T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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698.1 | one teaches by example.... | ULTRA::LARU | let's get metaphysical | Fri Apr 08 1988 12:32 | 2 |
| to make sure something gets done, and gets done right, one must do
it oneself...
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698.2 | FIND ONESELF..... | FRICK::HORNE | | Fri Apr 08 1988 14:00 | 2 |
| Unless we use supreme power of delegation.
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698.3 | DEJAVU | MCIS2::MORAN | | Fri Apr 08 1988 14:45 | 10 |
| I am new to DEJAVU, and I'm glad to see activity in this file also
since this is very much a topic of interest to me.
I would love to hear some real life experiences too, so that I can
get the idea on some of the things brought up in this file.
I'll be here.
Kathy 8^)
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698.4 | Numbers in the Curtain!! | STEREO::VINDICI | It's the Journey, Not the Destination | Fri Apr 08 1988 14:48 | 21 |
| Here's my latest experience with psychic phenomena:
A couple of months ago I was at my fiance's house. I was lying
on the bed watching TV and he was asleep beside me. I looked
over at the curtains (white lace) and thought I saw a number
in the curtains -- 20 on the top and 68 on the bottom. The thought
of playing that number occurred to me, but since it was Sunday,
I would have had to play the number on Monday and forgot about it.
On Tuesday, driving to work I was listening to the radio and heard
Monday night's NH number: You guessed it: 2068!!!! I wanted to
kick myself for not listening to my intuition!!
The next time I was at my boyfriend's I checked the curtain again..
hoping for a different number this time....no such luck, it still
showed the same number!!!
Ah well, it did teach me that there are things beyond our understanding
occurring all around us -- we just need to tune into them!!!
Helaine
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698.5 | feelings of discontent | MILVAX::SOUZA | | Fri Apr 08 1988 14:59 | 18 |
| I don't know if this is dejavu or what but, was strange, so I guess
it classifies...
In 5th grade my grandfather died of pnuemonia from complications
due to his having lung cancer. I was never close to him but I can
remember like it was yesterday waking up around 12:30 in absolute
hysterical tears. As my father was walking into the room I told
him grampa was dead. He was walking in to tell me....
Just recently my grandmother died. I am 20 years old now so it was
a little less dramatic, but coming home from being out with some
friends of mine, I didn't want to go home. I felt something was
deathly wrong. I couldn't figure why I felt the way I did and when
I walked into the house I asked what was wrong before even saying
hello. He just looked at me and said "Nothings wrong", I breathed
a sigh of relief just as he finished,"Gram died tonight." I wasn't
particularly close with her either.
What do you think??
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698.6 | What its called. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Apr 08 1988 15:19 | 23 |
| RE: .5
Well its not "dejavu" (as has been discussed at length elsewhere
in this conference dejavu is an unjustified feeling of familiarity
about events that are transpiring). If we take it at face value
then it is ESP (somehow knowing something which you have no "normal"
way of knowing), either the type known as "claivoyance" (knowing
something contemporary but elsewhere, i.e., about the death) or
"precognition" (knowing something before it happens, i.e., the
announcement of the death).
This is one of the most common types of apparently paranormal
experiences. Just last night, the TV show "The Days and Nights
of Mary Dodd" showed an example of the somewhat extreme form known
technically as a crisis apparition. The title character was looking
in her medicine cabinet. When she closed the door she saw her father
reflected clearly in the mirror. She spun around but he was not
there and when she looked again in the mirror his image was gone.
Then the phone call about her father's sudden and completely unexpected
death came... Fiction, of course, but surveys show that many people
have actually had experiences very similar to this.
Topher
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698.7 | HHmmmmmmm.... | EXIT26::SAARINEN | | Fri Apr 08 1988 16:02 | 9 |
| Funny,...As I was reading Note 698.5, thinking about Pyshic types
of things that had happened to me, the first thing that came to
mind was the sequence in the TV show Note 698.6 alludes too......
Then I read 698.6.
HHmmmmmmmm........
-Arthur
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698.8 | minor-league experiences | GENRAL::DANIEL | If it's sloppy, eat over the sink. | Fri Apr 08 1988 16:54 | 25 |
| One night when I was a child, I dreamed that my mother and I were climbing up a
sterile white stairwell in a newly-opened, six-story store. She was opening
the doors on each floor; I was following her; she would peek inside, then close
the door, and we would proceed up the stairs.
A couple of years later, I had a dream that I was riding one of those sky
chairs like they have at amusement parks, only I was very upset about
something; the sky chair crashed through an opening in the ceiling panels and
continued along the rail on the ceiling of one of the levels of that same
building where my mother had peeked in the door at the stairwell. I remember
looking down and seeing 16 Magazine on one of the tables, on display.
A couple of years after *that*, I dreamed that I was trying to escape someone
or something, and there was a glass-encased catwalk next to that very same
six-story store, that had an elevator in it. I was on all-fours and couldn't
reach the button very well; I stretched and finally did; when I got on to the
elevator, all the walls fell away, and I found myself on a sky chair again.
the Dejavu of dreams; recurring visits to a place that doesn't exist (yet?).
I have also had dreams of being somewhere, and saying something; then, much
later (as in, a year or two later) I catch myself in the same place, getting
ready to say the same thing, in real life; I usually will stop to think about
it for a second instead of coming right out with it, since I perceive the dream
as a sort of warning to be careful in speech.
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698.9 | ...a tangent... | WRO8A::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Fri Apr 08 1988 22:26 | 13 |
| re: .0
Maybe I misunderstood something...as for activity in this
conference, do you have SET SEEN/ set to keep you current? It
certainly seems to me that there is a great deal of action here.
Most days it takes 30-60 minutes just to read everything that
has been entered (Overnight and during the day, in my case)
especially if the more detailed and complex issues are carefully
scrutinized (and I admit to not having an interest in many.)
So, either your idea of activity is different from mine or maybe
you're "missing the action" somehow.
Frederick
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698.10 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Fri Apr 08 1988 22:52 | 25 |
| On thanksgiving 1972 my grandparents came to Colorado Springs from
kansas city for the holiday. At 9:30 that night my grandfather passed
away from a heartattack. Just as the paramedics were arriving the
phone rang(i answered it) The voice on the other end was my aunt
in KC and she was crying and said Grand pa is dead isent he?...
I dident know what to say other than "I think so" and she said that
she heard his voice(he had had an earlier stroke which left him
speechless) and he had told her to take care of mother(my grandmother)
and that he loved her.
This really blew me away at the time as my grandfather had been
fully alive only 5 minutes before and she had no way of knowing
about his death so quickly.
Another interesting thing was that he and i had a long talk(he wrote
what he wanted to say) that day. He was telling me to take care
of my parents and to be good to them and other things that after
the fact seemed to be a last goodbye. When the time came he took
my mother by the hand and walked to the bedroom where my grandmother
was, kissed them both then dropped dead.
-j
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698.11 | All deaths are "suicides"! | WRO8A::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Fri Apr 08 1988 23:58 | 20 |
| re: -.1
One of the goals I have "in life" is to die consciously at
the time I feel is appropriate. This has been a goal for at least
15 years. What you described (about your grandfather) is not too
far removed from the manner in which I envision my own death.
I will still hold out for just a little, tiny bit more (to be
asleep and depart quietly) but I wouldn't in any way feel bad
looking back at my life if I left the way he did. I like the
"class" that your grandfather had in that day. Sure beats "endless"
days of suffering with tubes sticking out all over or getting
squashed by a locomotive or ending up with a .45 cal slug in
some part of the anatomy, in my opinion. The point is that I
believe it is possible to preordain ones death consciously and
that it is preferable to "allowing it" (for me) and that what you
described adds a bit of credence to this belief.
Frederick
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698.12 | Getting to it... | COMET::AIKALA | Future Lamborghini Owner | Sat Apr 09 1988 11:18 | 70 |
| Experiencing a foretelling dream has happened to me but very
infrequently, and usually dully realized, i.e., "I wonder if
that was what that dream was all about." It has never impacted
with sudden understanding when some future (from an hour after
wake-up to a year later) event unfolded. I feel this entails
alot of the feeling of dejavu itself. When one comes upon a
familiar replay, it may just be a dream revisited, not necessarily
a winding-back-of-the-clock living event revisited.
One person I take seriously however, on dreams and premonitions forecasting
a time yet to come is my mother. She is a receptor for the negative
futures of people. The people concerned can be total strangers
to her and everyone in our family, however, the stranger will know
someone, a direct relative, or someone who knows someone who knows
someone who eventually will make the connection to a relative or
us.
The last such incident she had, happened at a time when she would be
flying to Honolulu, Hawaii to attend a niece's wedding. When she
left here (Colorado) she was extremely saddened and began to cry
uncontrollably when the goodbyes were being said at the airport.
This was highly unusual for her and us since she's been back to
Honolulu many, many times before while we've been here in Colorado.
Sometimes she goes alone, sometimes with dad, sometimes we all go.
She felt she traced the undue emotion to my father, being extremely
saddened to leave him (we were told this after her return). She
tried to figure this out on the plane. Eventually she got her emotions
under control. She said when she was at the mid-point between
California and Oahu over the Pacific ocean, she began to weep once
again uncontrollably accompanied with a heavy sadness. She
was completely baffled. My father has suffered a heart attack,
and she was completely fearful he was going to suffer another in
her absence.
When the plane landed, she was greeted by crying relatives who looked
as though they had been up all night. The crying did not exemplify
joy, it illustrated a tragedy. A young man, the best friend of
the groom, 19 years old, had died in a violent way in a one car
accident on the island of Molokai the evening before my mother arrived.
It was a rainy night on Molokai that night. Apparently he lost
control of his car (Molokai has some serious mountain passes with
dangerous curves), went off the road and plummeted in free fall,
more than 1500 feet to his death. He was returning home from
work. He was to be the Best Man at my cousins wedding on Oahu.
This was not a foretelling 'dream' I realize. Her dreams she can
recall vividly and I have heard quite a few, and to hear them and
hear her describe what she was seeing, what the surroundings were,
is chilling. I am often fascinated to hear these dreams because
usually all things within them are eerily symbolic, i.e., a sunlit
room, a window framed by white curtains blowing because of a breeze
due to the window being open, yet the window shows that it is night
outside. A holding of a hand that you cannot let go of, being in
a room alone then suddenly a scream rips the air and when she turns
she'll see the person who will be affected sometime soon.
She has cried herself awake, she has screamed herself awake, she
has bolted awake. Fortunatley, these dreams happen far enough
apart so as not to make a mental wreck out of her. But when they
happen, we worry, and she usually makes a couple of dozen phone
calls after these dreams. Her dreams never foretell a positive
event, only negative ones. I should also say they don't always
foretell death. Someone might have a heart attack, or be told
they have cancer, etc. Her dreams are more accurate in the sense
that she can reasonably tell who the person is. The premonitions
are a bit more vague, leaving her confused and uncertain. The
only certain aspect being that someone will experience the worst.
Sherman
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698.13 | Old age must have some insight! | NEXUS::ENTLER | | Mon Apr 11 1988 14:04 | 36 |
| RE: .10
My grandparents, one on my mother's side of the family and the
other on my father's side have died in similar manners. To some
degree they knew ther time had come.
My grandmother on my mother's side had been ill for quite some
time. See had told one of her daughters that see wanted to see
her youngest daughter. My grandmother lived in Ohio and her youngest
daughter, Patty, lived in Wyoming.
Patty was contacted by the family and drove home to see her mother.
She had only planned to stay a few days, but fate intervened and
the transmission on Patty's car went out and she ended up spending
a week or longer at home with her mother. After her car was repaired
she headed back to home. On the same night that she began her trip
home her mother quietly died in her sleep. Family members believe
that all she was waiting for was to see her baby one last time before
she departed.
Then on my Dad's side of the family, my grandfather, who had
always been in generally good health, took ill. He had been in
the hospital for a few weeks. His wife, my grandmother, was with
him at the time. He looked up at her and said "Edith, I going to
head down the other side of the mountain now", he closed his eyes
and just quietly passed away.
I don't know if religion has anything to do with it, but on
both sides of my family, my grandparents were very religious. Perhaps
being more at peace with themselves may have something to do with
it.
One other thing that has always fastenated me is the similarity
between my grandfathers. They were born exactly one month apart
from each other in 1900. My grandfather on my dad's side died at
age 82 on November 4th. My grandfather on my mother's side died
at age 82 on December 4th. Again exactly one month apart. Just
coincidence I guess.
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