Tagparanormal

People flock to Peru for the healing powers of alien mud

alien mud cures illness?

People are flocking to wallow in the mud of 3 small remote ponds that locals in Peru believe to possess miraculous healing powers brought by alien space ships. Residents of Chilca – a dusty, desert town on the Pacific coast 40 miles (20 kilometers) southeast of Lima – claim that aliens altered the mud flats in town, infusing them with inexplicable healing powers.

It’s said that the lagoons cure everything from acne to rheumatism and boast plentiful cures. Ailing Peruvians arrive sick and in a short time set forth healed and revitalized.

The nutrient rich mud is applied to the skin as a natural peel that restores the cells of the skin and eliminates toxins. The secret of the cure is to bake in the sun, allowing the mud to thoroughly dry after utterly plying yourself from top to bottom with the medicinal muck.

Full Story: Life in the Fast Lane.

(Thanks Bill!)

Uri Geller:”Forget the Paranormal!”

“TV-Mystifier Uri Geller on his experiences with the CIA, his work for an Israeli and Palestine rescue service, the war in Lebanon, his novel “Ella” – and his advice to forget spoon bending …
Last year Telepolis brought a short bio on Uri Geller that was criticizing the media, but could have been alleged itself because it didn’t use an important source: Uri Geller himself. This was made good by meeting the worldfamous spoonbender in Cologne, where he is living for two months to realize his current tv-show. Between a trip to the hospital and his appearance in a talkshow he took the time to give Telepolis an interview concerning political matters.”

(via Telepolis)

The Distance Between Spiritual Experience and Interpretation

“It is undeniable that human beings in all times and cultures have been hardwired for spiritual experiences – some of course more than others. But is this proof of any of the multiple metaphysical belief systems that we tend, I would suggest, to superimpose onto the experience? The central difficulty here is that the altered state of a spiritual experience is so convincing (and so important, beautiful and meaningful in its own right) and we are so suggestible during and afterward, that it is almost ubiquitous to be convinced that the experience is undeniable (or at the very least strong) proof of whatever belief system the ensuing interpretation is coming from – when in actuality it is nothing of the sort!

Humans love to go into altered states. There is not a culture in the history of the planet that has not come up with some way of fermenting, drinking, eating, fasting, dancing, sweating, drumming, smoking, snorting, chanting, breathing, meditating, stretching, sensory depriving or sensory overloading its way into altered states of consciousness. In addition some people have more labile neurophysiology than others – be they epileptic, hypo-glycemic, bipolar, schizophrenic or merely garden-variety creative, empathic types with thin ego-boundaries.

Thankfully we have developed an ever-deepening understanding of some of the more extreme dysfunctions of the brain and have ways of diagnosing and treating these problems that are more effective than ever before. One cannot help but be curious about the similarities between say religious and schizophrenic statements about reality and wonder how much of the difference is one of degree, and to what extent the vocabulary of experience being used is coming from the same part of the brain.

It is undeniable that to both the person in the grips of an ardent religious conversion and the clinically insane the novel and metaphysical revelations being described are not only convincing but are held as extremely important, often not only for the individual in the grip of the experience, but for all of humanity. I want to suggest that this is an extreme form of an activity of our physiology and its related interior – the psyche, that at its best can be positively transformational, healing and creative and at its worse can be fundamentalist, violent and crazy.”

(via Julian Walker’s Blog)

Review of David Icke Guide to the Global Conspiracy

Wow! All throughout this book and his others for that matter, Icke details and talks about how secret societies have all these very same rituals, ideas, plans and structures and how evil and dangerous they are. And then he’s saying that some unknown being wants to indoctrinate him and the rest of us in those same mystic rites and that he wants Icke and the rest of us to turn ourselves inside out.

I’m afraid that I don’t turn myself inside out for any entity; no matter how ?good’ they supposedly are.

I also have a very hard time following the logic that Satanism, witchcraft and Harry Potter are different from Icke’s sources of information. What I mean is this. Icke constantly rails against them, (well not so much Harry Potter but he does mention the ?evilness’ of the Harry Potter series) and yet Icke consorts with psychics, who channel goodness knows who, as well as witch doctors and shamans. Not that I’m against the Harry Potter series, on the contrary I loved it. And as for witches, I have a wonderful story or two that I could share about the kindness and total loving nature of a witch I happen to know. My point is there seems to be some sort of double standard or divide here. Why is one bad and the other good? It boggles my mind.

Full Story: My Strange Blog.

(via Disinfo).

Historians say the story of Portland’s infamous Shanghai tunnels likely is a myth

Portland-area historians have found virtually nothing in their research to back up the notion that hustlers used a tunnel network for kidnapping men. A few question whether tunnels, beyond some simple connections among basements, ever existed.

Although the city does have a history of “shanghaiing,” or “crimping” as the practice was called, local historians say the first recorded mention of the tunnel connection didn’t come until the 1970s — decades after the practice peaked. The types of historical evidence academics and researchers would normally expect to find are missing.

“It’s not good history,” said Jacqueline Peterson Loomis, founder of the Old Town History Project and a history professor at Washington State University Vancouver. “It tends to obfuscate the real history, which I would argue is equally interesting and dicey.”

[…]

Still, Jones’ tours, which started in 1996, continue to thrive. IRS filings by the nonprofit that runs the excursions show that some 6,000 people each year take one of Jones’ underground tours, including one version for history buffs and one for those interested in ghost stories.

[…]

But on the tour itself, visitors don’t venture down any tunnels. Rather, the tour consists of walking among a few interconnected basement rooms.

[…]

Jones insists that he will prove the tunnels’ existence and their role in supporting Portland’s Shanghai trade. Eventually.

For years, he has said he was working on a book documenting the tunnels’ history. Now he says he aims to release a book in the next year, including information and documentation from a family who he said has photos and other evidence.

Jones refuses to disclose or share any of the documents before then.

Full Story: The Oregonian.

Jones has been giving these tours, for $13 a head, for over 10 years and has yet to release a shred of evidence. Also, the official web site provides no information about Jones’s credentials.

I’ve been on one of these tours: it mostly involved walking around in dusty basements and listening to ghost stories. Each group gets to pick which version of the tour they want: the historic version or the ghost version. Guess which version most people want to hear. Jones did mix in some history with our tour, but from the sounds of it it was just as much fiction as the ghost stories.

Even before reading this article, I’ve suggested that people skip the tour and just visit the Shanghai Tunnel bar, where for the cost of a drink you can see what these Old Town basements look like.

Forces of the Unconscious Mind

“In the first chapter of his fascinating book The Origins of Psychic Phenomena (1984), the British psychologist Stan Gooch explains that he used to smile when he heard, ‘for instance, stories of invisible ?thought forms’ allegedly produced by Tibetan mystics and others.’ He then adds: ‘I no longer smile at such stories. My own feeling, now, is that there may literally be no limit to what can be achieved by the human subjective mind manipulating and actualising itself in the external, objective universe around it.’

(via New Dawn Magazine)

Sexual encounters with aliens

alien sex

No longer content with Earth women, a large number of guys are claiming wild sexual encounters with hot space-babes from the other side of the galaxy. And girls are getting in on the alien action, too.

Full Story: Naughty American (NSFW).

(via Irreality News Wire).

For more alien sex, visit Supervert.

On The LAM

“The latest Fortean Times is a special issue looking at various aspects of Crowley to mark the 60th anniversary of his death, on the 1st. I’ve had my copy for a day or two and had time to read through a number of articles and they are all excellent but the one that stands out is the one by Alan Chapman looking at the LAM hypothesis.”

(via Cabinet Of Wonders)

(see also The LAM Hypothesis)

Spiritual Kitsch, Paranoid Process, and Relativist Nihilism

“In it’s healthy form, Postmodern spirituality deconstructs the cultural baggage and prerational superstitions of Magic and Mythic and expands Rational natural-world, sensual spirituality into a deeper valuing ofboth the inner world of the psyche and the universal truths and states of consciousness made available through the still valid perennial
practices at the heart of those traditions.

Instead we have what I call spiritual kitsch – a kind of lowest common denominator combining of angels, aliens, karma, positive thinking, narcissistic fantasies about manifestation and how the universe works, extra-dimensional spirit guides, astrology, psychics and everything happening for some cosmic reason – all supported by an imaginary new
science that is really just a self-referential reflection of the marketing material that keeps this segment of the economy chugging along at ever greater profits.”

(via Zaadz)

Hear Voices? It May Be an Ad

An A&E Billboard ‘Whispers’ a Spooky Message Audible Only in Your Head in Push to Promote Its New ‘Paranormal’ Program

New Yorker Alison Wilson was walking down Prince Street in SoHo last week when she heard a woman’s voice right in her ear asking, ‘Who’s there? Who’s there?’ She looked around to find no one in her immediate surroundings. Then the voice said, ‘It’s not your imagination.’

Indeed it isn’t. It’s an ad for ‘Paranormal State,’ a ghost-themed series premiering on A&E this week. The billboard uses technology manufactured by Holosonic that transmits an ‘audio spotlight’ from a rooftop speaker so that the sound is contained within your cranium. The technology, ideal for museums and libraries or environments that require a quiet atmosphere for isolated audio slideshows, has rarely been used on such a scale before. For random passersby and residents who have to walk unwittingly through the area where the voice will penetrate their inner peace, it’s another story.

Full Story: Commercial Alert.

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