Optical IlIusions of Ancient India - Everything You Know Is Wrong?

Are we looking at ancient temples in a completely different angle? Are the carvings actually fooling us all the time? Is it possible to unlock the truth about ancient Indian temples? Do we even grasp 1% of the information found in these carvings? Let's delve into MAYALOKA - the world of more than 100 ancient illusions. Whatsapp :// Instagram................ Facebook.............. Twitter...................... Email id - @ 0:00 - The Hidden Postures 1:55 - Where are the Bulls? 3:57 - World’s Oldest Illusion 5:52 - What’s Inside? 6:21 - Mesmerizing Music 8:49 - Magical Monkey 11:17 - A Strange Carving 12:07 - How many positions? 13:07 - The Hidden Illusions 14:49 - Human Palanquin? 15:27 - Hidden to Plain Sight 18:30 - Sharing is Caring 20:42 - Spider Woman 21:43 - NOT Multi Armed 23:59 - 3 Headed Dog 24:47 - A Movie in a Carving 25:58 - Can you Visualize This? 26:26 - 2 Headed Bird 27:23 - Mythical Or Extinct? 29:06 - 3 in 1 Yali 30:08 - Ancient Pole Dancers 30:53 - Optical Fish 31:51 - Human Life Cycle 33:19 - The Hidden Stories 36:35 - The Corner Elephants 37:12 - Ambiguous carvings 38:00 - 5 in 1 Deity 38:31 - Why do They Carve This? 39:16 - Conclusion Hey guys, here you can see an ancient carving of Lord Shiva, doing his cosmic dance. But there is something weird about this. How many legs does he have? 3. And also notice his hands, how many hands does he have? That’s right, 3 hands. Let us look at another carving of Shiva. Here too, he is dancing, but notice that he has 3 legs, not 2. So, we can see him in 3 different leg positions: 1, 2 and 3. But again, notice that he also has 3 hands. And if you focus on the hands alone you will get 3 different hand positions: 1, 2 and 3. But what happens when you start looking at the carving with the hands and legs, the result is mesmerizing. This is dancing position number 1, dancing posture 2, 3rd position looks like this, this is position number 4, this is the 5th position, and this is the last of 6th position. For humans, this is 3 + 3 so a total of 6 positions, but may be Lord Shiva uses three times three, so may be, he is capable of these three postures as well. If this is not enough, look at this carving, it not only shows Shiva with 3 legs and 3 hands, he even has 3 heads. How many positions would you get with this carving? 9? 12? 18? Now, Forget Shiva, let’s look at his guards, see how he has 2 giant guardian doorkeepers. The guardian of Shiva is called Nandhi, and this is how he is carved here. But if you are a Hindu, you will say wait a minute, that is not how Nandhi is usually shown, he is usually shown as a Bull, right? This is how a typical Nandhi is carved, but this guardian does not look like a bull. Are you sure about that? Look carefully, and you will see the bull’s face on his body. This is a very stealthy optical illusion, 99% of the people who visit this temple, will not even realize that this is a bull’s face. See how the nipples make up his eyes, and his belly fat makes up the bull’s mouth. You can even see how the horns are going up. You can see this carved on the other guardian on that side as well. I call them Ninja Nandhis, because this is a very stealthy, secretive way of hiding in plain sight. And look at this one, this is also a Nandhi, it looks somewhat human, but when we zoom out, you realize there are 2 faces, there is also a bull overlapping the human-like face. If you want to see a human, you will see a human, and if you want to see the bull, you can see the bull. And if you look at the side view, the sculptor has carved the entire bull’s body with the hump and all 4 legs, so this is a spectacular carving of the Ninja Nandhi. But Nandhi is not the only Ninja hiding in plain sight, when you visit ancient Indian temples, you can miss the illusions that are right before your eyes. Unlike ancient builders, modern human beings are not designed to absorb 100% of the information they see. Look at this carving, what do you see? A calf is drinking milk from its mother, and the cow is licking its baby. What else do you see? Why does the cow have an unusually thick leg in the front? Is there some Maya, some illusion hiding in this carving? Let us look at a similar carving in Mahabalipuram. This is 1300 years old, so it has faded a little bit, but it shows the same thing, a cow licking its calf while the baby is drinking milk, right? But again, there is something different about the front legs, right? #ancienttechnology #praveenmohan #hinduism