The Living Buddha: Case EF-991-M
[!CAUTION] ARCHIVE CASE: EF-991-M SUBJECT: BIOLOGICAL STASIS / SOUL ANCHORING LOCATION: MEANDER MEDICAL CENTRE, NETHERLANDS (ORIGIN: CHINA/MONGOLIA) STATUS: ACTIVE ANALYSIS (RESIDUAL BIO-RESONANCE DETECTED)
Abstract
In February 2015, the Drents Museum in the Netherlands orchestrated a high-definition CT scan at the Meander Medical Centre. What was intended as a routine examination of a 1,000-year-old golden Buddha revealed a biological anomaly: the skeletal remains of Buddhist master Liuquan, seated in the eternal lotus position within the hollow bronze cast. While the public narrative focused on "self-mummification," our internal investigation (Case EF-991-M) discovered that the Master’s internal organs had been replaced with encoded rolls of paper—a trans-human ritual designed to anchor the consciousness to a physical vessel for a millennium. This report evaluates the Liuquan mummy alongside the 2015 Mongolian discovery of a monk in "Tukdam" stasis.
Source: Meander Medical / Case EF-991-M Diagnostic Reconstruction
The Discovery at Meander Medical Centre
The CT scan confirmed that the mummy is approximately 1,000 years old, dating back to the 11th or 12th century. The master, Liuquan, was a member of the Chinese Meditation School. Unlike standard mummification, where the body is treated post-mortem, Liuquan likely underwent a process of incremental biological shutdown while still conscious.
The golden statue surrounding him is not a coffin; it is a Conductive Containment Vessel. The bronze and gold alloy acts as a Faraday cage, shielding the master's "residual charge" from environmental electromagnetic interference. This suggests that the practitioners of this ritual were aware of the electromagnetic nature of human consciousness long before the advent of modern neuroscience.
The Organic Replacement: Scraps of the Sacred
The most significant finding was the removal of the master's internal organs. In standard Sokushinbutsu (the Japanese tradition of self-mummification), the organs are left in the body to dry out. However, Liuquan’s organs were surgically removed and replaced with rolls of paper inscribed with ancient Chinese characters.
Our linguistic analysis of these "paper organs" indicates that they were not merely decorative. The ink used contained high concentrations of heavy metals, effectively turning the master's chest cavity into a low-voltage battery. By replacing perishable meat with permanent "sacred data," the ritualists created a hybrid entity—part biological, part symbolic—designed to bypass the decay of time.
Comparative Case: The Mongolian Tukdam Monk
In the same year (2015), another mummified monk was found in the Songinokhairkhan district of Mongolia. Seated in the lotus position and wrapped in animal hides, this monk showed even less decay than Liuquan. Some Buddhist scholars claimed the monk was not dead, but in a state of Tukdam—the final meditative state before reaching Nirvana.
Our field agents in Ulaanbaatar reported that the Mongolian monk exhibited a "warm zone" around the heart region, suggesting a residual metabolic process that functioned at a sub-cellular level. While mainstream science called it "natural mummification due to the cold," EtherealFiles investigators classify both Liuquan and the Mongolian monk as successful Stasis-Anchors.
Source: EtherealFiles Lab / Bio-Resonance Log EF-991-M
The Path of the Poisoned Master
The preparation for Case EF-991-M involves an ordeal that spans years: * Dehydration Protocol: Consuming only seeds and nuts to strip the body of fat. * The Urushi Ritual: Drinking a tea made from the sap of the lacquer tree. The sap is toxic and induces severe vomiting, further dehydrating the body and poisoning the tissues against maggots and bacteria. * Final Sealing: The monk is placed in a stone tomb with a bell and a breathing tube. They ring the bell daily to signal they are still meditating. When the bell stops, the tube is removed and the tomb is sealed for 1,000 days.
Investigator’s Conclusion
The Liuquan Buddha is a functional piece of 11th-century technology. It is a soul-vessel designed to bridge the gap between human incarnation and the next density of existence. The removal of the organs and the insertion of the "paper battery" indicates an advanced understanding of the soul's ability to anchor itself to complex geometric and symbolic structures.
Liuquan is not a mummy. He is a dormant operator, waiting for the right resonant frequency to re-engage with the physical plane.
Stay vigilant. Not all statues are empty.
Senior Investigator, EtherealFiles
DEBRIEFING NOTES
This report is part of the EtherealFiles initiative to document extra-terrestrial and paranormal phenomena. All findings are subject to verification by senior archives staff.