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Telepathy with Animals

09/25/2009 · Leave a Comment

This article was forwarded to me by my friend Jonathon Parker…Enjoy

Telepathy with Animals
 

Animal communicators – specialized type of psychics – believe that meaningful telepathic communication is possible with your pet. They say even you can do it.

“I broke my ankle in five places,” writes the unnamed author at Interspecies Telepathic Communication “I was lying in bed in a great amount of pain when I heard, ‘I know we come from different cultures, and maybe you don’t think I can help you, but if you just pet me, I will take away your pain.’ I heard these words in my head as clearly as someone speaking to me. I opened my eyes to find my angel cat Kisa on my pillow and looking right at me. I knew it was her. I did pet her and my pain did go away! I slept comfortably for the first time since the accident.”

The author is a self-professed “animal communicator,” one of a growing number of people who say they have the psychic ability to communicate telepathically with various animals. “Anybody can communicate with animals,” the author claims, and says it’s done through imaging. “Animals communicate in pictures, feelings, emotions, and concepts. Sometimes you get a picture of what the animal is trying to communicate, but many times it is an emotion or concept that you pick up.”

What is Animal Telepathy?
“The animal doesn’t actually open its mouth with words flowing out verbally,” say the animal communicators at The Fur People, “but animals do amazingly communicate non-verbally. Many times I receive information in words; or feelings in my body; or pictures and symbols which the animal gives me through telepathy.”

Telepathy between people and animals is not much different than telepathy between two people, according to Raphaela Pope. “The dictionary defines telepathy as ‘communication of impressions of any kind from one mind to another independent of recognized channels of sense,’” writes Pope at her What is Telepathic Communication with Animals website. “My experience is that telepathy is the universal language of the animal kingdom. I believe that humans are actually born with telepathic ability, but tend to suppress or forget it when they learn spoken language. Telepathic communication assumes that animals are sentient beings with their own purposes, desires, choices, and manner of looking at the world.”

Webster’s defines sentient as “responsive to or conscious of sense impressions,” and by that definition it would have to be agreed that most animals are sentient beings. And certainly many have desires and make choices. But can they communicate those desires and choices? Surely, a dog can communicate that it wants to go outside by standing by the door and scratching at it or barking. And incredible discoveries have been made about the minds and communicative abilities of some higher primates, most notably Koko, a gorilla who was taught American sign language and now has a vocabulary of more than 600 words. “Talking” to her caretakers through sign language and a special Macintosh computer, Koko is able to articulate not only such basic desires as what and when she wants to eat, but how also how she “feels” about many things in her life.

There is a great leap, however, from saying that animals can communicate their needs in the familiar way that they do to saying that they can do so through telepathic words and pictures (just as telepathy among humans is not an everyday event for most people). Animal communicators believe that it’s not only possible, but that they can talk to animals in this way at will. Raphaela Pope recounts a consultation she had with a German Shepherd named Helga: “Helga’s person, Joan, told me that Helga had a very severely lacerated left ear. She wanted to know how the dog had injured herself. When I tuned into Helga, she showed me a picture of digging at the wooden fence surrounding her property. Helga tried to get her face under the fence, only to run into an old rusty piece of barbed wire. Later, Joan asked Helga to show her exactly where the wire was. Helga led her to the spot and Joan found the old rusty wire wrapped around the base of the fence!”

Animal communicators have many such anecdotes, some of which you can read about in such books as Penelope Smith’s Animal Talk and When Animals Speak. But why talk to animals? For many animal communicators, it’s their business. As consultants, they offer their services to help customers solve problems they are having with their pets. “This type of service is most beneficial to you and your pet when there are problems going on,” says The Fur People. “Behavior is one way an animal can demonstrate its unhappiness, and illness is another.”

How You Can Do It
Can you talk to your pet? Animal communicators provide these tips:

  • “I discovered that one of the secrets to effective communications with nature is to be clear within yourself, emotionally and mentally – and to put a little emotion into the communications. Allow yourself to notice, listen with your heart, speak with feeling, then trust that you’re connecting.” – Laura Simpson, from “The Art of Noticing Your Pet.”
  • “Picture in your mind what it is you are trying to get them to do or what you are trying to tell them. Send them your emotions and feelings too. If you intend that your message gets there, it will. Try not to lean over your animal in anticipation of hearing what they are saying. Sit back, relax, and let the animal’s thoughts and feelings come to you.” – Interspecies Telepathic Communication
  • “The basic steps of telepathic animal communication are creating a state of quietness and receptivity in order to actually receive the communication, sending the message, and receiving the answer.” – Raphaela Pope

How do you know your experience is genuine? Raphaela Pope offers this answer: “People new to animal communication often ask, ‘How can I be sure the answer came from the animal? It feels like I’m making it up.’ If you are in a quiet and relaxed state, not putting out a lot of thoughts or emotions, the information that comes to you must be from the animal. Because it comes to you through your mind, or your emotional sense, or your visual perception it may feel like it is from you. You will know it is not when you get an unexpected answer.”

Laura Simpson adds: “Many folks will want to discount the communications, thinking their imagination is working overtime… but if you listen closely – and with your heart – you’ll soon discover that your imagination knows what it’s doing… the images and words come up as they do for a reason and if you will respond in trust that your insights are valid, you’ll find that your pets, and in fact all of nature, have quite a story to tell you!”

Still, since the pets cannot verbalize their problems and illnesses, how do we really, really know if we, or an animal communication we might hire, is understanding what the animal might be trying to communicate? The proof of the pudding, as they say, is in the eating. If the problem or illness goes away or improves after such communication… maybe there’s something to it after all.  

From Stephen Wagner,

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An Amazing Weekend with 7 of the Top Psychic/Mediums in the world!

09/19/2009 · 2 Comments

One of the most amazing events of the year is coming to Minnesota this
November 6-8.

The Awakenings event begins a 3 night, 2 day journey to understanding your
full potential and unlocking your psychic ability.

Your host for the weekend is KTLK FM’s Dave Schrader, host of the top
paranormal radio show, Darkness Radio.

We have brought together 7 of the top psychic/sensitive/medium teachers in
the world all under one roof for an amazing weekend that will thrill and
entertain you!

11 hours of hands on workshops on developing your abilities and
understanding your potential.

7 1/2 hours of Live Medium Galleries led by top Mediums each night.
Connect with loved ones on the other side with Spirit Artist & Mediums
Michael and Marti Parry on Friday Night, for his first time ever at an
American event the legendary Derek Acorah on Saturday Night and wrapping up
our event, one of the most sought after and popular psychic/mediums in the
world today, Chip Coffey, will end our conference with a gallery session on
Sunday night.

Join them along with fellow speakers, from Psychic Kids and Dead Famous TV
series on The Biography Channel, Chris Fleming, Psychic Detective from
CourtTV’s Haunting Evidence, John J. Oliver and our own local Minnesota
legend, Echo Bodine.

Did I mention we have over 20 metaphysical vendors and packages to attend
this event start as low as $70!

Don’t wait, your future is here and tickets are selling fast.
Visit http://www.darknessradio.com/TRIPS/awakenings/index.htm  for more
information and ticket prices.

This entire event is being held at the Ramada Inn/Grand Rios in Brooklyn
Park, MN.
Only 20 mins from the Minneapolis/St. Paul Airport & Mall of America and
less than 15 minutes from Downtown Minneapolis.

We have special room rates and packages for just $99 a night that includes
2 wristbands for the family fun water park. Bring the whole family and have
an adventure of a lifetime!

Order tickets now!  http://www.darknessradio.com/TRIPS/awakenings/index.htm

Warmest regards-
 
Dave Schrader
 
Listen Live to the best in paranormal radio Sunday Nights from
10pm – 2am central.
www.KTLKFM.com
www.DarknessRadio.com
www.MySpace.com/thedarknight
www.FaceBook.com/DarknessRadioDave
 
ORDER THE NEW BOOK CO-AUTHORED BY DAVE SCHRADER @ AMAZON.COM
The Other Side: A Teens Guide to Ghost Hunting and the Paranormal

Darkness Radio
4150 North Lexington Ave
Suite 4202
Shore View, MN 55126

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Michael Jackson Contacted by Psychic James Van Praagh

08/13/2009 · 5 Comments

King of Pop Michael Jackson is in ‘good spirits’, according to renowned psychic James Van Praagh who spoke to the dead musician. Praagh asked Michael Jackson several questions. One question focused on circumstances regarding the pop icon’s  death.

 

Controversy surrounds Jackson’s death on doctor- “enablers’ who allegedly have been giving him addictive prescription pills. Speculation goes that Jackson might have died on drug overdose.

 

Jackson was in his rented home at Holmby Hills, Bel Air when he collapsed reportedly due to cardiac arrest.

 

But Jackson, according to Praagh’s conversation with the pop icon said, there was ‘no foul play in his death’.

 

“I felt sick that day, very sick. My doctor Conrad told me to rest, but I had to practice moves for my upcoming concert. I was tired, very tired, then I collapsed,” Michael Jackson told James Van Praagh.

 

The popular King of Pop is scheduled to have a show in London a few weeks from now.

 

And where is Michael Jackson now? How is he doing in the Otherworld?

 

“I am surrounded by happiness. I never felt happier,” said Jackson, according to Van Praagh.

 

With a world which tried him for child molestation charges and nearly $500 million debt knocking at his doorstep, sleeping finally at rest must have been relieving for the pop icon.

 

But when asked about his children, Jackson started crying. “I miss them a lot. I want them to be happy. I will be with them…  in their hearts, will be looking over their shoulders.”

 

Van Praagh also asked Jackson where he would like to be laid to rest. Jackson responded, “Neverland Ranch. I do not miss my body. I do not feel anything. I am happier without it. I can only remember pain that my body gave me.”

 

Talking with the dead person’s spirit is a phenomenon among mediums and psychics from different countries and cultures, when relatives of the dead want to know where they are and what restless issues they could be facing in the Otherworld.

 

Check the original article here http://www.palluxo.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=609:exclusive-interview-with-dead-michael-jackson-psychic-medium&catid=4:news&Itemid=104

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Psychic Bonnie Vent Channeling Michael Jackson ?

07/10/2009 · 57 Comments

 

Source : http://www.sdparanormal.com/Michael_Jackson.html

 

PERSONAL NOTE : The videos and story below was brought to my attention at my blog by Ms. Bonnie Vent. Many of you may already know that name. She is a Psychic/Medium based in San Diego, CA who has been a researcher of the paranormal for over 20 years . She has recently connected with a spirit claiming to be Michael Jackson. ABC News had planned an interview with her, but when she wanted them to help her to verify the information she had channeled with family and friends of Michael’s strangely they backed away.

    Watch the 2 part video below and see what you think…Also see her website for more.

Best wishes,

Donald Ryles PhD

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Psychics given £4,500 government grant to help relatives contact the dead

06/30/2009 · Leave a Comment

By Luke Salkeld , http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1165017/Psychics-given-4-500-government-grant-help-relatives-contact-dead.html

 

 

Two clairvoyants have been awarded a £4,500 government grant to set up a school for psychics.

Paul and Deborah Rees had their palms crossed with taxpayers’ silver after applying for funding through a Department for Work and Pensions job creation scheme.

The couple’s Accolade Academy of Psychic and Mediumistic Studies aims to train people to contact ‘the other side’.

 

 Psychics Deborah and Paul Rees have been awarded a £4,500 government grant to teach people how to contact the dead

Yesterday critics branded the award a ‘disgrace’ and said public money should not be spent on ‘hocus pocus’ business ideas at a time when thousands are losing their jobs.

But Mr Rees, 40, and his wife, 37, defended the public funding.

 Secretary of State for Work and Pensions James Purnell: His department approved the grant

Mr Rees said: ‘People who feel their tax money has been wasted should remember that if they’d lost a child they would go to a medium to get peace that their loved one has passed safely and is in a better place.

‘Our job is to provide substantial evidence to bring ease to people’s grieving.’

The couple, who have been working as mediums for five years, admitted they were surprised to get the Want2Work grant aimed at setting up new businesses.

Mr Rees, a father-of-two who worked as an upholsterer for 17 years, said: ‘They hadn’t invested in psychics before so we really had to prove ourselves.’

The couple run the £65 workshops from their home in Bridgend, South Wales, and say the cash will be spent on printing, advertising and website costs.

But Conservative Welsh Assembly member Jonathan Morgan said: ‘It is an utter disgrace.

The people administering the scheme should be disciplined for allowing this project to get public funding  -  and the money should be recouped.’

Mark Wallace, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: ‘The last thing our money should be spent on is this kind of hocus pocus.

‘At a time when people who are alive are losing their jobs, it’s absurd that money is being spent trying to contact the other side.’

Welsh Assembly chiefs have now launched an internal investigation into the funding of the psychic school.

A DWP spokesman said of the £21million Want2Work scheme, aimed at getting 200,000 people back into work: ‘We give real help to anyone who loses their job to get back into work as quickly as possible.’

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Michael Jackson, Ghosts and the Paranormal : The King of Pop’s connections to psychics and spirits

06/26/2009 · 10 Comments

PERSONAL NOTE : I had recently posted about Michael Jackson deciding against renting a supposed haunted house for his stay in the UK . The link is:

http://parabook.wordpress.com/2009/04/27/michael-jackson-decides-against-haunted-house/

    

Best wishes,

Donald Ryles PhD

 

Source : By Stephen Wagner,

  http://paranormal.about.com/od/humanenigmas/a/aa020705.htm

WHEN MY DAUGHTER was two years old, back in 1982, she used to love to watch Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” video on MTV. She never seemed to be bothered by the sight of decaying zombies crawling out of graves, or of Jackson himself transforming into a werewolf. I guess she just liked the music.

 

In the early 1980s, Jackson began to transform into something quite stranger than a werewolf, of course, as a result of multiple plastic surgeries. What he became makes the title here, “Michael Jackson and the Paranormal,” sound like the premise of a joke or at least a redundancy, but that’s not my intention. Despite his obvious talent, it’s hard to imagine a person weirder than Jackson was at times, from his grotesque appearance to his quirky behavior – a bizarre image he seemed to have purposely cultivated. But we’ll leave all that (and other matters) for others to judge.

 

Beyond the imaginary elements of “Thriller,” Michael Jackson did have real-life connections to the world of the paranormal.

 

URI GELLER

 

Jackson was close friends with controversial psychic Uri Geller. In fact, in March, 2001 when Geller and his wife retook their wedding vows in a well-publicized ceremony, Jackson stood in as best man.

 

Apparently, Jackson first learned about Geller when he was a small boy through some books about the psychic, and was particularly fascinated by his spoon-bending and telepathic abilities. Many years later, they were formally introduced by Mohammed Al Fayed (the father of Dodi Fayed, who was killed in the car crash that also took the life of Princess Diana). Jackson urged Geller to come to New York to meet him, which he did. Jackson rented a movie theater for Geller, Jackson and Jackson’s son Prince for a private screening of The Matrix, which features a scene of psychic spoon bending, probably inspired by Geller’s trademark feat.

 

Geller was even invited to attend one of Jackson’s recording sessions in 2000 or 2001. Reportedly, Geller meditated over the recording tapes to “energize” them.

 

Geller was also a staunch defender of Jackson regarding his legal troubles involving minors. According to Geller, back in 2001 he hypnotized Jackson to help cure an urge for peanut butter. While Jackson was under, Geller also asked him about his alleged sexual molestation of children. “He answered me under deep hypnosis that he had never touched a child in a sexual way,” Geller told CBS News. “He said – and here I’m using his exact words – ‘My relations with children are very beautiful.’ I’m a good hypnotist, and I know who is trying to mislead me. I can see straight into the subject’s eyes … [Jackson] didn’t fool me, I’m absolutely sure of it.”

 

And there’s another psychic in Jackson’s corner. Jacqueline Stallone, mother of actor Sylvester Stallone, claims to be a clairvoyant and has been doing psychic readings and making predictions for years. In fact, she correctly predicted that Arnold Schwarzenegger would become Governor of California. In November, 2003, Stallone told the MSNBC source The Scoop that Jackson would be found innocent. “He is totally innocent. I got a flash. You’re going to find out that this is the biggest frame up that ever happened. People say his career is over. They’re wrong. He’s going to come out of this stronger than ever. This all came to me like a lightning bolt.”

 

Stallone was correct about Jackson being found innocent of all charges, but I don’t think it can be said that he emerged stronger than ever.

 

PSYCHIC MICHAEL

On at least one occasion, Jackson indicated that he had psychic experiences. In an interview with Barbara Walters on September 12, 1997, she asked him how he heard of Princess Diana’s death. “I woke up, and my doctor gave me the news,” he said, “and I fell back down in grief, and started to cry…. I said there’s another one real soon, I feel it coming, there’s another one, and I pray it’s not me. Please, don’t let it be me. And Mother Teresa came.”

 

Walters then asked if he was saying he was psychic. “I don’t want to say that,” he replied, “but I’ve done it before.”

 

MICHAEL AND GHOSTS

 

Jackson wrote a song called “Ghosts,” but it’s not about the supernatural kind. It appears to be about the legal system that haunted him.

 

But he did have ghost connections. In October, 2004, Jackson was reported by BBC News to be bidding on a “genuine Irish ghost trapped in a bottle.” A retired mill worker in Ireland was auctioning the item on eBay, saying that it was at least 100 years old and was bricked up in a window by a priest following a failed exorcism. A newspaper report said that an agent representing Jackson was involved in the bidding. It sold for $478.33, but it is not known if Jackson was the winner.

 

Jackson did claim, according to several sources, to communicate with the spirit of flamboyant pianist Liberace, who died in 1987. Jackson supposedly had a private mirror-filled room where he communed with Liberace. “That’s where I talk to Lee,” Jackson said. “His is the voice I hear in there. I feel his presence so very close to me. [He] is like my guardian angel. He’s even given me permission to record his theme song ‘I’ll Be Seeing You’.”

 

When he was alive, there was a Michael Jackson joke that poked fun at his gaunt, pale appearance: 

Q: What’s the difference between Michael Jackson and a ghost?

A: One is completely white and has a scary face. The other is a supernatural being.

 Now the joke only has a morbid irony.

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Science and the Psychic Taboo

06/10/2009 · Leave a Comment

Parapsychology researcher Dean Radin on ESP, spirituality, and how the consciousness of individuals is connected

 

By David Ian Miller

Source: San Fransisco Gate

 

 

It often seems like science and spirituality are bitter enemies, incapable of playing nicely together. Scientists are not fond of ideas that can’t be tested; spiritual people say that the important things in life are beyond quantifying.

 

But Dean Radin firmly believes that both can get along, at least out on the far fringes where most of his work is done, investigating the extreme reaches of human consciousness.

 

Radin has been conducting experiments on psychic (or “psi”) phenomena since he was 13, an interest that led to appointments at Princeton University, the University of Edinburgh, the University of Nevada, SRI International and Interval Research Corporation.

 

At SRI International he worked on a then-secret government-funded program of psi research, now declassified and dubbed Stargate.

 

In 2000, he cofounded the Boundary Institute and since 2001 he’s been the senior scientist at the Institute of Noetic Sciences, in Petaluma. He’s the author of the book “Entangled Minds: Extrasensory Experiences in a Quantum Reality,” which looks at how theories of quantum physics and other scientific discoveries may provide a logical explanation for psychic phenomena.

 

I spoke with Radin last week about mind-matter interaction, intentional thinking, New Age guilt and the power of chocolate.

 

SF Gate: You recently gave a talk at Google Headquarters in Silicon Valley called “Science and the Psi Taboo.” What did you talk about?

 

Dean Radin: The theme of my talk was that there are 17,500 institutions of higher learning around the world, but only about 30 of them have at least one faculty member who has seriously written about psi, either pro or con. That’s a very small fraction of 1 percent. And I think that’s because it’s a taboo topic.

 

Were you trying to suggest that Google employees shouldn’t view this as a taboo?

 

I don’t see my job as trying to convince anyone of anything. I want people to make up their own minds. I’m interested in countering what amounts to a myth — a popular myth — that there is no scientific evidence (for psychic phenomena), or if there is scientific evidence, then it is not any good. Both of those really are myths.

 

Do you think people can predict events that will occur in the future?

 

Predict is a little bit too strong. I think that sometimes people have experiences that turn out to be true, and they know it in advance, but prediction implies that I’m going to sit down and figure out what is going to happen. I don’t think that the phenomenon is exactly like that. But the fact that people can gain information about future events, of that I’m nearly convinced.

 

What is the most compelling evidence, in your view, that people can sense what might happen?

 

I would say that the experiments that I’ve done which I call “presentiment experiments” are among the most compelling, primarily because the results are more robust than what you typically see in these kinds of experiments.

 

Can you describe what those are?

 

They’re a class of experiments where you don’t ask the participant to consciously try to do anything. You just measure their body’s response as a way of detecting that something is happening. So we measure skin response, pupil dilation and things like that.

 

We ask a person to sit in front of a computer and look at a blank screen, then push a button. A few seconds go by, and then the screen makes a random decision to select a stimulus that is either calm or emotional, and then it goes away after maybe 10 or 15 seconds. And then this process is repeated again and again. The analysis looks at what’s happening while you are waiting for the computer to make that random decision about which picture to show. We are wondering whether people would get an unconscious sense of what their future is about to bring them.

 

When you do this experiment with lots of people on lots of trials, what you end up with is evidence that people significantly show different physiological conditions or states just before emotional pictures are shown as compared to calm pictures, and in the direction that you can predict, as if in fact they were somehow aware of what their future was about to bring.

 

Do you think that we all have some extrasensory abilities?

 

I think we do in the same way that we can all play golf, but we are not all going to win the Masters.

 

Any idea how to improve your psychic skills? Is it like golf, you have to practice?

 

I think the single method that seems to work is meditation. These abilities have something to do with the subtle aspects of mind. The phenomena seem to bubble up from our unconscious, so the more that we are aware of what’s going on in our unconscious, the better people are likely to do. There haven’t been that many experiments working with both meditators and non-meditators, but of those that have been done, the meditators almost always do better, usually significantly better.

 

Can you tell me about what you did on the Stargate project?

 

I was a visiting scientist for a year on the project, before it got that code name, Stargate. Part of my job was to look at literature that had been translated primarily from China and Russia, and on a few occasions to interview defected scientists from those countries who had claimed to be working on something having to do with psychic phenomena. We also conducted our own experiments.

 

What did you learn from that work?

 

I guess the primary thing was, I learned a new way that a person could become frustrated. At the time, and it’s still true somewhat today, there were lots of rumors about what the government may or may not be doing related to psychic phenomena, and most mainstream scientists thought that there actually wasn’t anything going on, nothing worth looking at.

 

Once I went through all of the months and months of background reviews and so on to get the classification, I finally got the briefing that is given to the military officers and intelligence officers with the right clearance, and when you get to the end of that briefing the idea that there is no evidence is so ludicrous that you want to somehow let everybody know this.

 

It is amazing! There are some people who are extremely good, highly reliable remote viewers. And not simply in terms of experimental studies, but in real world applications, typically intelligence-backed applications. There are dozens and dozens of government agencies that were actively using these people, and there are dozens of examples of amazing gifts. The psychics were able to describe things that turned out to be not only true, but pragmatically useful.

 

Last year you conducted an experiment with something you call “intentional chocolate.” You had several Tibetan monks and a Mongolian shaman bless chocolate, and then you tested the moods of people who ate it. What prompted the idea?

 

It came up during a discussion with a chocolate maker from Hawaii. I’m not much of a foodie, so I don’t think about these things very often, but I certainly know that there is something that seems different when food is cooked by someone you love. It feels better. It tastes better. And a lot of chefs swear by the idea that somehow their attitude, their intentions, make a difference in terms of how people respond to food. It occurred to me that this was a testable idea. So we did double-blind experiments to see what would happen if you exposed some chocolate to the highly trained intentions of expert meditators. It came out with results that significantly supported the idea people report having a better mood when eating the intentional chocolate as opposed to the placebo.

 

It was probably the strangest experiment that I’ve done so far because it implies not only that intention changes substance, but whatever is being changed also results in a behavioral difference.

 

I’ll admit I had mixed reactions when I heard about this. On the one hand, I have a general feeling that when food is being created with love and attention that it actually tastes better. But another part of me was thinking: “Oh, come on! This is a scam.” Has this experiment been replicated anywhere else?

 

I don’t think it’s been replicated; the study was just recently published. But I think I point out in the paper that there are previous studies that suggest that something like this probably should work. These are mostly studies involving water and people who do hands-on healing, like therapies of touch, perhaps. And they are asked to hold vials of water while they are doing the healing with the idea that maybe the water will be changed as a result of what’s going on. Then you see if the water makes a difference when it’s used on plants and seeds, as opposed to control water that is not handled. And most of the studies do show that there are small effects that can be detected.

 

Do you consider yourself a spiritual person, and how might you define that for yourself?

 

If spiritual means that there is more than meets the eye, absolutely yes. I feel that is confirmed by looking at the history of science, which in a very cartoonish way has gone from the refinement of common sense to further and further away from common sense. In almost any scientific discipline you can imagine right now, such as physics, the leading edge doesn’t look like common sense at all. It looks more like science fiction.

 

It doesn’t take a great leap of faith to imagine science a few thousand years into the future will be very different from what it is today. Down the line, I imagine what we intuitively feel or describe as spiritual will fall into the domain of science, but it will be a type of science that in today’s terms we wouldn’t recognize at all.

 

Do you believe in a God or gods?

 

Not in a personal God. We tend to think of it in those terms, because we have little tiny pea brains that can only imagine things in human terms, so we psychologically project out into the world that maybe that’s the way it is. But I think that whatever is going on is so far beyond our ability to imagine that I don’t like to limit myself.

 

What do you think God is?

 

Perhaps a form of intelligence that is distributed, or larger than what we would think of as intelligence. Perhaps it’s built into the fabric of reality itself. I don’t see why not.

 

Can we communicate with this intelligence?

 

Certainly a lot of people believe that. I guess I don’t know. I’m open to all possibilities.

 

The problem is that we are also dealing with the possibility of psychopathology, and so people can fool themselves and fool others very easily. So, while I think the answer probably is yes, it also requires a huge amount of caution.

 

Albert Einstein had this notion of “spooky action at a distance,” the way two objects remain connected through time and space without communicating in any conventional way long after their initial interaction is taken place. That is also a part of many cultures’ folk magic traditions. Do you think science is proving that magical theories are correct?

 

A scientist has to be very careful about the word “proof.” I wouldn’t use that word. Only mathematicians can provide proofs. I would say that there is some evidence for this, yes. In quantum entanglement, for example, we have the idea that things that interact remain connected when separated — this is the essence of contact magic. But I don’t think anything is truly supernatural. It’s either natural or it’s not. Magnetism used to be considered magic, but of course we know it really works. I think a lot of what used to be described as magic will transition into language that is more descriptive about what is actually going on.

 

Over the years, you have had your share of arguments with skeptics. You told me that’s something you kind of enjoy. Why do you enjoy it?

 

Well, it keeps both sides sharp. It is necessary in science to take the skeptical viewpoint, because life is short, and it’s not so much fun to fool yourself, even if you can get away with it. So, I’m always grateful to the skeptics who point out things I may have overlooked. What I’m not so grateful about is a kind of stubbornness or, worse, a kind of arrogance whereby people believe their side so strongly that they are not even willing to question it or protest it.

 

Have you ever had what you would call psychic experiences?

 

I think so. Most of them have been extremely mundane. To give you an example, one day my wife and I were both reading our e-mail on our own PCs, within earshot of each other, but we couldn’t see what was on the other person’s screen. So I was just reading an e-mail from a colleague who had just written a book on deja vu some years ago and had just rewritten it as a new issue, and he was going to call it “Deja Vu Revisited.” I thought that was a clever title, and I was going to look it up and tell my wife about it. At that instant, she suddenly looked up from her e-mail and said, “I just had the strangest deja vu!” She had never said anything previously about deja vu, so here was a coincidence of a particular topic at a particular time that looks a lot like telepathy.

 

There has been this craze of late about “The Secret.” And I wonder if you have any thoughts on that, since a lot of the work you do relates to how our minds affect reality.

 

Well, craze is a good word. I mean, it’s a little overblown and embellished, but I think the general idea that intention can help either push us or pull us towards goals that we have is not a bad idea. It’s not significantly different from the power of positive thinking, nor is it too different from the effects that we see in our intentional chocolate experiment and many other experiments like that. There is something about intention that seems to be the underlying focus for a mind-matter interaction.

 

One reason people cringe when they hear about “The Secret” is that it suggests we have far more control over our lives than we probably do. So if you get cancer, let’s say, you should be able to cure yourself with your thinking.

 

It does create this sort of New Age guilt, and actually I think that the intentional effects that we see in the lab (from positive thinking) are pretty small. It’s not as if you’re in a boat without a paddle and you’re about to go over Niagara Falls — you can’t simply zoom off to the shore by wishing that it will happen. But you can, if you pay a little bit of attention beforehand, move it very slightly, and if you do it systematically you might be lucky enough to move it to a place of safety. Obviously, if you are near the falls, it’s too late.   MORE strange, Paranormal & Mind Power related ->->

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How to Avoid Psychic and Occult Scams

06/10/2009 · Leave a Comment

Source : Ryan Omega , LA Occult & Paranormal Examiner

www.examiner.com/x-12989-LA-Occult–Paranormal-Examiner~y2009m6d8-How-to-Avoid-Psychic-and-Occult-Scams

 

In this downturn economy, there is an increased demand for psychic, occult and metaphysical services. The connection to an outside power that is immediately available for guidance is comforting in uncertain times. There are a great deal of good and respectable psychics or intuitive consultants (as some prefer to be called) that are able to help others and happen to be flourishing. At the same time, there are a few people who are using this trend to con people who are seeking help of their money. This drums up negative stereotypical images of psychics such as “Miss Cleo,” driving away people who could actually benefit from metaphysical assistance. The keys to avoiding occult scams are doing research before a consultation, knowing what you are paying for, and remembering that you have the power to walk away from a bad reading.

Doing your research:

Ask other people who have used psychic services before. Ask who they would recommend and how much they charge. Most psychics want to increase their business by giving good readings, knowing that others will talk about them enthusiastically and promote them naturally.

Go to fairs and expos featuring psychics and other occultists. There will be plenty or resources there and you can feel out the best person to work with you.

When speaking to someone you are going to consult, ask about how the service, the price and the amount of time. Those who are doing this as a business will be upfront about the price and what they provide for the price. If at anytime you feel uneasy, thank them for their time and allow yourself time to do more research. Psychic service should be a service for you, not a consent to a high-pressured sales pitch.

Knowing what you are paying for:

Psychic services are extremely varied in price. A street vendor palm reader can charge ten dollars for a fifteen minute reading while a medium on a website can cite $250 an hour while metaphysical experts can charge even more for specialty services. Since there is no set guideline for pricing, this can scare people who are not sure what amount is the “right amount.”

It is important to note that just because one is charging more does not mean it is a scam. It usually means that their services are more in demand and their time has become limited due to the number of people wanting his or her services. Because of this, psychic work is most prone to the standard economic rule that the price goes up when the demand is higher. As the old adage goes, “You get what you pay for,” and this often proves true in metaphysical work.

If you cannot afford what one person charges, do not feel pressured to pay it. Either wait for a time when you can afford it or find another service that you can manage within your means.

Know when to walk away, know when to run:

Hopefully at this point, you have found a metaphysical person that you feel that you can work with. But during a reading, how do you know when things aren’t quite right? Because every reader is different, it’s difficult to look at the process and look at only accuracy. Examining the business professionalism of the reader is what can keep you from trouble.

~Does the person feel like he or she is rushing you even though you’ve paid outright for his or her time? If someone paid for half an hour, she should be wary of anyone who was creating excuses to leave around fifteen minutes into the reading. The reader should have been professional enough to schedule that privileged time with you or reschedule it for another time.

~In the middle of the reading, does he or she attempt to use scare you with a foreboding vision that would cost more money to fix? This is a red flag. Someone telling you that it will cost $500 to fix your demon problem before they do harm to you should be met by walking away. This person does not have your best interest in mind.

~Does the reader ask for more money after the service is rendered (provided that you did not extend your time)? The person should have been professional enough to state a higher rate upfront. Avoid giving in to ploys of guilt or hard luck after you agreed on a price but if you want to tip someone because of good service or sincere helpfulness, by all means feel free.

Potential clients always need to remember that even though psychics and other metaphysical workers have talents, abilities and other powers, all clients have one power that they don’t have: The power to keep them in business.

>>> More Paranormal, Mind Potential>>>

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Indonesian Mystic Controls the Weather

03/16/2009 · Leave a Comment

When pop star Avril Lavigne and the late Pope John Paul II visited Indonesia, a Javanese mystic was called in to work his magic and ensure a rain-free event. He tells Marianne Kearney how he turned from a sceptic into one of the superstitious country’s most sought after rain masters.

 

By Marianne Kearney

Source: AFP

 

 

Indonesian mystic Haryobintoro Tjakra enters a small hut and kneels before the tools of his trade: incense, a bowl of dirt, two black umbrellas and a ceramic burner on which he piles chunks of wood.

 

Bowing his head, he lights the burner, sending fragrant fumes swirling up to the hut’s exhaust fan, and prays in Javanese: the rain must stay away.

 

“I pray to the gods via the medium of smoke,” the 69-year-old says, dressed in black pants and matching high-necked traditional shirt.

 

Tjakra seeks blessings from the local spirits inhabiting Java long before Buddhism and Hinduism, and later Islam, arrived. Most Javanese are Muslim but many practise kejawen, a syncretic belief that incorporates the original animist belief system here.

 

But to keep all the deities he can on his side, this Javanese shaman always makes his offerings facing west.

 

Tjakra conducts the simple but well-practised ritual not in a temple or religious building but in a white, pre-fabricated hut in the bustling hub of modern Jakarta, surrounded by gleaming glass skyscrapers.

 

He has been hired to keep the clouds at bay for three afternoons and evenings by a multi-national cigarette company holding an art exhibition and promotion event in the grounds of a major sports stadium.

 

The round-faced Tjakra, who intersperses his talk with mischievous chuckles, is among the pawang hujan, or rain masters, who work across the equatorial island of Java, where tropical downpours can strike at any time during Indonesia’s monsoon season.

 

For 24 hours before the first day of this ritual, Tjakra, his wife and three assistants have fasted to increase their spiritual strength. A week ago, he came to collect some soil from the site he is protecting and included it as part of his daily offerings to the gods.

 

Just two hours earlier, there was a heavy downpour in central Jakarta. Now, after Tjakra has sent his smoke signals, the sky directly above is a brilliant blue.

 

Dark clouds, however, still circle, so the mystic repeats his wood-burning ritual every hour until evening, when the exhibition closes.

 

And although it tickles his congested lungs, he also smokes the fragrant Indonesian clove-scented cigarettes known as kretek for additional insurance.

 

“The doctor told me not to, but I have to smoke to keep those away,” he says, pointing to the ominous black clouds hovering just outside the stadium’s perimeter. Sceptic turned believer Tjakra has a reputation as one of Jakarta’s most powerful pawang hujan, having kept the clouds at bay for pop concerts, weddings for Indonesia’s rich and famous and even team-building sessions for international companies for the past two decades.

 

But he wasn’t always a believer.

 

“Out of all the descendants of my grandfather, the most stubborn was me, because I was military. I laughed and I didn’t believe in it,” he says, describing how he used to kick his grandfather’s burning bowls.

 

Many of Tjakra’s aunts and uncles, and brothers and sisters, who come from a poor family in central Java, were keen to learn the art of rain control. But it was Tjakra, then a 46-year-old one-star general enjoying his military life, that the grandfather chose as his protege.

 

Convinced that he had supernatural powers, his then-89-year-old grandfather persuaded Tjakra’s commander to send him back to Madura, a small island off the coast of east Java, where he spent six months teaching his grandson his secret skills.

 

“In fact I didn’t want to but, because I was afraid my grandfather would die and then he wouldn’t be able to pass on his knowledge, I did it,” says Tjakra.

 

The rain expert is coy about what he learned in those months, but he will say firstly that he had to purify his soul, cleansing it of greed or the desire to harm others.

 

Since his training in Madura, Tjakra believes that the supernatural powers required to do his job are either endowed by the local gods or not.

 

He is suspicious of some pawang hujan who have tried to Islamise this mystical tradition.

 

“I inherited these powers from my grandfather, and later I will pass it on to my descendants,” he says.

 

Tjakra has seven children and 14 grandchildren from his first wife Nganten Sunaningrum, a Catholic, who died several years ago, but he has yet to pass on his skills to anyone in this large brood. But he does have faith in the abilities of his second wife, 29-year-old Novita Kusuma Ningtiyas, who began her training three years ago.

 

“You can be taught if you have it in here,” he says, pointing to his chest.

 

Ningtiyas says she is able to act as a proxy pawang hujan, conducting the smoke ceremonies, if her husband has been requested to work at two different events on the same day.

 

Tjakra, though, will still collect the all-important dirt from the sites several days ahead of the event and the two will stay in touch via mobile phone, with Ningtiyas reporting on any worrying cloud movements.

 

Chorus and concerts

 

Punk-skater princess Avril Lavigne and the late Pope John Paul II may not have realised it, but they both owed their rain-free performances in Indonesia to Tjakra’s skills. Or at least, he performed his rituals for them.

 

“I did nearly all the concerts last year. I did that singer – what’s her name?” Tjakra asks, summoning an assistant who turns around to display “Avril Lavigne Bonez Tour 2005” on the back of her T-shirt.

 

“And when Paulus (the late Pope John Paul II) was here in 1989, over there at Senayan Stadium, I pushed the clouds away,” he says.

 

Tjakra’s diary has been full since a fateful call to appease a restless ghost.

 

A Belgian racing car driver was killed during an international rally in the mid-1980s and his body was kept under 24-hour guard.

 

But police watching over the body claimed they were being haunted by its ghost, so the committee organising the rally, which had heard about Tjakra, summoned him to the hospital.

 

“So I spoke to the face of the Belgian, and I said, ‘Don’t play round! If you keep following the guards around, you will be buried in Jakarta and you won’t be taken back to Belgium,’” he recalls. “I don’t know if this was the correct way to deal with a ghost but after that he stopped haunting people.”

 

The next day Tjakra’s powers were reported to “Tommy” Hutomo Mandala Putra, the youngest son of then-president Suharto, who demanded to meet Tjakra.

 

Eventually he was flown to New Zealand by Tommy – applying his skill to snow rather than tropical rain.

 

“They sent me to New Zealand and I moved the snow away from the track,” he says of his trip, aimed at providing perfect conditions for the famous playboy’s car rallying.

 

Tjakra’s former patron Tommy has since been jailed for ordering the execution of a judge who had him jailed for corruption.

 

Indonesia’s current leader, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who is far less superstitious, has not called on the rain expert’s services. But in the Indonesian entertainment world, Tjakra is a regular fixture.

 

No drinks, drugs or gambling

 

Yohannes Sri Haryanto, a director of major concert organiser Java Music, says no event should go ahead without a cloud diverter and often calls on Tjakra himself.

 

“Every time I hire a pawang hujan, if it’s raining, then they move the rain,” says the man responsible for putting on performances in Jakarta by Lavigne, Irish pop group the Cranberries, heavy rock outfit Korn and Croatian pianist Maksim Mrvica.

 

None of the stars or their managers are told about the assistance they receive from the Javanese gods, says Haryanto.

 

Pawang hujan like Tjakra – who charges a standard 2.6 million rupiah RM1,026) per day – are expensive but a worthwhile investment, Haryanto insists, if it means fans avoid injuring themselves in a wet, slippery stadium.

 

Tjakra claims that he rarely fails to satisfy his clients, although he concedes an occasional small shower has marred the start of an event.

 

Alfi Chaidir, marketing manager at Jakarta’s luxurious Dharmawangsa Hotel, confirms Tjakra’s claims, saying that in the eight years since the hotel used him, only one event was ruined by a downpour.

 

Occasionally Tjakra has been asked to use black magic – to make people sick or ruin their businesses – but he has always refused despite fat pay cheques. In the dry season he does private consultations, occasionally locating stolen cars or laptops using his spiritual contacts. He used to work on murder cases, too.

 

“Before I did lots – but it’s too dangerous,” he says. “Being a rain main is more lucrative.”

 

Keeping up his powers to wrestle with nature does require constant vigilance – and some sacrifices, Tjakra confides.

 

“No drinking, no drunkenness, no drugs, no gambling and no playing with women,” he says

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Europe Plans Crackdown on Psychics

03/16/2009 · Leave a Comment

Mediums are fighting new EU rules designed to protect the public from dodgy traders, fearing that honest spiritualists could be targeted

 

By Caroline Davies

Source: The Guardian

 

 

The evocative question ‘Is there anybody there?’ conjures up images of mediums summoning spirits in a darkened room. But now psychics must add a few riders before they invoke the voices of the dead, thanks to new consumer laws due to come into force. Breathless audiences are now likely to be asked: ‘Is there anybody here… who is vulnerable, of nervous disposition, or likely to sue?’

 

Indeed, a whole list of disclaimers must be added to the spiritualists’ spiel if they are to avoid an avalanche of writs following the repeal next month of the Fraudulent Mediums Act, to be replaced by the new Consumer Protection Regulations.

 

Promises to raise the dead, secure good fortune or heal through the laying on of hands are all at risk of legal action from disgruntled customers. Spiritualists say they will be forced to issue disclaimers, such as ‘this is a scientific experiment, the results of which cannot be guaranteed’. They claim the new regulations will leave them open to malicious civil action by sceptics.

 

The problem is that very little in the multi-million-pound psychic industry in Britain is for free, and anyone charging or accepting ‘gifts’ in exchange for a service is bound by the new regulations.

 

There are charges for seances, Tarot, psychic readings and clairvoyance. Spiritualist church service-goers – and there are more than 300 spiritualist churches in Britain – are charged or asked for donations. Psychic mailings – letters promising spiritualist services in exchange for a cheque – are estimated to have cost Britons £40m in 2006-07, according to Office of Fair Trading research. Psychic services via telephone, online and satellite TV keep the tills ringing further.

 

For the past half-century, ‘genuine’ mediums have been protected by the 1951 Fraudulent Mediums Act, under which prosecutors had to prove fraud and dishonest intent to secure a criminal conviction, which was difficult. There have been fewer than 10 convictions in the past 20 years. With that protection gone, there will now be nothing between the medium and the trading standards officer – and no need to prove fraud. Instead it will be up to the trader, in this case the medium, to prove they did not mislead, coerce or take advantage of any ‘vulnerable’ consumers.

 

Carole McEntee-Taylor, a spiritualist healer in Essex, said having to stand up and describe the invoking of spirits as an ‘experiment’ was forcing spiritualists to ‘lie and deny our beliefs’. She added: ‘No other religion has to do that. And how can you tell if someone is vulnerable? You would have to ask them if they felt vulnerable, or had mental health issues, or were of a nervous disposition.’

 

With her husband, David, a spiritualist minister, she has set up the Spiritualist Workers’ Association, to help regulate the industry and offer guidance on the law. They will be presenting a petition to 10 Downing Street on 18 April. Their website warns: ‘The changes in the legislation are a minefield… given Britain’s litigation culture. We have to fight it. If not, we will go back to the Dark Ages, where we will be persecuted and prosecuted.’

 

The Fraudulent Mediums Act replaced the 1735 Witchcraft Act. The government is set to repeal it and many other laws alongside the introduction of the Consumer Protection Regulations. If they are approved by Parliament, as is likely – there are debates in the Lords on 23 April and in the Commons on 6 May – the regulations will come into force on 26 May. They will ban 31 types of unfair sales practice outright, including bogus closing-down sales, prize-draw scams and aggressive doorstep selling, and will for the first time establish a catch-all duty not to trade unfairly, closing loopholes that rogue traders have been able to exploit. But spiritualists say the measures fail to take account of their religion.

 

‘It is taking a religion, a way of life, and making it a commercial transaction,’ said David McEntee-Taylor. ‘If we hold a service in a village hall, we have to charge or ask for a donation to cover the cost of hiring the hall. There are bad mediums out there, and we would like to regulate them. But this is unfair on genuine spiritualists. Some people are very nervous of entrapment.’

 

Emma-Louise Rhodes, a researcher for BadPsychics, which seeks to expose malpractice, said: ‘Hopefully, the new regulations will bring to justice those who have cruelly sought to exploit the bereaved for personal financial gain.’

 

A legal specialist said: ‘Now there is no difference between a psychic and a double-glazing salesman in law.’

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Was 9-11 “encoded” into a book copyrighted 4 years before the events ?

The true and often bone- chilling and inspiring book people are talking about…

A lifetime of unexplainable and strange paranormal events that led to important guidance for us all …

Hidden Secrets of Many, But One  By Donald Ryles PhD

*****

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UFO,Conspiracy,& Beyond

Dr. Ryles YouTube Channel  

 Official Website

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