded, the tester opened the envelope and said the patient was a late 70s woman with cirrhosis of the liver.

    Lucky guess by nine year old me? Maybe, maybe not.

    I tend to think it wasn’t a lucky guess, because, at that time, I didn’t think such things were impossible. My mom did it. Lots of responsible looking adults in the class could do it. I should be able to do it, thought nine year old me.

    Life happens. I tried the same technique on my mother, decades later, but she still died of cancer in her 70s.

    Another case: I don’t want to give the details here, but there was a situation that might have required a child to have surgery. In desperation, I did the technique and even managed to track down Helen, who was in her 80s by this time. She remembered me from her class like it was yesterday.

    She told me to keep doing the technique and that she would personally do it for this child. She would also task her group to assist with the child’s health challenge.

    The child wound up not needing the surgery.

    Maybe the situation resolved itself. Maybe the chiropractor helped. Maybe the psi protocol helped. Maybe a combination. Who knows…

    Anyway, this is long enough.

    It’s like Helen taught in her class, “You’re free to accept or reject this information as you see fit.”

    Note: The class was a form of mind control. She told students it was and that’s why it was important to know it was up to them to be able to accept or reject what was taught.

    She warned that people should be very careful about allowing themselves to be placed in an altered state of consciousness by anyone or anything they don’t trust.

    The first time I heard that TV was a mind control device that could be used for good, but isn’t: That’s right, that six foot tall red headed lady you see in the video above warned us about TV as mind control circa 1980.

  6. Snowman says:

    I have offered to be hypnotized on a few, widely separate occasions. Even though I wanted to see what it was like each time, the hypnotist couldn’t put me under his spell.

    I see that now as a safety feature built into my mind. Perhaps it also contributed to my mistrust of politicians and attempts to figure out what they are really up to.

    I recently searched ‘distance viewing’ on google. Way down the results list was an Irish-American site with lots of personal stories. I was amazed and delighted to find that many other people have experienced the specific kind of incidences that I have. Like Kevin, I’ve had sufficient evidence to know that what I experienced really happened. Not crazy, not hallucinating — just able to spontaneously tune in in a way most others can’t. Many on the site thought the ability could be taught.

    Don’t know if this is faked, but here is an 80 page PDF supposedly from the CIA:
    A Suggested Remote Viewing Training Procedure. 1986
    https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP96-00789R002200070001-0.pdf

  7. soothing hex says:

    Some evidence shows that if one prays for a sick person, worst results can issue if the ‘beneficiary’ is told.

    https://www.templeton.org/news/what-can-science-say-about-the-study-of-prayer

    http://mrpeterson.pbworks.com/w/file/fetch/59105992/STEP%20experiment.pdf

  8. pookie says:

    I made sure to keep a copy of the below revelation by Ben Rich of Skunkworks when I first read it online years ago, but here’s the first part:

    Ben Rich of Skunkworks Said We Have Technology to Take ET Home

    According to a UCLA engineering alumnus, in 1993 a fellow alumnus, who happened to run one of the most advanced and secretive aircraft development organizations in the world, says the key to the technology that will allow us to travel to the stars, without taking a lifetime to get there, lies in ESP.

    Read the rest here:
    https://web.archive.org/web/20231126011019/https://thetruthisinyourroom.blogspot.com/2013/07/ben-rich-of-skunkworks-said-we-have.html

  9. Kevin says:

    @pookie

    Yes, the Ben Rich info was a weirdly revealing nugget of data long before the CIA/New York Times went into afterburner limited hangout in 2017.

    Interestingly, Eyes on Cinema just posted this a few hours ago. haha

    Lockheed Skunk Works director Ben Rich and his remarks on black project “alien” technologies

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QfRX9x20qOk

  10. Kevin says:

    I’ve mostly stopped posting stories about intelligence community limited hangout “disclosure,” but even that stuff is now mentioning the psi component of the phenomenon:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PcuxnqQLuAQ

    I have to admit, I did not expect them to mention this at all.

  11. Dennis says:

    A little prosaic compared to these stories…

    In the late-90s, I had a job house-painting in CA.
    I was sitting on the kerb of a suburban cul-de-sac one day, eating my lunch, when a Lucent Technologies vehicle drove up. A guy got out, grabbed his tool belt from the back of the car, and started walking around holding a tool in each hand, occasionally bending down to spray paint markings on the road.

    Intrigued, I asked what he was doing and he said he was marking where the water pipes were located because they were going to dig up the road to lay fibre optic in a few days. His tools were dowsing rods, each a piece of wire bent into an L-shape, the short length resting inside a short section of pipe he grasped vertically.

  12. Snowman says:

    Why would aliens have revealed themselves to our military but not to all of us? What do military types have to offer them that we civilians don’t? Why didn’t they just take whatever they want and ignore or blow away the military types? Why all the fake pics and fake stories if real spacecraft were here to be photographed and described? Are they very gradually leading us up to their takeover, or their settling down among us, or their taking us as emigrants elsewhere, in any case trying to do it as peacefully as possible but using our military as necessary to impose/enforce their wishes?

    Somebody who can see into the future ought to look for what this is going to bring us and let us know.

  13. dale says:

    @Kevin
    Appreciate you relaying that experience. Appreciate all the stories. There is so much more to life than what we see and touch. Thanks

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