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AA-EVP ParaNews Index >
2004 Reports
AA-EVP ParaNews for June
2004
X-Ray Vision.
Natalia Demkina, a 17 year old Russian girl caused a sensation when she
appeared on British TV in February. Faced with four total strangers, she
correctly described their medical conditions including the fact that one
of the test patients had only one kidney. The show’s resident doctor,
Chris Steele, admitted “My skepticism has waned. I have been very
impressed. I’ve talked to a couple of the patients. Natalia has been spot
on.” The girl has been studied by Russian, English, American and other
doctors and scientists. All have stated that her paranormal ability is
genuine. From: Victor Zammit
www.victorzammit.com/index.html
Comment:
We should point out that so called, “X-Ray Vision,” is an ability that can
be taught. Try this practice exercise. Have a person act as a guide. The
guide has information about the health of a target person and will be able
to give feedback to the student practicing X-Ray Vision. The guide tells
the student, who is in a meditative state, the name and address or some
other information that would uniquely identify the “target” person. The
student then visualizes that person in his or her mind and “sees” layer
after layer of the person’s body, while describing his or her impressions
to the guide. We think you will be very surprised at the information that
you will pick up when doing such an exercise. We believe that “X-Ray
Vision” is like other mediumship abilities; you can develop it!
Hypnosis a part of Mainstream Medicine. Last fall, the Cleveland Clinic Foundation sponsored a presentation on
hypnosis, intended for doctors and others in medicine, so that they would
better understand when hypnosis might help patients. Last year, the
Harvard Mental Health Letter devoted a two-part report on hypnosis and
Tufts University Health & Nutrition Letter reported on findings that
hypnosis may provide relief from chronic indigestion.
Howard Hall, another expert
who participated in the clinic’s program, has studied the effect of
hypnosis on children at Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital in
Cleveland. He reported successful results helping children overcome pain,
anxiety, headaches, bed wetting and coughing spells, with lasting results.
Hypnoanalyst and Hypnosis Counselor,
Robert Egby, tells us that, “The American Medical Association approved
hypnosis as an effective treatment mode in 1958.”
Egby has successfully treated chronic
pain in patients with a process called “Glove Anesthesia” using only
hypnosis for over 12 years. Robert also wrote that, “The Cancer Control
Clinic in
Vancouver, British Columbia has had a hypnotist on staff for at least ten
years. The National Guild of Hypnotists has a number of members working as
hypnotists in American hospitals.” See
www.robert-egby.com/
Gary Schwartz
Survival Experiments. An article in the Arizona Daily
Wildcat, by Sarah Stanton, detailed the seven years of afterlife
experiments conducted by Dr. Gary Schwartz at the
University of Arizona. Schwartz is also conducting experiments to try and
learn more about what the afterlife is like. “Where are you and what do
you see?” are included in a series of thirty questions that mediums are
asking the deceased. Schwartz says that these experiments are producing
some extremely interesting data but that it is too early to be able to
draw any conclusions.
Schwartz says that it is difficult for many to
believe that consciousness survives death and that mediums can talk to the
dead. He says that he has something called ‘PESD’ or Pose-Education Stress
Disorder. “I was taught throughout school that this stuff is impossible
and I think a lot of other people were too. But how much data do you have
to see before you accept a new vision?” From:
http://wildcat.arizona.edu/papers/97/102/01_3.html
Definitions that will be helpful with the next article: Ganzfeld : the
name of a technique in parapsychology that is used in the investigation of
Extra Sensory Perception (ESP). A subject normally wears halved table
tennis balls over the eyes while listening to a hissing sound (white
noise) through headphones. The experiment is conducted in this way in
order to help the subject experience the absence of patterned stimulation,
a condition that is useful in the study of ESP.
General Extra Sensor Perception (GESP):
a term that refers to a form of ESP that, when it occurs, is particularly
unclear as to whether or not the results were due to clairvoyance,
precognition, retrocognition or telepathy.
Papers Presented at SPR 27th International Conference.
The January 2004 Paranormal
Review reported on some interesting papers presented at the SPR’s 27th
International Conference. Simon Sherwood, of the research team at the
University College Northampton (UCN), presented a methodology for
investigating the role of the sender in the Ganzfeld. Results suggested
that the expectancy of the receiver that a sender is ‘sending’ is more
important than the actual presence of the sender.
Adrian Parker’s work has attempted to
improve GESP ability across repeat performances. Clear evidence of psi was
found in his experiments although performance over trials did not improve.
One interesting discovery was that when participants did not perform more
than one trial per day they had a higher hit rate.
John Harvey presented a paper on
psychic photography historically and detailed novel ways in which the
authenticity of ghost photographs could be verified.
Erlendur Haraldsson reported on a
Lebanese community where children reporting a past life were not uncommon.
Her presentation provided some compelling evidence for past life memory.
Montague Keen presented a fascinating
case in which a medium had received information from a murder victim that
contained such precise details that investigating officers initially
considered her a suspect in the murder. They used her leads to identify a
suspect but did not have enough evidence to convict. The suspect was
finally convicted eighteen years later with the advent of DNA analysis.
Yung-Jong Shiah from Taiwan is
conducting research at Edinburgh and hopes to train children “to hone
their cutaneous acuity skills for touch reading.” Results have been so
impressive that delegates were questioning their own sight-reading
abilities.
From: “Review of the Society for Psychical Research 27th
International Conference” by David Luke in the January 2004 Paranormal
Review Issue 29
A
Millionaire’s Last Vocation.
Ninety year old Millionaire Sir John Templeton says, “No human being has
yet even understood one percent of what can be learned about spiritual
matters.” The John Templeton Foundation spends 16 to 30 million dollars a
year funding studies on spiritual matters. The foundation funds projects
from cosmology to faith healing. The grants often support scientists who
have no other source of funding.
From: “A
Millionaires Last Vocation” by Debra Rosenberg, Newsweek November
10, 2003.
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