
Seriously, I once saw a small, multicolored glowing orb flying irregulary behind the window for a full 30 seconds before it left. Like a probe or something. That was pretty tense

Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
In my mind? Yes. Hell i get a bad vibe from going under high tension powerlines, simply becuase of all the fearmongering about them by the media, none of which i rationaly believe in.Ghosts area strange topic for me. I don't really believe in them, but just sometimes I get an AMAZINGLY bad vibe from places. But thats just the good old human mind, right?
Didnt they found a lost Japanese platoon that tought the war was still going on in the middle of some jungle some years ago?weemadando wrote:
Also, one of my friends from Malaysia has some really awesome tales of his father's school (his dad is a principal), which was built on the site of a former Japanese prison camp. Things like having a guy in full WW2 japanese uniform, with weapon walking around on the sports field like he was patrolling, then just vanishing.
Yeah, so far, I've heard two explanations for this: 1) the shape and layout of a place (for instance some caves, or some corridors in an insane asylum at night) can inadvertantly put you on guard. It's a primal response and you don't really have any control over it. 2) Your brain creates a magnetic field from its workings, that actually extends outside your head. This field can actually effect what's going on in your brain too, and you can change it with varying magnetic fields. Magnetic fields around the head have been seen to cause hallucination, a sense of someone else "being there," fear of that person that isn't there, and a feeling that that nonexistent person is benevolent.weemadando wrote: Ghosts area strange topic for me. I don't really believe in them, but just sometimes I get an AMAZINGLY bad vibe from places. But thats just the good old human mind, right?
Generally. Don't feel bad, however; some of the most entertained we can be is by being scared by something that can't hurt us, and then laughing or being amazed by it later.weemadando wrote:Ghosts area strange topic for me. I don't really believe in them, but just sometimes I get an AMAZINGLY bad vibe from places. But thats just the good old human mind, right?
Sounds like it could be one of two things, either a fungus/bacteria that produces a toxin, but also some sort of nutrient that seeps out a bit more, or a spring, and nothing grows there because, for some odd reason, there aren't any plants around there that can stand very wet soil.wautd wrote:Also, a while ago I saw a documentary that showed a rather barren plain with a rather odd sighting. Don't remember a lot (not even in which country it was) but this I still remember:
- the main vegetation of the plains is low grass
- there were cirkles (perfect round iirc) where absolutely nothing could grow
- only the border of these barren cirkles, the grass was a lot higher than the grass that covered the plains.
Anyone knows what I'm talkng about? Is the mystery solved by now?
God I hate that feeling. Always looking over your shoulder, mistaking your own shadow for someone else's, hearing every floor creak like a tree-falling.Rye wrote:Yeah, so far, I've heard two explanations for this: 1) the shape and layout of a place (for instance some caves, or some corridors in an insane asylum at night) can inadvertantly put you on guard. It's a primal response and you don't really have any control over it. 2) Your brain creates a magnetic field from its workings, that actually extends outside your head. This field can actually effect what's going on in your brain too, and you can change it with varying magnetic fields. Magnetic fields around the head have been seen to cause hallucination, a sense of someone else "being there," fear of that person that isn't there, and a feeling that that nonexistent person is benevolent.weemadando wrote: Ghosts area strange topic for me. I don't really believe in them, but just sometimes I get an AMAZINGLY bad vibe from places. But thats just the good old human mind, right?
Well, the point was that scientists already looked after those things but still couldnt find a reason. There was also no physical difference between the dead soil and the soil that had grass on it.Quadlok wrote:Sounds like it could be one of two things, either a fungus/bacteria that produces a toxin, but also some sort of nutrient that seeps out a bit more, or a spring, and nothing grows there because, for some odd reason, there aren't any plants around there that can stand very wet soil.wautd wrote:Also, a while ago I saw a documentary that showed a rather barren plain with a rather odd sighting. Don't remember a lot (not even in which country it was) but this I still remember:
- the main vegetation of the plains is low grass
- there were cirkles (perfect round iirc) where absolutely nothing could grow
- only the border of these barren cirkles, the grass was a lot higher than the grass that covered the plains.
Anyone knows what I'm talkng about? Is the mystery solved by now?
Any time a TV SHOW says the phrase, "scientists examined X paranormal activity but couldn't find a cause", you should ask questions until your throat hurts, starting with 'which scientists'.wautd wrote:Well, the point was that scientists already looked after those things but still couldnt find a reason. There was also no physical difference between the dead soil and the soil that had grass on it.
(perhaps by now they solvde the case, altough the docu was pretty recent)
iirc, it was on National Geographic and they showed a well equipped labLagmonster wrote:Any time a TV SHOW says the phrase, "scientists examined X paranormal activity but couldn't find a cause", you should ask questions until your throat hurts, starting with 'which scientists'.wautd wrote:Well, the point was that scientists already looked after those things but still couldnt find a reason. There was also no physical difference between the dead soil and the soil that had grass on it.
(perhaps by now they solvde the case, altough the docu was pretty recent)