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Topic: GHOSTS?
no photo
Thu 11/09/06 07:43 PM
what's up solow, i'm not the denial type but i do try to see what is up
because i like to know if it's something else so that i don't think i'm
losing my mind and need to see a shrink lol...send them tracks whenever
you can.

no photo
Thu 11/09/06 07:50 PM
the house i use to live in had a cold spot but only in one room in the
basement. it was not all the time and it would happen in the summer as
well. the spot was so cold i could see my breath. always sounded like
someone was walking around upstairs at night and the door to the
upstairs would be closed everynight but be open in the morning. it
wasn't due to the house settling or the change in the temp from day to
night and one night before i9 fell asleep i noticed my closet door
open(it was always closed)and there was a figure of a man standing in it
with a light around him, kinda some weird shit. i have experienced alot
of other things as well but they are minor things that i never bothered
to check out. just tend to let it go without thinking about it now as
none of them seem to be malicious.

no photo
Thu 11/09/06 07:56 PM
solow--i never believe in "ghost" until i see one--no offense, bro--the
way i read ya'll stories--it kinda made wonder if such incident occurs
wherever they usually are heavy populated--i'm may not be making sense
but at least i'd like to know-know what i'm sayin'--no?

no photo
Thu 11/09/06 08:00 PM
by the way-- i'm one-half cherokee---when my daddy's side were full
blown from generations--i'm just curious

Ghostrecon's photo
Thu 11/09/06 08:45 PM
I'm a ghost! LOL

TheShadow's photo
Thu 11/09/06 08:50 PM
Bailey sorry but that pic if the funnest thing I ever seen as a pic on
this site. LMAO

Ghostrecon's photo
Thu 11/09/06 08:57 PM
Death's White Light: Is THIS the Cause?

The stories give us chills. A man suffers a near fatal heart attack.
After he is resuscitated, he tells of walking into a blindingly bright
white light as he is suffused with feelings of calm and joy.
A woman has surgery and her heart stops beating on the table. Within
minutes, the surgeons bring her back and she later says she detached
from her body and floated above the operating room watching the entire
procedure.
What causes this? Religious people say near-death experiences are
evidence of life after death. Neurologists insist it is far too complex
for scientific study.
Now researchers from the University of Kentucky in Lexington think they
may have figured out a biological origin. Healthy people who regularly
blur the line between sleep and wakefulness--that is, when the dream
state spills over into waking, a phenomenon called REM intrusion--are
more likely to experience extraordinary sensations when they are close
to death or believe they are dying, reports Reuters.
The Kentucky team found that adults who had near-death experiences were
also far more likely to have a history of REM intrusion, which can
include a feeling of being paralyzed when they first wake up or having
visual or auditory hallucinations as they drift off to sleep or awaken,
Reuters reports. Of the 55 volunteers in this study, all of whom had a
near-death experience, 60 percent had also experienced REM intrusion at
some point in their lives, compared with 24 percent of the control group
of 55 adults who hadn't had a near-death experience.
Neurologist Kevin R. Nelson says this suggests the brain's arousal
system predisposes some of us to both phenomena--REM intrusion and
near-death experience. He explained to Reuters that many features of REM
intrusions parallel those of near-death experiences, including the
visual centers of the brain being highly active while the body is
temporarily paralyzed. Nelson says it is possible that a REM intrusion
could give visions of light along with the feeling of "being dead."
However, Nelson says REM intrusion is only part of the explanation for
near-death experiences and insists this finding shouldn't in any way
detract from the meaning people have found in such experiences. Calling
his work "spiritually neutral," Nelson says his research only examines
how the brain contributes to a near-death experience and not why it
occurs. "The 'why' can't be addressed by scientific inquiry," he told
Reuters.
The study findings were published in the journal Neurology.

no photo
Fri 11/10/06 07:42 AM
So Shadow...you say'n my baby picture is funny? All the girls say I'm
sooo cute and I haven't changed a bit.........LOL
It's a GIF file and the eyes blink....way to funny

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