T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1097.1 | when was this book published? | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anyone can fly with an aircraft | Thu Aug 03 1989 10:32 | 29 |
| Re .0 (Roger):
>I can now move very small, light objects several feet if I really
>try, but it takes hours of concentration beforehand. Also, I've
>found that if anyone else is present in the room, their presence
>defects the mind waves, and I can't do it.
You might try seeing if you can videotape your levitation. Camcorders
can be rented; and while a videotape isn't the same as a "live"
demonstration, it'd be a start.
>The book goes on to prove that levitation must have been used to
>construct ancient people's huge buildings - specific examples include
>the pyramids of Egypt (some of the blocks weigh over 50 tonnes)
>the statues on Easter island, and the Inca temples in South America.
It might make an argument for such a position, but I refer you to
the book _Aku-Aku_, by Thor Heyerdahl. Heyerdahl went to Easter
Island and worked with the natives. He hired a bunch of them to
show him the carving techniques, said to be "beyond" the ability
of their available tools, and erecting a statue. They did both
things using conventional materials. Additionally, most Egyptologists
believe that the pyramids were constructed using conventional means,
and have written how this could be done.
Could you give the name of the book, author, and publisher (and
ISBN number, if present) for the delectation of other DEJAVU folk?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1097.2 | keep up the good work! | FEISTY::RAMSAY | | Thu Aug 03 1989 12:04 | 8 |
| In the book "Illusions," by Richard Bach, the main character, whose
name is Don Shimoda, makes dozens of profound statements which say,
in effect, that you can do whatever you set your mind to do. One
quote I like is, "You don't do anything. You see it done already,
and it is."
Keep practicing and soon you'll be an expert!
|
1097.3 | Nobody has proved it couldn't be done! | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Thu Aug 03 1989 13:40 | 7 |
| More on Easter Island -- In a program that directly challenged Von
Daaniken's claims that people couldn't have moved and/or carved the
stones using primitive tools, PBS filmed a team on Easter Island that
completed both accomplishments within days.
Mary
|
1097.4 | | BTOVT::BEST_G | We the Travelers of Time... | Thu Aug 03 1989 13:58 | 10 |
|
re:.3 (Mary)
I saw that show and they didn't prove it *could* be done either, from
what I remember. I remember them telling about all the reasons why
each method wouldn't work, unless they were somehow missing
something...
Guy
|
1097.5 | Levitation Race | FOOZLE::GOODHUE | | Thu Aug 03 1989 14:04 | 17 |
| Has anyone seen anything on the transcendental meditation people? I've
read a couple of articles in the past year or so that discussed their
levitating themselves!
Somewhere or other they were supposed to have held a 'hop-in' (think
that's how they termed it). They put long strips of mats on the
floor/ground and had levitation races down them. They couldn't stay up
the entire time so they sort of hopped (levitated) from place to place.
Sounded real interesting.
I'd like to know what the book is also.
Meredith Goodhue
|
1097.6 | ?s | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Aug 03 1989 15:20 | 15 |
| Hi Roger,
Could we have some details? How light is light? Do they float, slide
or roll, or do they move directly from one location to another without
traveling through the intervening space? Can you "do it" through
a barrier? Do you have to see the object? Do you have to touch it at
any point? What, in broad terms, is the training and/or practice like
to reach the state you are at? Have you noticed a "release of effort"
effect (i.e., a tendency for things to start to happen only when you
stop trying -- but you have to have tried hard enough first)? Do I ask
too many questions? :-)
Thanks.
Topher
|
1097.7 | | GULAM::COTTON | The man with no personal name | Fri Aug 04 1989 05:54 | 4 |
|
Jeez roG, I always thought there was a strange aura around you but I
thought it was your underpants. Tell us the name of the book Roger!
|
1097.8 | | SUBURB::SCOTTV | I see you shiver in anticip... | Fri Aug 04 1989 09:25 | 3 |
|
Yeah, Roger,tell us the name of the book! Is it `I Saw It With
My Own Eyes' by that well-known psychic, Tim O'Connor??
|
1097.9 | Not how I remember it! | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Fri Aug 04 1989 09:37 | 10 |
| re: .4
Guy,
We must have seen different programs, because in the show I saw they
completed a sculpture that was essentially identical to those already
existing on Easter Island. As I recall, in the last scene they erected
it using native hemp-type ropes next to the originals.
Mary
|
1097.10 | You got me... | BTOVT::BEST_G | We the Travelers of Time... | Fri Aug 04 1989 09:54 | 12 |
|
re:.9 (Mary)
I remember them trying to move a sculpture by various methods. The
method I saw consisted of them standing on end and rocking it with
ropes to "walk" it along. One scientist speculated that by the time
they got it to the erection site the sculpture would be worn down to
the eyeballs... Of course, my memory is not perfect by any means.
Guy
Different show?
|
1097.11 | Probably different show | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Fri Aug 04 1989 13:08 | 11 |
| .10 Must be. In the program I saw, the team (mostly natives, if
memory serves correct) moved the rock to the site 1st, then spent days
carving it, then erected it on the site where they carved it.
I forget if it was a team of 6 that took 10 days, or 10 that took 6
days, but was under 2 weeks to complete.
It was on channel 2 within the last 3 years (I remember I was in my new
condo when I saw it!)
Mary
|
1097.12 | One other observation - sounds like different show | UBRKIT::PAINTER | One small step... | Fri Aug 04 1989 18:46 | 5 |
|
I saw a portion of the show that Guy saw - where the statues were
'rocked' to their sites (theory only).
Cindy
|
1097.13 | Light as a Feather... | MAMTS7::DFOLEY | D-NUH | Mon Aug 07 1989 15:55 | 13 |
| Has anyone ever heard of the game "Light as a feather, Stiff as
a board"? A person lays on their back, and everyone puts one finger
underneath the person (like under his heel, or under his knee, under
his head) and concentrates on lifting the person. Then
they chant "Light as a feather, Stiff as a board" over and over
again, and eventually lift the person.
Yes, if twenty people are helping, it could happen. But when I
was young, I saw three children (about 13 yrs.) lift their 18 year
old brother, who is HEAVY!! I would never play this again... Pretty
strange, huh?
Deena
|
1097.14 | I've seen it done...it's pretty wierd | COMET::PINAR | | Tue Aug 08 1989 03:58 | 13 |
|
Yes, I know of that game. I've seen it work in the same manner that
you did. It was really unbelievable. I saw two guys holding up a
girl with just a few fingers on each side of her. She was probably
about 5 feet off of the ground. I wouldn't believe it if I hadn't
seen it with my own eyes. I remember everybody looking around at
each other in disbelief. I know what many people might be thinking.
Two guys might have little problem holding up a small women. Well,
it's hard to believe but they literally were holding her with *just*
a couple fingers (from each hand). She was "stiff as a board and
light as a feather." Never seen anything like it since...
|
1097.15 | Yeah, it is neat. | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Tue Aug 08 1989 08:37 | 10 |
| re: last two
I did it once with three other people. I forget how we did it
(we rubbed hands together or somesuch thing first) then surrounded
a person who wasn't a featherweight and lifted them a couple of feet.
We were somehow only able to sustain it for perhaps five to ten
seconds before they "got heavy" again.
Frederick
|
1097.16 | I remember that! | AKOV11::GALVIN | ALPHA.......works for me | Tue Aug 08 1989 09:06 | 18 |
| I remember playing that game as a child, only a different variation.
The subject would sit it a chair with two people on each side of
him/her. We would rub our hands together, raise them very slowly
so that they are outstretched. Then with palms facing each other
clenched with just the index fingers extended, we would then
simultaneously lower our arms to our positions which were......the
two people at the head (underarms) and the two people at the front
(under the knees). We would then place our index fingers under
the person in the chair and presto raised him with no problem.
At the time we were told that we were pushing down the air when
we brought our arms down together so that when we raised the person
the air just raised to its normal place. I never understood it,
but it sure was fun.
Blessed be,
Fran
|
1097.17 | Would you like a lift.... | ESSB::BROCKLEBANK | | Wed Mar 06 1991 08:29 | 19 |
| Re last 4 notes
Yes I remember it too. We did it at school when we were about
12 years old. Anyone else who remembers it were also about
this age.
So yesterday a few of us here tried to repeat the feat (sitting down
position). We had no luck! None of us could remember the chant so
what we did was to firstly place our hands on top of the person's
head in a pile and pressed down for about 1 min.. Then we swiftly
moved our hands (same clasp and positions as last note) to our
positions and tried to lift.
Has anyone done this lately with success? Any recommendations of
what to try? Do the participants need to be children, or is the
chanting the critical factor?
Regards,
Dave
|
1097.18 | Neat trick, huh? | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME---as an Adventurer! | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:34 | 10 |
| re: .17 (Dave)
No, you don't have to be children. I did it with four
other adults (the biggest of which sat in the chair) and it
worked. Unfortunately, I can't remember the details of how
it was done. What I remember is that we all used only our
index fingers (eight hands all together) to lift him.
Frederick
|
1097.19 | An-a-vun, an-a-two... | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Mar 06 1991 13:22 | 7 |
| This was covered in "The Skeptical Inquirer" within the past year.
The chant is very important; it provides the timing co�rdination
which makes the lift work. Without it, people are lifting at
slightly different times, and the additive effect is missing.
Ann B.
|
1097.20 | best as I can recall... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | I -- burn to see the dawn arriving | Wed Mar 06 1991 14:04 | 28 |
| As children, we'd be in a darkened room. One would lie in the middle,
and the rest of us would kneel around her. We'd each have two fingers
of each hand under their body - one at each side of the chest, one at
each side of the hips, one at each side of the thighs, one person at
the feet, one person at the head. As the person at the head chanted,
they'd cradle the person's head with both hands and rock it gently side
to side a little in time with the chanting. They'd say something like
"Here lies Susan", and this would be repeated around the "body". Then
they'd say "She was out walking one dark night, and it was raining" and
the last part of the phrase "it was raining" would pass around. The
head person would create various and sundry ways for hte person to have
"died". At the end of the tale ("she tried to run from the car, but it
was too late" "too late" "too late"....etc.). Then the head person
would say "she is as light as a feather and stiff as a board" and this
phrase would pass around the body (down the people to the left, around the
foot person, back up the right to the head person). The head person
would then say "when I count to three, we will raise her to
heaven....one....two....three" and everyone would lift.
I remember we did it maybe 10 or 12 times, then kinda forgot about it
and didn't do it again. Being in the dark or near-dark helped. The
"tale" should take about 5-10 minutes. Lying there getting your head
moved gently back and forth with all those fingers under you felt
pretty relaxing, but once you realized you'd been lifted it was kinda
scary!
-Jody
|
1097.21 | Do we have lift-off... | ESSB::BROCKLEBANK | Looking at/for the more subtle things | Fri Mar 08 1991 05:55 | 9 |
| Does anyone have a copy of the Sceptical Inquirer which contains the
feature on this levitation feat?
I'd be very interested in reading it. I'd rather not try the experiment
again until I get some more info in case too many unsuccessful encounters
will hinder whatever process is at work.
Regards,
Dave
|
1097.22 | | RAMOTH::DRISKELL | seeking optimism | Fri Mar 08 1991 16:35 | 21 |
|
I recall doing this at girl scout camping, of all places. We followed the
'technique' Jody listed, with 6 people (1 playing 'dead', 5 people using just
the index finger under the 'body'). What I recall was that it was successfull
if everyone was serious, (no giggleing, pretty hard to do at 13! :-) ), and
the 'dead' person went into a trance-like state.
What I recall most vividly is the last time we tried it. I was playing 'dead',
just relaxing, and then i had this urge to open my eyes... it was suddenly so
quiet , you see,... At that point I was about 12 inches from the tent roof... ,
course it looked more like an inch or two to me!...and this was the old fashion
cabin tents that were put up & left up till they rotted, and the roof was quite
high. Well, I screamed out, which naturally broke the 'trance', and fell like a
log back on the sleeping bags, *and on top of one of the other girls!*... seems
I had been lifted so high she was standing *under* me (she was pretty short)
with her fingers just brushing between my shoulderblades....
For some reason, we never tried that one again! We were all pretty spooked.
Mary
|