Life is been keeping me off X lately, and that’s likely to continue for a while. I will still drop by once in a while, but mostly staying quiet for now.
Until then take care and enjoy the scroll!
There are two accounts using my picture, name, and content. One of them is messaging my followers. I don’t have a second account. Please help me report these accounts.
Thank you.
@abhiyogi I love the Banyans tree. Near Bhot there is a street where at both sides we have Banyan trees in rows. These trees are a complete ecosystem on their own support for many types of lives, and can live many centuries. Really magnificent
Did you know the bizarre true story behind the "Man from Taured" legend?
In October 1959, a smooth-talking man named "John Allen Kuchar Zegrus" arrived in Japan with his Korean wife, carrying a passport from a country that didn’t exist: "Negusi-Habesi," a fictional Saharan nation.
Zegrus spun an elaborate backstory—claiming he was a WWII RAF pilot, a former POW, and a spy working for multiple governments. He even said he was in Japan to recruit mercenaries for the Arab Coalition.
But when he tried cashing forged checks at Tokyo banks, authorities arrested him. His passport was a crude fake, stamped with imaginary embassy seals. After a dramatic suicide attempt with hidden glass during sentencing, he served a year in prison before being deported to Hong Kong… and then vanished from history.
So how did this become an interdimensional mystery?
By the 1970s, Zegrus’ story had mutated into the "Man from Taured" myth—a traveler from a parallel-universe version who supposedly disappeared from a guarded hotel room. Books and conspiracy theorists ran wild, turning a real-life con artist’s fraud into an enduring paranormal legend.
The truth is there was no vanishing acts, no alternate dimensions—just a master manipulator whose tall tale outlived him.