T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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416.1 | try, try again | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Mon Jul 20 1987 17:35 | 27 |
| In theory only, it's quite possible. Indeed, in some legends, this
has happened. The genies (djinn) of the _Arabian Nights_ are actually
supposed to be demons of various sorts who were captured by magicians
and imprisoned in bottles that were sealed magically (most commonly
with the "seal of Solomon" [a hexagram like the Star of David] done
in lead metal sealing the mouth of the bottle. According to
tradition, the one who started the practice was King Solomon himself.
In Medieval times, some sorcerers reputedly could call up spirits
or demons, but generally then it was the sorcerer rather than the
supernatural entity who was "contained" (in his or her protective
circle). There were, however, some wards (talismans, etc) that
presumably could repel supernatural entities (a hexagram of Solomon
-- the same ones on the djinn bottles -- could be used for this);
presumably, if one could induce an entity to enter a room and place
(spring-loaded?) wards on the four walls, floor, and ceiling, before
it could get out....
The real problem is that you may be asking whether there's any form
of energy shield that can block an entity from paassing through...
using known energies, that is, like volts.
In the movie _Ghostbusters_, there was a lot of pseudoscientific
doubletalk about how this could be done. But that's all it was.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
416.2 | Dragnet | BCSE::FLEMING | | Tue Jul 21 1987 14:25 | 11 |
| In one of Robert Monroes' books (Far Journeys?) on OBE's he talks
about an experiment he performed. The details are sketchy in my
memory but it involved generating an electrical field around his
body to form a Faraday cage and then attempting to leave his physical
body. He was unable to do it and felt that he was held back by
something resembling a net. This would lead you to believe that
other non-physical entities could be restrained in the same way.
Maybe "Ghostbusters" wasn't so far off.
John...
|
416.4 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | No final answers here | Wed Jul 22 1987 01:42 | 19 |
| There was an interesting discussion of capturing a spirit in
a bottle in _The_Secret_Science_Behind_Miracles_ by Max Freedom
Long. The spirit in question was a "low self" (equivalent to
a subconscious mind). It was hypnotized (willed) to go into
the bottle, then thrown in the ocean.
In this story, the spirit appeared to be a smokey sort of haze
that floated near the ground. It obeyed willed commands the
way any subconscious might.
He says that there is also a "middle self" (conscious mind),
as well as a "high self". The middle self and the low self
might might accidently become separated at death. Earth bound
sprits (according to his model) are mostly separated low or middle
selves.
One might suspect other kinds of spirits might not so easily
be contained. This spirit was said to be easily contained due to
it's stupidity and obedience.
Some fascinating material in Max's books....
alan.
|
416.5 | pentagrams have their uses | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Wed Jul 22 1987 09:13 | 39 |
| Re .3:
No, the pentagram could prevent demons from reaching the magus who
called it up. Traditionally, the magus stood within a "pentacle"
[sometimes called "pantacle"] circle because it could kep the demon
out. In some forms of ceremonial magic, a second circle with a
triangle was used to "contain" the demon, but in some traditions
that inscribed triangle was more a focal spot than a "containment
vessel." The "pentacle" might or might not have a five- or
six-pointed star within it. The_Grimoire of Honorius_ has different
pentacles for every day of the week, to conjure up different demons;
the only pentacle in that series that has anything even loosely
representing a star is the one for the conjuration of the demon
Silcharde (Thursday's demon), and one would really have to stretch
one's imagination to think of that circumscribed symbol as a star
of either five or six points.
>... stories where someone accidentally erased part of one of the lines
>of a pentagram and let the demon out (usually with fatal consequences))
Actually, if the stories were technically accurate, the incomplete
pentagram would let the demon _in_ rather than out.
Pentacles in the form of medallions (e.g., metalic and hung from
the neck on a chain) are sometimes used as talismans to ward off
spirits, demons, and the like. These need not be star-shaped, either.
The Seal of Solomon mentioned in .1 can be used in the form of a
medallion.
The Sumerians also had a "demon trap," which was a bowl with a spiral
inscription that they presumed the demons would follow from the
outside rim to the center of the bowl. The incurving spiral
inscription would prevent the demons from escaping, according to
their beliefs. However, archeologists who uncovered these traps
never found any with demons in them. :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
416.6 | Faraday cage ?= Ghost cage. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Jul 22 1987 11:42 | 51 |
| RE: .2
(I *still* haven't gotten around to reading Monroe -- a distinct
gap in my coverage of the field I agree -- so it should be understood
that the following is a response to John's uncertain memories rather
than to whatever Monroe actually wrote).
A Faraday cage cannot be created by generating an electric field
in the usual sense. A Faraday cage is a solid metal box (if high
frequencies are not of concern then it can consist of a grill instead,
hence the name) without any openings. Any electromagnetic field
impinging on the box will be "shorted" (this is a gross simplification)
out and so in a perfect Faraday cage there is no electromagnetic
radiation except that generated within. In practice no Faraday
cage is perfect (its next to impossible to put a door in, for example,
which can be sealed perfectly enough to be of the same quality as
the box as a whole) but quite good ones can be made for the radio
range. Light will, of course, be blocked as will be UV and most
X-rays. Infrared will diffuse through (by conduction to the inner
wall and then reradiation). And high-energy gamma rays will get
through.
Faraday cages have been used a number of times in parapsychology
experiments without showing any effect on ESP or PK -- most recently
by Charles Tart in a report delivered at the Parapsychology Association
annual meeting last summer. He had an engineer specializing in
Faraday cages come in and measure the quality of his cage with good
results. The relationship between ESP/PK and OBEs is, of course,
unclear.
Monroe's experiment, as described, suffers from the same problem
that virtually all of Monroe's experiments seem to (from second
hand reports) -- a total lack of blind controls. OBEs have been
shown to be very sensitive to beliefs and psychological factors.
What this comes down to is that if Monroe believed that the FC even
*might* interfere with his OBE and if he knew that the FC was in
place then it would be expected that it would interfere with his
experiencing an OBE. A positive result (i.e., a successful OBE)
could be taken as evidence that the cage does not interfere with
OBEs but nothing much can be concluded from a negative one.
An interesting historical note: an experiment with a FC in Russia
back in the 30's(?) demonstrated to the government that ESP was
not electromagnetic. In their eyes this made it "mystical" and
against dialectic materialism and all further work on parapsychology
was banned. It contined in Russia only underground. Work officially
was started again only when a (apparently mistaken) report in a
French popular magazine appeared claiming that the US Navy had been
experimenting with ESP for communication with submarines.
Topher
|
416.7 | clarification | INK::KALLIS | the goblins'll getcha if ya don't... | Thu Aug 06 1987 17:30 | 8 |
| Re .6:
I think the implication of .2 was that a _charged_ conductor would
block supernatural passage. A person inside a FC would effectively
"sense" no electric field, but the outer surface would show the
field existed.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
416.8 | a few musings | MARKER::KALLIS | Don't confuse `want' and `need.' | Wed May 25 1988 17:44 | 17 |
| Some more thoughts:
Vampires (of the Dracula stripe) are clearly supernatural creatures,
Besides crucifixes, they are supposed to be repelled by garlic.
A vampire, then, might be "contained" in any container smeared with
fresh garlic juice.
In general, _to the extent any supernatural creature can interact
with its environment_, the environment has an equivilent effect
on the creature. Therefore, besides "repelling" items like pentacles,
something that the supernatural entity cannot interpenetrate coulkd
hold it. In the movie _Ghostbusters_, this was done by a
not-very-well-defined electromagnetic energy. But that was a film,
and shouldn't be confused with anything appropaching "reality."
[Films are notoriously inaccurate in technical details.]
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
416.9 | Can't contain 'em | USAT05::KASPER | Life is like a beanstalk, isn't it... | Thu May 26 1988 12:27 | 15 |
| re .8
Wait a minute... If there are such occurances of supernatural
beings I don't see how they could be contained by anything we
produce. They're not of this dimension so how could things that
are even affect them? How could they be contained by something
that is not part of their 'world'? Suppose that there is a two
dimensional world with living, breathing beings a part of it.
As I set my hand on their 'world', say the surface of a table,
there's nothing they can do to contain 'me'. The part of me
that intersects their 'world' would certainly appear to be
supernatural, but they can do nothing to keep me from lifting
my hand. Right?
Terry
|
416.10 | We don't know. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu May 26 1988 12:44 | 24 |
| RE: .9 (Terry)
If they can interact with me, then I can interact with them. The
question is whether I can *effectively* interact with them, and
that we can't know unless we know something of their nature and
the nature of their interaction. If they are 4 dimensional beings
who are intersecting our 3 dimensional space (which you seem to
simply assume) than we still have the potential of effecting them.
Imagine that you dip, not your hand, but, to make things as clear
as possible, that you dip an hourglass into Flatland up to its
narrowest point. A Flatlander ties a string around the circle that
they see. To move the hourglass out of the plane, you would have
to expand the strings loop, or you would have to lift it out of
Flatland. The former clearly takes force, and the latter may
also either because it is impossible to remove a Flatland object
from its context or because the other end is attached to something
fixed relative to Spaceland (because it also is 3-D or because
it is heavy, or because it is *its* nature even if it is not the
nature of all Flatland objects).
We don't know enough to know whether or not it is possible.
Topher
|
416.11 | Well..... | USAT05::KASPER | Life is like a beanstalk, isn't it... | Thu May 26 1988 14:54 | 19 |
| RE: .10 (Topher)
> If they are 4 dimensional beings who are intersecting our 3 dimensional
space (which you seem to simply assume) than we still have the potential
of effecting them.
Not necessarily 4th but some higher dimension. And to take the
Flatland example a bit farther to make my point, since their world
is limited to 2-D then the 'string' they use would not have a 3rd
dimension (they're limited by the rules of their world) and in our
3-D world the hour glass intersecting Flatland could not be affected;
just as we can't be cut by the 2-D line running along the edge of a
piece of paper.
> We don't know enough to know whether or not it is possible.
I agree...
Terry
|
416.12 | then again ... | MARKER::KALLIS | Don't confuse `want' and `need.' | Thu May 26 1988 15:32 | 33 |
| Re .11 (Terry):
>Not necessarily 4th but some higher dimension. And to take the
>Flatland example a bit farther to make my point, since their world
>is limited to 2-D then the 'string' they use would not have a 3rd
>dimension (they're limited by the rules of their world) and in our
>3-D world the hour glass intersecting Flatland could not be affected;
> ...
I can't agree: Topher (and I previously to him) specified that
_interaction_ had to take place. Now, for instance, if the hourglass
didn't _interact_ with the Flatland space, then you'd be right.
However, it does, in Topher's model.
Now, let's look at the classic "supernatural" creatures:
Ghosts give people chills -- i.e., they are _cold_ in some fashion.
This is a physdical interaction with this plane (presuming it isn't
a psychological chill, and ghost lore suggests it isn't). Then
a "containment vessel" might be something made of flame (or, in
the case of a really macho ghost, plasma).
Demons are said to produce physicaal manifestations; then, if they
can affect material objects, material objects can affect them.
Demons sometimes "possess" humans. When they are in human shells,
it might be possible to contain them by containing their (willing
or unwilling) hosts, especially in a room filled with the appropriate
talismans.
It's sort of a Newtonian principle: if it can affect us, we can
affect it.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
416.13 | Can't be | USAT05::KASPER | Life is like a beanstalk, isn't it... | Thu May 26 1988 16:38 | 11 |
| re: .12 (Steve)
Has anyone actually attempted such containment with any level
of success (other than Bill Murray and Dan Akroyd)? My own finite
mind is having trouble with this one. When there is an
intersection between these levels, what we experience is somewhat
of an illusion and to try to affect it, limited by the 'rules'
of 3 dimensions, can't work due to the fact that it's not really
here (physically speaking). :^% <- (that's a perplexed look...)
Terry
|
416.14 | "Can't"? | INK::KALLIS | Don't confuse `want' and `need.' | Thu May 26 1988 17:16 | 40 |
| Re .13 (Terry):
That is a beautiful multiplexed question (that is, it's several
questions in one). The answers have to do with our understanding,
however slight, of what "supernatural" beings _could be_.
There are two possibilities:
1) The beings are manifestations involving higher spatial dimensions
in one way or another.
2) They are restricted, effectively, to the cosmos we know.
Let's take the first case first. Either the beings are 4- (or higher)
dimensional, or they are three-dimensional but asre interposed into
our space _via_ a higher dimensdion, by projection. The analog
to this second is the projection of an (effectively) two-dimensional
image on a film to a two-dimensional movie screen. Another would
be projecting shadow pictures on a wall. In such a situation, there
would be no _inter_action, even if we _react_ to the image. Naturally,
such a projection could not be contained in our space. The first
case (analog, us to a Flatlander) I covered earlier. If they can
affect us, we can affect them; and if they can't, we can't.
The case where no "higher" space dimensions are involved might be
analogous to a radio or television set. While there's a lot of
stuff being broadcast, we [have mechanisms that] filter out all
but one "reality." Thus, I can watch Channel 4 while you watch
Channel 7. In this case, we can assume the supernatural entity
as something that has "tuned" to us [analogously] sufficiently to
materialize in our space. One form of such "tuning" traditionally
has been the magician that summons demons and suchlike. _If_ thisd
model is correct, while that being is "tuned" to us (which it might
not be able to control), we can interact, and it thus has the potential
of being contained.
There have been stories of attempts of "containing" supernatural
entities, but nothing's been verified, one way or the other.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
416.15 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Thu May 26 1988 17:40 | 7 |
|
One effective mechanisim for containment of less advanced
spirits may well be;
*hypnotism*!
Alan.
|
416.16 | Hypnosis. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu May 26 1988 18:19 | 18 |
| RE: .15 (Alan)
Couldn't let this go by without comment.
An effective mechanism for containment might be a hypothetical,
possibly "magic", method of stupification and mind control which
resembles hypnosis on the surface.
Hypnosis is not, despite the stereotype, a method of one person
imposing their will on another. Nor is it more effective on the
less intelligent, the less enlightened, or in other ways the "less
advanced". If anything, the reverse is true.
You might be able to keep supernatural entities in one place by
convincing them that it is what they want to do (possibly by
misleading them), and hypnosis might be used to help that effort.
Topher
|
416.17 | Well maybe, I guess... | USAT05::KASPER | Life is like a beanstalk, isn't it... | Fri May 27 1988 09:20 | 10 |
| re: .14 (Steve)
This is one of those that can't be settled. I do see your point,
considering the different possibilities of the origin of such
supernatural beings.
If what you're saying is correct, that means if I get 'slimed' I
can do something about it, right?
Terry (:-? <- not as perplexed as before, but still a little...).
|
416.18 | yep | MARKER::KALLIS | Don't confuse `want' and `need.' | Fri May 27 1988 10:06 | 8 |
| Re .17 (Terry):
>If what you're saying is correct, that means if I get 'slimed' I
>can do something about it, right?
If you know how to, and if you survive the "sliming." ;-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
416.19 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | The Cosmic Anchovy | Fri May 27 1988 14:57 | 8 |
| RE: .16 (Topher)
How do you hypnotize something that doesn't have a brain? You are
placing animal constraints on a supposedly nonanimal being. If
one could expect a supernatural entity to be hypnotized, one could
as well expect it to wear shoes.
John M.
|
416.20 | that's easyu enough | MARKER::KALLIS | Don't confuse `want' and `need.' | Fri May 27 1988 15:08 | 12 |
| Re .19 (John)
A little ~/~ , eh?
>How do you hypnotize something that doesn't have a brain? ...
If it's a volitional being, which is hypothecated in the initial
question, then whether it's got a brain or not is secondary to that
it has a mind. If it has a mind, then something on the order of
hypnosis is potentially possible.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
416.21 | Should then one assume? | SCOPE::PAINTER | Heaven is a state of mind. | Fri May 27 1988 19:30 | 5 |
|
So the question now is what do you do if the entity in question
begins singing "If I only had a brain...."?
Cindy
|
416.22 | | GENRAL::DANIEL | We are the otters of the Universe | Fri May 27 1988 19:44 | 6 |
| > So the question now is what do you do if the entity in question
> begins singing "If I only had a brain...."?
Ask it where it learned that song. If it has an answer, it has a brain, and
you may inform it of such. If it simply repeats the song, find the "Off"
switch - it's obviously carrying a tape recorder.
|
416.23 | Elaborating on Steve's reply. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue May 31 1988 13:55 | 66 |
| RE: .19 (John M.)
That's an interesting question, John. I'll start by giving the
simple (not so interesting) answer and then go into a bit of depth.
Simple answer: I don't *expect* a supernatural entity to be
hypnotized, but I can't reject the possibility a priori.
Juicy details: There is currently a cross-disciplinary argument
raging about the "best" level of abstraction to describe the
functioning of the brain. Some argue that only "neurons" are
real, so the only "scientific" description is in terms of them
and their interconnections. Others argue that describing the
functioning of the brain in terms of neurons is like describing
an air-conditioner in terms of the individual molecules in its
hardware and "working fluids", and that the "best" description
is on the so-called "symbol level".
My particular interest is more on the symbol level, but I think
that which level is best (and there are many intermediate levels)
depends on exactly what you are trying to define.
A rough analogy is that the neuron level corresponds to computer
"hardware" while the symbol level corresponds to "software" (some
tend to equate at least the "higher" symbol levels of description
with descriptions of "mind" but this is a matter of choice as to
whether this is what you mean by the rather ill-defined concept
of "mind").
It would be foolish to try to describe a bad boundary condition
on a loop in terms of which specific gates (on every computer the
program runs on) turned on or off or failed to do so. Equally,
it is foolish to treat a power glitch as an essentially software
problem, though it may be reasonable to ask about its consequences
on that level.
The question becomes -- is hypnosis a consequence of hardware (specific
to the human neurological system, and therefore not likely to be
found in quite different "cognitive systems"), a consequence of
the software property of "intelligence" (and therefore likely to
be a property of any "intelligent" symbol processing system whatever
hardware its implemented on), a software consequence of specific,
non-essential-to-intelligence, constraints under which the human
program developed (and therefore likely to be a property only if
similar constraints were placed on the initelligent symbol processing
system; e.g., if was a gregarious pack entity to which social concensus
was of positive benifit), or a consequence of implementing an
intelligent "program" on certain types of hardware (in which case
it would occur only in intelligent systems whose hardware corresponded
in some more or less abstract property with the human brain)?
The only fact (actually more of a non-fact) that I know which is
relevant is that there are no *known* physiological correlates to
hypnosis. For example, the EEG of a hypnotized person is
indistinguishable from that of a relaxed, alert person.
Since I can't answer the question, I can only say that it is possible
that if supernatural entities exist, and can meaningfully described
as intelligent (more so, less so, or about the same as humans) then
it is possible that they can be hypnotized and therefore it is
possible that hypnosis might be an aid to convincing them to stay
around. I'm not sure how to convince them to be hypnotized in the
first place, nor exactly how you would use the state to convince
them they want to stay, but the possibility exists.
Topher
|
416.24 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue May 31 1988 16:39 | 50 |
|
In certain esoteric teachings, it is believed that there is
an 'emotional body' which we have in common with all animals.
These teachings say that we have other bodies as well, but it is
the emotional body that can be hypnotized. It appears that
snakes hypnotize their prey, and no doubt there are other examples
of animal hypnosis or trance states.
According to this model a spirit may have several components,
or may lack components. An animal (emotional) spirit can be
brought under the direct control of a conscious mind, or under the
control of a stronger animal spirit. The only spirits that can
be controlled in this way would be those open to suggestion, and
lacking the creative will to counter those suggestions.
We all can (and should) learn to consciously exercise control over
our own emotional bodies. Perhaps 'exercise control' overstates
it a bit, since the process is more like gaining the cooperation of a
child and is best achieved by enlisting it's self-interest. The
concept/model of the 'emotional body' seems quite similar in practice
to aspects of the 'subconscious mind', in that both seem to function
in terms of emotionally charged images. It also seems to be the
part of the mind that accesses memory.
I personally have little experience with this, but have read several
accounts from widely varying sources, by those who have described this
type of thing. This type of spirit is said to look like a puff
of smoke. In Lynn Andrews "Medicine Woman", she describes a fellow
apprentice who had this component of her spirit stolen by a rival
evil sorcerer. With it gone, she seemed emotionless, and memoryless,
although some aspect of consciousness remained. Agnes Whistling
Elk told Lynn that the girl would die if it was not recovered soon.
Red Dog (the rival sorcerer) was keeping it in a gourd. They
recaptured the gourd, and were able to restore the girl to full health.
I had read several such tales from the Americas, Africa, Polynesia,
and had been dismissing them as unbelieveable, until I kept running
across some of the same elements in each tale. More recently,
I have learned to accept that there is definitly some element of
truth to all these tales, and am searching for the next keys to
it; (Does this 'spirit' have some material element? How is memory
encoded in it? Does the smokey stuff have something to do with
Mesmer's 'magnetic fluid'?....)
Again, the best reference I have found for this stuff is a
somewhat hard to find book; "The Secret Science Behind Miracles"
by Max Freedom Long. He gives quite a detailed description of
the theory being used by the people who are into these things.
Alan.
|
416.25 | Hypnotizing snakes. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue May 31 1988 18:14 | 56 |
| RE: .24 (Alan)
There is a type of spell which is known as a "fascination" (whether
or not it actually exists). The thoughts of a person (or animal) which
is fascinated are "locked" by the spell into consideration of one
simple thought or image and they are therefore unable to consider
any other thought -- such as escape. This is considered a magical
process analagous to simple "rapt attention", but involuntary and
more generally more powerful. When we say that something is
"fascinating" or that someone is "fascinated" we are technically
speaking metaphorically.
It used to be said that snakes caught their prey by casting a
fascination (i.e., by fascinating) them.
Post-Mesmer hypnosis frequently (and this is still true) used a
voluntary fixation of attention on some object or idea as part of
the induction procedure. Frequently, optical illusions or other
psychological tricks were used to make this fixation easier, but
it was always voluntary.
A popular (and popular does not preclude many practicioners) equation
grew up between "hypnosis" and "fascination". So it came to be
that it was said that a snake "hypnotizes" its prey.
Snakes do *not* normally catch their prey either by "hypnotizing"
them or by "fascinating" them. They catch them pretty much the
same way other predators do, by a combination of sneaking up on
them and moveing faster (at the last moment) then they do. If
they use "hypnosis/fascination" it is extremely rare, I have yet
to see a first hand account of it, even in the "occult" literature
(though I'm sure one can find someone who will claim to have seen
it).
A likely source of this story is small animals who are literally
paralyzed with fear. I assure you, hypnosis is the polar opposite
of paralyzed panic.
Mesmer believed in his "animal magnetism" because he believed that
it was the simplest way to explain the results of certain experiments
he did. Later others showed that essentially the same results could
be obtained in ways which his "animal magnitism" theory did not
explain, but that were consistent with essentially psychological
theories. Mesmer never accepted these alternatives but I believe
that this was the unfortunate consequence of early, ignorant criticism
of his work by the scientific (medical) establishment of his day,
which made him embittered and rigid. From what little I know of
him I think that it is likely that if presented while he was young
with the evidence which only appeared later in his life, that he
would have been one of the first to abandon his theories.
In other words, to associate the "smokey stuff" with Mesmer's magnetic
fluid would be to say that it does not exist. I would not bother
pursuing that chain of reasoning if I were you.
Topher
|
416.26 | Cleaning 'em out | GENRAL::DANIEL | We are the otters of the Universe | Tue May 31 1988 18:26 | 21 |
| Well, here's one for you;
Back in the days when I was hanging out with the Denver gypsies, the Chief
Weirdo left a metal (I think copper?) bowl-like thing in my car, that had
spikes on the bottom "rim". It was black on the inside with a resin of sorts,
and it "asked" me to clean it out. I did, to reveal some beautiful type of
hieroglyphics on the inside. I have no idea what origin. I had thought the
bowl belonged to one of the other brainwashed people, but when I told the Chief
Weirdo that I'd found Raymond's bowl in my car, she said no, it was hers, and
she'd been looking for it (It was one of her High Magick pieces, one of several
that she kept hidden from us all) and not to touch it. According to her, it
was some thousands-of-years-old incense burner. Too late; I'd already taken
COMET to it, to get the grunge off!!
She said she'd put some fire spirits in it during a campfire at Larkspur, where
some ancient Indian burial ground is located, and that since I'd cleaned it, I
now had fire spirits with me.
Piffle, I say; if anything was released, it didn't "stick" with me!
Hmmm...
|