We Are Not Alone (And Never Were)
Chapter Fifteen - Vimanas and Vedic Tech
Section 16 of 18
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Vimanas and Vedic Tech
BEFORE THE WRIGHT brothers ever touched wood and cloth, the skies of ancient India were already buzzing—with Vimanas.
We’re not talking metaphors here.
We’re talking blueprints.
The word Vimana appears throughout ancient Hindu texts like the Mahabharata, the Ramayana, and the Vaimanika Shastra. It translates to "measuring out" or "traversing"—and is used to describe aerial vehicles capable of:
- Vertical takeoff and landing
- Long-range atmospheric travel
- Interplanetary movement
- Cloaking and stealth
- Shooting advanced weaponry
One description from the Ramayana literally reads:
“The Pushpaka Vimana resembled the Sun and belonged to my brother. It was brought by the powerful Ravana… that aerial and excellent Vimana going everywhere at will… that chariot resembling a bright cloud in the sky.”
A chariot resembling a bright cloud? That’s a spaceship. It’s a fucking spaceship.
Now here’s where it gets real.
In 1908, a man named Subbaraya Shastry began channeling Sanskrit texts that would become the Vaimanika Shastra.
It included diagrams, propulsion methods, energy source descriptions, and even pilot training techniques.
Key concepts?
- Anti-gravity propulsion using mercury vortex engines
- “Solar energy harnessing crystals”
- Sound-frequency steering
- Multiple classes of Vimanas, including warships and reconnaissance craft
It’s not poetic. It’s an engineering document—written thousands of years ago.
You think these people were imagining UFOs before electricity existed?
Or maybe… they just knew.
Let’s talk about the war.
The Mahabharata describes a catastrophic battle involving divine weapons:
“It was as if the elements had been unleashed… A single projectile charged with all the power of the Universe. An incandescent column of smoke and flame as bright as ten thousand suns rose in all its splendor… It was the unknown weapon, the Iron Thunderbolt, a gigantic messenger of death.”
Fallout. Radiation sickness. Burned corpses.
Birds dropping from the sky. Hair and nails falling out.
The aftermath matches a nuclear explosion.
This isn’t just mythology.
This is data, encoded in story.
The kind of story that only makes sense if it’s retelling something real—a technology-fueled cataclysm, way before Hiroshima.
Here’s the kicker.
The Vedic texts weren’t just technical manuals.
They were also deeply cosmological.
- Time was non-linear.
- Universes were infinite.
- Consciousness was central.
- Travelers moved between lokas (planes of existence).
- Matter was made of vibration.
- Geometry wasn’t decoration—it was a map of multidimensional space.
It’s quantum physics, written in verse.
We think we’re advanced.
But maybe we’re just remembering.
And the Vedas?
They weren’t myths.
They were manuals.
