ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...
ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...
ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...
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Examples:<br />
Any number, color, object, etc. may be induced to be ignored by the patient after full<br />
consciousness. A certain keyword starts the suggestion <strong>and</strong> a different word ends it. <strong>The</strong><br />
patient will not know nor use the item to be ignored. He/she may state that the sea is<br />
colored red, if suggested to ignore the color blue. A count of eleven may be achieved if<br />
asked to count ones fingers if a number -say 5- is suggested to be ignored. Thus the patient<br />
counts 1-2-3-4-6-7-8-9-10-11<br />
Different type of behavior patterns may be induced such as forcing the patient to recite a<br />
certain sentence whenever anyone says out loud the special keyword. <strong>The</strong> patient is<br />
fully aware of the conditioned action but it is very difficult, if not impossible, to restrain from<br />
doing it. Sweating, loss of coordination <strong>and</strong> full lack of concentration plagues the<br />
patient until he/she performs the programmed action.<br />
An object may be set to be perceived as invisible <strong>and</strong> it will be fully ignored <strong>and</strong> evaded<br />
during the period of suggestion. Experiments may be performed with a coffee mug, induced<br />
to be invisible. If the mug is put on top of a page with writing, the patient will only read the<br />
parts not covered by the mug. Even though the sentences may make no sense, nothing is<br />
seemingly wrong to the suspected. It is difficult to suggest an object be invisible, yet stay<br />
tactile. Usually the object is completely ignored by all senses. Thus, the mug in the<br />
example will reportedly not exist, even when the patient is touching it.<br />
Stage hypnotists will sometimes perform shows in which they hypnotize participants to think<br />
they are some celebrity <strong>and</strong> behave exactly like them. John Mohl, stage hypnotist <strong>and</strong><br />
member of <strong>The</strong> National Guild of Hypnotists, says that he has often hypnotized people to<br />
become someone else! Mohl noticed that adults often became a celebrity while Middle or<br />
High School students usually become something much more creative or imaginative."<br />
-- Reference: Wikipedia.org<br />
75 "... Untouchables..."<br />
"In the Indian caste system, a Dalit, often called an untouchable, or an outcaste, is a<br />
person who according to traditional Hindu belief does not have any "varnas". Varna refers to<br />
the Hindu belief that most humans were supposedly created from different parts of the body<br />
of the divinity Purusha. <strong>The</strong> part from which a varna was supposedly created defines a<br />
person's social status with regard to issues such as whom they may marry <strong>and</strong> which<br />
professions they may hold. Dalits fall outside the varnas system <strong>and</strong> have historically been<br />
prevented from doing any but the most menial jobs. (However, a distinction must be made<br />
between lower-caste people <strong>and</strong> Pariahs.) Included are leather-workers (called chamar),<br />
carcass h<strong>and</strong>lers (called mahar),poor farmers <strong>and</strong> l<strong>and</strong>less labourers, night soil scavengers<br />
(called bhangi or chura), street h<strong>and</strong>icrafters, folk artists, street cleaners, dhobi, etc.<br />
Traditionally, they were treated as pariahs in South Asian society <strong>and</strong> isolated in their own<br />
communities, to the point that even their shadows were avoided by the upper castes.<br />
Discrimination against Dalits still exists in rural areas in the private sphere, in ritual matters<br />
such as access to eating places <strong>and</strong> water sources. It has largely disappeared, however, in<br />
urban areas <strong>and</strong> in the public sphere, in rights of movement <strong>and</strong> access to schools. <strong>The</strong><br />
earliest rejection of discrimination, at least in spiritual matters, was made as far back as the<br />
205