Tonay said:I don't mean to be mean, but when I hear this story all I see is a girl with mental problems who didn't get the medical help she needed, and her family only increased her delusional state, and now she's run away for the last time. A tragic and completely shameful story.
Holy shit! This reminds me of Donnie Darko, so thats where that bunny guy came from.Johann said:
canova said:no, not too offensive, just unbearable.
Stop acting like you know all the shit, so yeah please stop.
Tonay said:Yeah, mate, read up on something called 'mass hysteria'. It's really cool.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_hysteria (check out the related links and specific examples too - my favourite has always been Dancing Panic).
It's funny how when these things happen in backwards superstitious cultures, the first explanation for anything happening is a fucking stupid one. When something bad happens, it's not because that's just how things played out, there has to be a REASON for it.
It was someone's spell. An evil eye cast by that neighbour who doesn't like you. It was God's punishment for your sin of having a wank whilst thinking of Zac Efron. It's blatantly demonic possession. It's bad luck brought on by walking under that ladder.
Hey look, the newspaper is reporting it as a djinn invasion, so they must have done some research before coming to that conclusion. Now the Sultan is here and he says the demons are only here because of the homosexuals bringing sin into the country, if he thinks they're demons it must be true.
Get this, our religious book says that god made the universe in a week, i dont see an obvious scientific explanation and im too dumb to understand what a big bang is so it must have been god. I don't care what you say all I know is that we all have heart chakra's and mine is in a weakened state hence my unhappiness. We must not work on the sabbath and lets drink from the Kiddush Cup, thatll make things better. Don't cut your hair or god will be displeased. Yadda yadda yadda. We live in a stupid world.
The conflict in science over NDEs centers not on whether they happen but on what they are. It's accepted, based on various studies, that between 4% and 18% of people who are resuscitated after cardiac arrest have an NDE. Researchers tend to fall into one of two camps. The first argues that an NDE is a purely physiological phenomenon that occurs within an oxygen-starved brain. "There's nothing mysterious about NDEs," says Mark Mahowald, director of the Minnesota Regional Sleep Disorders Center. "Many people want it to be a religious, paranormal or supernatural phenomenon. The fact that NDEs can be explained scientifically detracts from the mystique."
The second camp is as adamant that no theory based purely on the workings of the brain can account for all elements of an NDE, and that we should consider the mind-bending possibility that consciousness can exist independent of a functioning brain, or at least that consciousness is more complex than we suppose. Though NDEs are driven in part by neurochemistry and psychology, says Auckland psychiatrist Karl Jansen, it has "underlying mechanisms in more mysterious realms that cannot currently be described."
jakershaker said:You don't have to know "all the shit" to recognise bullshit stories. Sure they can be exciting and scary but they're still just made up stories so why even pretend that they are true without and shred of evidence?
Leonsito said:Wow, very interesting, but it sucks that your cousin disappeared
Nobody solved that site? What the hell, GAF let's do this !
big_z said:there was some show on discovery a while back where some people were trying to capture some type of creature with high speed cameras. they looked kinda like flying white centipedes or something but they were still blurry in the pictures due to their speed. anyone remember the special or what the things were called???
Weren't rods proved to be just video recording artefacts?KAOz said:
shuyin_ said:Weren't rods proved to be just video recording artefacts?
Spike6663 said:A quick read of this has ensured a few nightmares for tonight...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reportedly_haunted_locations
KAOz said:
Jason's Ultimatum said:This one's interesting. Berlin, 1939, a flower cart took off by itself and rolled approximately half a kilometer over level ground. Three hundred eyewitnesses.
Also, the Slow Down http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/vents/acoustics/sounds/noise97139.wavLeunam said:
Whilst not as creepy, I think the "Wow! signal" still in the same category.Insane Metal said:Also, the Slow Down http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/vents/acoustics/sounds/noise97139.wav
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slow_Down_(unidentified_sound)
WTF that's creepy O_O
Jason's Ultimatum said:This one's interesting. Berlin, 1939, a flower cart took off by itself and rolled approximately half a kilometer over level ground. Three hundred eyewitnesses.
KennyLinder said:LOL! I wonder how many GAFers will get it ?
One of the geological attractions is called the Racetrack Playa, famous for it's moving stones. The floor of the playa is dried, scorched mud which has broken into perfect little octagons and pentagons and mosaic. This is as "desert" as you can get in America. It's as flat as flat can be. With rocks which seem to move on their own.
The stones vary in size and shape from pebble size to half-ton boulders. They break off the hills you see in the background. Their tracks vary in length, going every which way from zig-zags to loops; some double back on themselves. Some travel only a few feet; others go for hundreds of yards, yet they can be right next to each other, and right next to some that don't move at all.
shuyin_ said:My theory regarding Mary Celeste is that a fight took place onboard the ship (cause may have been mutiny); people killed each other (throwing the bodies into the ocean) and the survivors used the lifeboat (found missing from Mary Celeste) and the sextant and marine chronometer (both were also missing from Mary Celeste) for navigation.
The biggest mystery is what drove the crew to abandon ship. Whatever it was, i'm sure it has nothing to do with paranormal activities.
Whether it was a storm and they left in a hurry thinking the ships was going to sink, whether a fight took place, the fact is it was abandoned. The missing lifeboat and navigation instruments indicate as much. Those that were on that lifeboat probably died in it.
I used to be such a fanatic for these stories of the unexplained. My library visits usually involved coming home with 4 or 5 books on ghosts or UFOs.
I'm 30 now though and I've never felt so skeptical. I miss that dreamy fanaticism sometimes.
Medalion said:When I was a young lad growing up in London, Ontario Canada, I went to a restaurant one weekend called the Friar's Club... urban legend said it was a restaurant built on a cemetary ground.
When ya had to use the bathroom, the bathrooms were downstairs in the basement... *shit I am getting chills recalling this now* I recall one incident me and my mother will never forget.
I was using the bathroom, I was waiting to use the men's stall, the door was closed so I assumed someone was in there, and I noticed like a white doctor's lab coat hung over the door... so I waited. Then I waited awhile, and then I saw the lab coat get pulled down as if the person inside was done using it. I then noticed the door was not really closed all the way or locked, when the door swung open, I saw nobody inside, and there was no white lab coat to be found, I checked everywhere. I was absolutely freaked out, I ran upstairs and wanted to get the fuck outta there. My mom also told me a very similar story and we vowed to never go there EVER again.
I remember not that long after going there... the whole restaurant mysteriously caught on fire. My mom and joked they call it the FRI-ars club, so that's why it burned down... but yeah it was creepy. Then my parents told me the urban legend about that restaurant... fucking scary shit son I tell hyeah whut.
The_Dude said:This one has always creeped me out, ever since hearing about it as a kid - Spring-Heeled Jack
Was just thinking about this yesterday. I wonder if they'll ever solve this one.
Tonay said:The whole idea of a ghostly entity fits perfectly with what I'm saying. That a spirit would materialize or return for no other purpose than to show itself is silly and ridiculous - I mean, what it really shows is how silly and ridiculous we have become in believing such things. That we can ignore all natural laws about the corporeal body, that we witness these spirits clad in their own shabby outfits with the same old haircuts and hairstyles, never aging, never in search of more comfortable surroundings...it actually ends up saying more about the living than it does about the dead.
It doesn't take an advanced degree in psychology to understand the unconscious yearnings that these imaginings satisfy. You know, the longing for immortality, the hope that there is something beyond this mortal coil; that we might never be long without our loved ones. I mean, these are powerful, powerful desires. They're the very essence of what make us human. All right, Mulder: I'm afraid. But it's an irrational fear.
Mr_Kitty_Fantastico said:I've always been partial to the Amityville Horror story. The actual events are much more intriguing than the film portrayals.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Amityville_Horror
If you can track it down, George Lutz did an interview w/ Art Bell a number of years ago that was absolutely amazing.
Tonay said:AMUSING ANECDOTE:
About 7 or 8 years ago, I used to post on the website run about the Amityville incident (the site was called The Night Exposed, not sure if its still around) that was owned by the wife of Ronnie DeFeo, who was the famous murderer in the Amityville house. The wife had actually married him in prison I believe (murderers tend to get a lot of whores digging them and it makes them wanna 'tame' the guy, I guess). Amusingly enough, Ronnies original wife used to post there as well - I'm not sure when he married her or why he didn't kill her or whatever - and they even used to bicker on the forum. If anyone knows the marital history of Ronnie DeFeo it'd be cool to know exactly who was who.
Anyway, long story short, I ended up convincing Ronnie DeFeo's wife that I was Ryan Reynolds. Yeah, this guy (he wasn't as famous then as he is now):
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I'd found out that he'd just signed up for a movie about Amityville and pretended to be him, and EVERYONE bought it. I acted like I'd signed up to the forum to ask questions about Ronnie now and what he had to say about the incident. I even mentioned Alanis Morrisette, who he was dating at the time. Eventually they realised I was a fake after I was found out to be posting at the exact same time as Ryan's live appearance on some late night chatshow.
Incidentally, Ronnie's wife told 'Ryan Reynolds' that Ronnie's lawyers loved all the shit about the 'haunted' house, because it helped them push for the insanity pleas they were going for during the appeals, so they positively encouraged it.
Anyway, about 6 years later I convinced the entire worldwide press that I was Benazir Bhutto's son, which culminated in the AFP newswire informing the british Houses of Parliament that they'd be banning the use of Facebook or Wikipedia as a source (and a few other news agencies followed in response), but that's a story for another day (specifically a day when I get to make my own threads on neogaf).
Mr_Kitty_Fantastico said:That's pretty funny.
I would just like to point out how you were railing on that guy about his sister being kidnapped by demons (I think your points are valid, its more likely that she was mentally ill than anything else), but then you claim that you convinced the world's press corp that you were Benazir Bhutto's son. That's pretty outlanish too. :lol
shuyin_ said:Weren't rods proved to be just video recording artefacts?
Spike6663 said:A quick read of this has ensured a few nightmares for tonight...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reportedly_haunted_locations
Blyss said:I read something about two guys that found a new, undiscovered cave. One of them made kept a journal, so you could read everything.
They got in after 3 days of hard work, but they started to hear crazy shit from inside the cave. They didn't really mind, so they kept working to get deeper. After a while, they got so deep that one of them had to crawl to get further. He attached a rope somewhere to hang on to it, but suddenly something from inside the cave started pulling the rope with a lot of force.
There were a lot of paranormal things going on, but I can't remember it.
Damn this shit is hard to explain. I hope someone knows what I'm talking about.
Lol, found it:
http://www.angelfire.com/trek/caver/page1.html
ringlord said:For quite a while my brother was way into Native American culture...
As my brother tells it, there was suddenly some lights in the room. He could see movement of it out of the corner of his eye, as if there was some light behind him, but in of him front he sees a brightly lit ball of light moving through the room. It was the size of a grapefruit or a little larger. As it moved, it transformed into a Native American in full dancing regalia who performed some dance steps to their song and then transformed back into the ball of light which continued moving through the room.
As soon as they all saw this, their singing and drumming stopped, naturally, and the lights disappeared.
My brother and the more experienced drummer/singer were on one side and saw the dancer. The other two drummers were facing the opposite way and saw two similar balls of light, but neither of them turned into a figure -- these are the lights my brother saw from his peripheral vision.
They were all dumbfounded for a while, and began describing what they saw to each other. My brother and the other guy that saw the dancing man described in detail what he was wearing -- the type and design of bead work, the color of feathers, type of headdress, and so on. Both were talking over each other describing these details, but both agreed they had each seen the same thing.
The other two only saw two balls of light, both perhaps a little smaller than the one my brother had seen, moving about the room. I asked my brother if they had been drinking or smoking anything, and he emphatically says no.