The Faluns I Saw

a practitioner from mainland,

PureInsight | June 4, 2001

As for the Falun, it is even more wonderful, though hard to describe in words. I can see the Falun in the upper front of my right eye almost all the time. Teacher says that Falun can be divided infinitely, which is exactly true. Sometimes, it turns into several Faluns; other times, it changes into tens or hundreds of Faluns, all of different sizes. In the end, however, it changes back to one Falun. They can be arranged into different shapes: triangles, squares, circles, etc. The Falun can also take on various colors. It can be yellow, and then change to green; it also changes from green in the center and pink on the sides or pink in the center and green on the sides. Sometime it rotates quickly while at other times it rotates slowly (I could not clearly see the symbol inside the Falun). Even more mystical, one night, after we had dinner, I saw a small Falun flying in my house. I immediately asked my wife to turn off the lights so we could see it more clearly. In a second, the Falun turned into a flower so beautiful that it could not be described with human language. The flower would change every few seconds until, finally, it had gone through twelve colors. In the end it changed back to a Falun.

One day, as I was riding my bike to sell some goods, I saw two Faluns in front of me. They were about three or four meters from me, and were floating two meters above the ground. They were as big as ping-pong balls, and one was on top of the other. As one moved down, the other moved up. Their movements looked like children tossing balls and they were incredibly beautiful. Regardless of whether I rode fast or slow, they always kept the same distance from me. After seven or eight minutes, they disappeared. Teacher said that a Falun is 'too beautiful to describe in words.' After I studied Dafa, I was enlightened to the fact that a Falun is an advanced being and it varies all the time. What I saw was nothing to be surprised about. Now, two years have passed and I still find it interesting whenever I recalled the scene at that moment.

(translated from: http://www.zhengjian.org/sci/sci/home/newscontent.asp?ID=10218)

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