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Oh, My!
Gordon,
I have no "scientific" evidence of it, only anecdotal evidence, examples from my own experiences that sounds can affect neural pathways. (You guys are safe! I'm not going to tell you about "Freddie!" Come to think of it, The Freedie story doesn't even relate.) I will say this. There exists in the world, a force which can and does cause things that aren't in the world to come into being. Are you sitting down? Did the chair you're in come to you from a "chair tree," or did somebody conceive of the chair and bring it into the world. Call it whatever you want, but it (the force) originates in our minds. It has two distinctly opposite effects, depending on the orientation of the state of the mind it's in. Example: Believe you can, and you can. Believe you can't and you can't. Uh, that ain't what I intended to write. I intended to say that I was looking for a cassette tape, because I wanted to record some thoughts so I could get them down on paper, later. I found an old one from my days in the classroom, and listened to it. I was surprised to hear my own voice describing an experience that my brother and I had. We were in the hallway facing each other, talking. There was no one else in the house. Simultaneously, we looked down the hall in the direction of the bedrooms which were directly opposite each other. Nervously, we looked back at each other, then he asked "What did you see?" Turns out we had each had seen out of the corner of the eye, someone/something cross the hall from one bedroom to the next. Ghost? Nobody was in either room when we checked. I just thought it a neat coincidence that I read your post then I go and pick up that tape. Mary BTW, If you're serious, I'm interested in the recording. |
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