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Archive for the ‘Intuition’ Category

The ESP Affair

Friday, May 25th, 2007

Exclusive Teaser Of  ‘The ESP Affair’

‘The ESP Affair’ is an upcoming feature film that is set to make you think so far out of the box that it will blow your mind. The ESP Affair is about Connie, an ordinary woman who’s dreams are invaded, causing her to stumble onto a top-secret government conspiracy involving psychics and mind control. 

“Imagine a world where . . .

Government has lost the nation’s trust, Democracy is compromised, Ordinary people suspect everyone and there is no privacy . . .

you can’t trust your neighbor, your family, your lover, you cannot even trust your own dreams”

The ESP Affair

 

 

The ESP Affair story is rooted in a TRUE, cold-war era U.S. military project involving trained “psychic spies” known as Remote Viewers. While the evidence suggests that the U.S. government’s Remote Viewing program was eventually disbanded, The ESP Affair supposes that it was merely taken underground, and continued to develop in secrecy.

Led by a corrupt politician with delusions of grandeur, the underground program in the movie is turned inward at America’s own populous. When a dissenting agent within the underground begins to use his powers for his own insidious purposes, he inadvertently awakens psychic abilities within one of his victims (Connie), and unleashes a series of “blowback” events that lead to the his own exposure, along with the subversion of the psychic conspiracy at large.

This film is set to be truly cutting edge - many of the contributors are pioneers in the field of this remarkable phenomenon - namely Major Ed Dames ( retired US Army) and the inspirational psychic and renowned parapsychologist Lloyd Auerbach consulting with the makers.

You can Learn Remote Viewing . . .

 

When investigating this thought provoking and engulfing practice I stumbled across a great website that has such a comprehensive catalogue of information on Remote Viewing.

Did you know the CIA, the US Army and the British Army have all used Remote Viewing???

Find out more about this amazing practice by clicking the link below. . .

 

Learn Remote Viewing

How Strong is The Power of Expectation?

Wednesday, May 16th, 2007

 

This wonderful article explains how the expectation that we have about other people influences their behavior. We behave in different ways with people according to the idea that we have created of them.

The good news are that we can use the power of expectation to influence positively other people. This means that we can adopt a more positive attitude to influence our environment and create a more fulfilling life for us and for those around us.  

 

The Self Fulfilling Prophecy

By Dr. Madeline Daniels

Back in the 1950s a number of researchers began to realize that when people act on a belief, they create a reality to match that belief. This idea was developed further by Dr. Robert K. Merton, a professor of sociology at Columbia University, who pointed out that even when the original belief is false, people make it come true.

We humans seem to prefer that other people behave as we expect them to, and we will modify or distort reality until it conforms to our expectations. And we can do this without even being aware we are doing it!

One of the most famous studies done on the SFP was published in a book called Pygmalion in the Classroom.If you remember your Greek mythology, Pygmalion was the sculptor who carved a statue of a beautiful woman, then fell in love with it. He believed so strongly that it could come to life, that it did! Hence, the SFP is also called “The Pygmalion Effect.”

A Harvard professor, Dr. Robert Rosenthal, collected the results of over 300 studies showing the Self-Fulfilling Prophecy in action. In classroom experiments, a group of children were divided into two classes. One class was given to a teacher who was told that the students were high achievers and should do well. The other teacher was told that her class was composed of underachievers who needed special help.

At the beginning of the school year there was no difference between the two groups of children in terms of ability. By the end of the school year the class that was labeled “high-achievers” was doing better than average work. The class that had been labeled as “underachievers” was doing below-average work.

Furthermore, a careful study revealed that children who made gains in the “high achiever” group were generally better liked by their teacher, but the children who made gains in the “underachiever” class were generally less liked by their teacher!

In summarizing this research, it can be said that people prefer people who live up to their expectations, and that people unconsciously create situations that encourage the expected behavior. If the expectations are positive, people (in this case, students) are encouraged to behave positively. If the expectations are negative, people (again, the children in the class) are encouraged to behave negatively.

There has been plenty of research that shows this Self-Fulfilling Prophecy effect in job situations. Since we do it so unconsciously, adults are no more immune to its effects than children are. Remember too that this effect usually occurs despite the fact that the person with the expectation is usually unconscious of the effect he/she is having.

For example: Dr. Albert King did a study with a number of welder  trainees. All the trainees had scored approximately equal in aptitude testing before the training started.

However, their trainer was told that five of the men had shown high aptitude on their tests. (Remember, this was not true!) AT the end of the training course, these five men had an amazing record. They had been absent fewer times than the other men, they had learned the welding skills in half the time, and they scored ten points higher than the others in a comprehensive welding test given at the end of the course.

Furthermore, when the other trainees were asked to rate each other in terms of whom they most wanted to work with, each wanted most to work with one of the five “high aptitude” men.

Somehow, both the trainer and the other trainees had encouraged these five men to meet their expectation. They had created a true reality out of a false belief. In every possible way, without consciously meaning to do so, they gave the five trainees messages that said “Don’t worry; we know you’ll do well.”

With all that subliminal encouragement, it’s easy to understand why those five trainees developed a positive attitude towards themselves and their work.

In studying the Pygmalion effect close-up, we have found a number of ways in which these expectations are transmitted and encouraged to become reality:

1) Climate: The entire package of non-verbal signals encourages or discourages the worker. Think of how much a smile or a friendly tome of voice can mean to you.

2) Feedback: More positive responses encourage; more negative ones discourage. Even if a worker makes a mistake, you can respond in two ways. “Not again! You’d better learn to do it right” is very disheartening. “Not bad, but you might find it easier to try it this way instead” sounds helpful and encouraging.

3) Amount of input: If we have positive expectations about a worker, we tend to give that person more information to help them along. If we have negative expectations, we tend not to bother to give information.

4) Amount of output: We expect more work from a good worker than a poor one. Saying “Don’t bother to tackle that job; I know you’ll never do it right” discourages an employee from taking on any new responsibilities.

What you expect to come true is often what you make come true. You may have seen this in everyday life. We all know at least one pessimist who expects things to go badly, and is always complaining about the things that have gone badly. And we all know at least one optimist who expects good things to happen.

The optimist doesn’t dwell on the negative, but rather continues to work on the positive, making those good things happen more often.

It should be clear from this research that far more important than the skills you learn are the attitudes with which you apply those skills. You must look carefully at what you expect from the group you are working with. Of course, you need to develop realistic expectations. You cannot, for example, expect people to do a job in one day that logically requires a week to accomplish.

However, within these reasonable limits, the most important thing you can do to increase productivity is to expect the best of people. To expect that they will give you their best efforts. To expect that they will want to meet their goals. To expect that they would prefer to do a good job.

Whether you are unconscious of your expectations or not, those attitudes will influence how you treat everyone who works with you!

The best way to ensure that your influence if positive is to become conscious of your expectations and to develop them into positive feelings for all your workers.

* The Self Fulfilling Prophecy - Article by By Dr. Madeline Daniels *

Original Story Here >>


 

 

READ MORE ABOUT THE POWER OF BELIEF:

 

Learn Remote Viewing on this New Blog

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

A friend of mine has recently launched an excellent new site on Remote Viewing.

Remote Viewing is the art of using your mind to transcend distance and time and “view” information. The term was coined by the scientist Russell Targ and Hal Puthoff, who studied it at the Stanford Research Institute.

Remote Viewing is a growing field and the number of articles appearing on the net about Remote Viewing seems to double every year.

Blog.LearnRemoteViewing.com compiles the top stories, videos, training, tests and articles on Remote Viewing and serves them up for your entertainment and education.

Here’s a screenshot of the site. Visit it today and add it to you must-read list.

My particular favourite part of this site is the video section. Listen and watch these amazing videos by Remote Viewing pioneers.

Check out www.LearnRemoteViewing.com

Studies Show Evidence for Psychic Intuition

Friday, February 16th, 2007

I found the following study from University College in London amazingly interesting. I brough to mind what I learned in a Silva class 15 years ago, that we can learn to tap into our inner intuition to help us get guidance to solve major problems in life. And that this intuition is often the first thought entering our mind, and subsequent thoughts are more logical and often not as right. The study below mentions how these “first thoughts” about a given situation are often far more correct than than logical thoughts. Strong evidence for the existance of ESP in all of us.

A University College London (UCL) study has found that you are more likely to perform well if you do not think too hard and instead trust your instincts. Appearing in the journal Current Biology, the research shows that instinctive snap decisions are sometimes more reliable than decisions taken using higher-level cognitive processes.

The experiment involved subjects picking the odd symbol (a rotated version) out of over 650 identical symbols presented on a computer screen. Tracking participants’ eye movements, the researchers controlled the time allotted to each individual’s search for their target. The visual display screen was switched off at various time intervals either before or after the subjects’ eyes landed on the target (between 0 and 1.5 seconds). They then had to decide whether the odd one out was on the left or the right-hand side of the screen.

Intriguingly, the researchers found that participants scored better if they were given no scrutinizing time at all. With only a tiny fraction of a second for scrutinizing the target, subjects performed with 95 percent accuracy. With over a second to scrutinize the image, subjects were only 70 percent accurate. Accuracy was recovered if scrutinizing was allowed to run for more than 4 seconds.

“This finding seems counter-intuitive. You would expect people to make more accurate decisions when given the time to look properly. Instead they performed better when given almost no time to think. The conscious or top-level function of the brain, when active, vetoes our initial subconscious decision - even when it is correct - leaving us unaware or distrustful of our instincts and at an immediate disadvantage.

Falling back on our inbuilt, involuntary subconscious processes for certain tasks is actually more effective than using our higher-level cognitive functions,” explained Dr Li Zhaoping, of the UCL Department of Psychology.

The researchers say the instinctive decisions were more likely to be correct because the subconscious brain recognizes a rotated version of the same object as different from the original, whereas the conscious brain sees the two objects as identical. For the conscious brain, an apple is still an apple whether rotated or not.

So while the lower-level cognitive process spots the rotated image as the odd one out, the higher-level functions override that decision and dismiss the rotated object because it is the same as all the other symbols. When subjects were given the time to engage their higher-level functions, their decisions were therefore more likely to be wrong.

“If our higher-level and lower-level cognitive processes are leading us to the same conclusions, there is no issue. Often though, our instincts and higher-level functions are in conflict and in this case our instincts are often silenced by our reasoning conscious mind. Participants would have improved their performance if they had been able to switch off their higher-level cognition by, for example, acting quickly,” explained Dr Zhaoping. ”

Our eye movements are often involuntary. What seems like a random darting of the eye is often an essential subconscious scanning technique that allows us to pick out unique and distinctive features in a crowd - such as color or orientation. Soon after our eyes have fixed on a target, the conscious or top-down part of cognition engages and examines whether the candidate really is the target or not. If the target is not distinctive enough in the ‘eyes’ of the conscious, failure of identification can occur.”

Source: University College London.  Discovered via Scienceagogo.com

Telepathy and Scientific Research

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

Scientist and author Rupert Sheldrake has announced what is perhaps, the most famous example of telepathy and scientific research.

Sheldrake, a UK scientist, claims he has evidence of what he calls “telephone telepathy” - the phenomenon by which you think about someone and, lo and behold, the phone rings…

According to Reuters, Rupert Sheldrake reported on Tuesday the results of experiments which “proved that such precognition existed for telephone calls and even emails”.

Sheldrake’s guinea pigs gave researchers the names and phone numers of four relatives or friends. One of these was contacted at random and asked to give the subject a bell. Forty-five per cent guessed correctly who was on the other end of the line, Sheldrake told the annual British Association for the Advancement of Science shindig - “well above the 25 per cent you would have expected.”

Sheldrake further commented:

The odds against this being a chance effect are 1,000 billion to one.

A similar test involving email yielded the same result, although the researchers’ limited pool of testees - 63 for the phone and 50 for the email - coupled to the fact that only nine subjects were filmed across the two tests, prompted “some scepticism”.

Sheldrake has vowed to continue his experiments, however, to prove what he believes is the “interconnectedness of all minds within a social grouping”.

Next up for scrutiny is text message telepathy. Will more cases of telepathy and scientific research come to public light? We certainly hope so.

Article from The Register. Orginally found on Reuters, Sep 2006.

The Boy Who Lived Before

Wednesday, January 10th, 2007

By YVONNE BOLOURI, September 08, 2006, The Sun

LITTLE Cameron Macaulay was a typical six-year-old, always talking about his mum and family.

He liked to draw pictures of his home too — a long single-storey, white house standing in a bay.

But it sent shivers down his mum’s spine — because Cameron said it was somewhere they had never been, 160 miles away from where they lived.

And he said the mother he was talking about was his “old mum.”

Convinced he had lived a previous life Cameron worried his former family would be missing him.

The Glasgow lad said they were on the Isle Of Barra.

Mum Norma, 42, said: “Ever since Cameron could speak he’s come up with tales of a childhood on Barra.

“He spoke about his former parents, how his dad died, and his brothers and sisters.

“Eventually we just had to take him there to see what we could find.

“It was an astonishing experience.”

Cameron’s journey to find his previous life is now the subject of a spooky TV documentary.

Norma said: “His dad and I are no longer together but neither of our families have ever been to the island.

“At first we just put his stories down to a vivid imagination.” Then life took a more sinister turn as Cameron started to become distressed at being away from his Barra family.

Norma said: “It was awful and went on for years.

“When he started nursery his teacher asked to see me and told me all the things Cameron was saying about Barra. He missed his mummy and his brothers and sisters there.

“He missed playing in rockpools on the beach beside his house.

“And he complained that in our house there was only one toilet, whereas in Barra, they had three.

“He used to cry for his mummy. He said she’d be missing him and he wanted to let his family in Barra know he was all right.

“It was very distressing. He was inconsolable.”

“He wouldn’t stop talking about Barra, where they went, what they did and how he watched the planes landing on the beach from his bedroom window.

“He even said his dad was called Shane Robertson, who had died because ‘he didn’t look both ways.’

“I assume he means knocked over by a car but he never says that.

“One day his nursery teacher told me a film company were looking for people who believed they had lived before.

“She suggested I contact them about Cameron. My family were horrified. There was a lot of opposition to it. I’m a single parent so it was me and Cameron’s brother Martin, who is only a year older than him, who were being badly affected by this.

Read the Full Article Here >>

The Inner Explorations of a Doctor & Psychologist

Thursday, December 7th, 2006

Dr. Leonard Nijssen shares this story with us.

Doctor Leonard Nijsen has doctorates in the field of Optometry (3countries), a B.S. in Psychology and various other minor degrees. He is also a leading member of Mensa.

“In 1972, I was in a bad shape physically, mentally and emotionally, just having come out of a bad marriage and a nasty divorce. Over a few years before my divorce I had acquired:

  • Migraine headaches that went to tunnel vision (interesting experience when I was driving in the fast lane on the freeway) and I was taking prescription medication three times a day for this.
  • A LONG list of allergies for which I was also taking prescription medication three times a day for this. These allergies included dust, pollen and cattle hair.
  • My nerves were in a VERY bad shape, my hands were shaking constantly like in palsy and I was also taking prescription medication three times a day for that.

Failing to take the medication timely I would get an asthma like attack in which I would sit with my mouth open gasping for air.

One weekend in the spring I wanted to “get away” and decided to go to a ranch of friends where I helped them gather overgrown calves to be branded. I was wearing a sheepskin jacket, of course on horseback,
LOT’s of dust and LOT’s of pollen. NO ALLERGIC REACTION !!! Oops, something does not fit the medical findings.

Shortly after that, one of my friends suggested that I participate in a Silva Mind Control training offered in San Francisco. This, at the time, was Tuesday evening through Friday evening plus Saturday and Sunday all day.

On the second evening the “headache control” technique was offered and I immediately thought: “If it can control headaches, it can also control nerves and allergies since they are frequently related.” That very same evening I stopped all medications and got rid of all three conditions.
Now, at age 70 and after 34 years, I have not head a single headache, no allergies and my hands are as steady as a neuro surgeon.

This success in 1972 started me on the road to seriously explore “the mind”, it’s capabilities and other (supposedly) para-psychological aspects.

While I can give you a quite long list of experiences and successes I will limit this to the above and below listed aspects.

Click Here to Read The Full Story »

How to Develop ESP

Monday, November 13th, 2006

Our newest contributor, Jacob of Mind-Energy.net shares this article with us.

Many people desire to develop their own ESP (Extra-Sensory Perception). Yet most people think that you have to be born psychic to have ESP abilities, that you can’t develop them on your own. Of course, being born with special abilities could be a big benefit, but since you want to develop them, most certainly you think that you don’t possess them now.

The truth is that ESP can be developed. I know people who learned to possess some aspects of ESP over their life through several techniques. I’m on that course myself, having a bit of progress over the last couple of years.

I want to show you several ways that you could you use to develop your ESP abilities:

 

Click Here for the Full Article »

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