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Paranormal Moms Society (PMS) Investigates Paranormal Events

August 10th, 2010 admin No comments

The Paranormal Moms Society out of Chicago is making waves, with a team of adventurous “mom’s” investigating many types of Paranormal activity and events.

The Paranormal Moms founded in 2007 is a non-profit research team of 6 members based in the Chicagoland area dedicated to furthering the study of paranormal events.

The mom’s goal is to add documented evidence into the field of paranormal study and also to offer assistance to those who wish to have their experiences documented and perhaps in some way validated through photographs, EVP session recordings and video.

To learn more, or become a Paranormal Mom yourself – visit: www.paranormalmomssociety.com

The Psychic Line - Phone Psychic Readings

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Can Psychics Predict The Future?

June 20th, 2010 admin No comments

As reported by the post-trib.com, reader questions are answered.

Dr. Wallace: A young lady wrote to you that her future mother-in-law visited a fortuneteller in Ireland and was told that the marriage between her son and the young lady would end in a horrible divorce. Her son said that the fortuneteller didn’t have any “psychic power” and that she was only out to earn a little spending money.

Please allow me to explain about those who can predict the future. I should know because I am a psychic. Fortunetellers and psychics who predict the future are only telling people what could possibly happen, but that person has the power to change their future. In this girl’s case, her marriage would end in a horrible divorce if she didn’t take precautions to change the future.

Some people put down fortunetellers and psychics — as persons who cheat people out of their money — because they are afraid to look into the future. That’s what we call human nature. — Psychic, Chicago

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What are Clairvoyant Psychic Readings?

June 18th, 2010 admin No comments

Clairvoyant psychic readings can be fun and informative. Some readings can be better than others depending on who gives the reading.

To understand what a Clairvoyant Reading is, you must understand how the process works. Basically we all have psychic abilities but not everyone knows how to use them. Many people get intuitive feelings but are not sure what to think about them while others rely on their intuitions to help guide what they do in their everyday lives.

Using The Stars & Astrology
People who do psychic readings have learned to tap into these abilities. It has been said that giving a psychic reading during a full moon greatly increases psychic abilities.

Plants & Psychic Ability
Psychic abilities can also be enhanced by different types of plants, flowers and herbs. Honeysuckle flowers may enhance psychic powers and psychic visions can become more intense with the use of Cedar incense.

Tapping Into The Earth
Some psychics use crystals such as moonstone, mother of pearl, sapphire and quartz to energize their psychic abilities. So a clairvoyant psychic reading may be great, medium or mediocre depending on the abilities of the person that is giving the reading.

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Police Investigate Mysterious Disappearance of Psychic Susan Paperno

June 13th, 2010 admin No comments

As reported by ktnv.com, Mysterious disappearance of well-known psychic “Suzie Rae”, Paperno stuns family and friends.

Las Vegas, NV (KTNV) – A well-known psychic goes missing without a trace, and the bizarre circumstances surrounding her disappearance have family and friends worried about some frightening possibilities.

Investigators started searching for Internet talk show host Susan Paperno almost a week ago. Paperno was last seen on June 1st.

So where did she go and could foul play be involved? Police can’t seem to find any sings of forced entry at Paperno’s home or any signs of Paperno’s whereabouts.

Family members say police found Paperno’s car still inside her garage along with her purse and her other belongings inside the Northwest Las Vegas home near Washington Avenue and Tenaya Way. Her niece says what’s most strange is that investigators found Paperno’s door left wide open.

“She doesn’t use the front door. She uses the garage or she uses the back door. She never opens the front door for anyone, unless she knows that person. This is just beyond bizarre for her,” said Megan Reeves, stunned by her aunt’s disappearance.

According to family and friends, Paperno was regarded in the psychic community, had no serious medical issues and was very guarded in the way that she lived. The 57-year-old is divorced and lives alone.

Known in the psychic community as “Suzie Rae”, Paperno recently launched a new season of her Internet broadcast featured on ‘AllTalkRadio.net’.

“I’m amazed by it, that she’s really got this gift,” Reeves went on to say.

Paperno’s neighbor of more than 10 years describes the career psychic as a “person of habit” who never went anywhere without contacting her or leaving a detailed message.

“She’s such a sensible person, and living alone for so many years, she’s so cautious. It’s really frightening. I personally have a bad feeling because this is so unlike her,” said Gayla Miyama, who’s fearing the worst.

Miyama says Paperno started seeing a man a little over a month ago. Beyond that, the long-time neighbor doesn’t recall Paperno having many other people at the house.

Metro’s Missing Persons Detail is actively searching for leads in this case. If you know anything that could help in this investigation, you’re urged to call them at (702) 828-3111.

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Family Trusts Hope In Psychic Robbie Thomas

June 10th, 2010 admin No comments

As reported by wkyt.com, family turns to psychic in their search for answers, after a A fire killed their brother and father four years ago. Now a Laurel County family is asking a psychic for help.

The family of Herbert and Herbie Brewer have spent the last four years looking for answers.

They say they’ve never believed the fire that killed their loved ones was accidental.

And now, thanks to a psychic, they hope to find closure.

“We’ve known all along that they didn’t die in that fire without somebody hurting them first,” said Irene Ballinger who lost her brother and father in the fire.

In the four years since the fire, no arrests have been made. The family had begun to give up hope, until a friend of the family mentioned the case to psychic Robbie Thomas on a radio show.

“We were skeptical too, but we knew we didn’t have anything to lose.
When I heard the interview and he hadn’t even talked to us yet and he was saying things that only we knew,” said Alene Spurlock.

Regardless of what answers Robbie Thomas gives them, the Brewers say they feel like they’ve made more progress in the past week than they have in the past four years.

From Robbie’s website, regarding his Psychic Tour:

Join Robbie Thomas world renowned psychic criminal profiler along with many unique special guest speakers for an intense, explosive journey into the mind’s eye you will never forget! Robbie Thomas shares with the attending audience his often dangerous 20 – year career assisting police and families on some of the most sensitive, high-profile cases to come along in North America and abroad. See Robbie’s rare ability in action! Live Case Investigations and readings.

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Faith healer Anatoly Kashpirovsky: Russia’s new Rasputin

June 7th, 2010 admin No comments

As reported by the Guardian, Faith healer Anatoly Kashpirovsky may be Russia’s new Rasputin.

Let’s get one thing straight. Your level of understanding is this big,” Anatoly Kashpirovsky announces, after striding on stage at north Moscow’s Cosmos concert hall, indicating the space between his thumb and forefinger. “But mine is 1,000 times greater.”

The 2,000-strong crowd looks suitably impressed. But then, having just shelled out the rouble equivalent of up to £60 a ticket and another £20 for one of Kashpirovsky’s “remote healing” DVDs, they are clearly expecting to witness something out of the ordinary.

They will not go home disappointed. (Although, it must be said, some will go not home at all, but rather to hospital, suffering from nausea and intense headaches.)

His terse introduction over, Kashpirovsky, who at 70 boasts the appearance and energy of a man two decades younger, launches into an almost hour-long monologue, taking in subjects as diverse as self-programming, Genghis Khan and unsightly vaginal moles.

As fascinating as all of this may be, I can’t help feeling that most of the audience would rather he just cut to the chase and laid on the healing touch that once made him the most talked-about man in the Soviet Union.

As the Soviet system began to collapse under its own weight in the late 1980s, a widespread underground belief in magic and the paranormal flooded into the mainstream, turning society on its head. The pinnacle of this scramble for new ideas to replace the certainties that Marxism-Leninism had once provided saw the incredible spectacle of extrasensory experiments carried out on state TV, prime-time viewing spots devoted to psychic healing sessions.

Where once there were screenings of Communist Party congresses and rhythmic gymnastics, now there were men with hypnotic eyes and soothing voices promising to cure the entire country of its ailments. The nation was entranced.

Kashpirovsky, who first came to public attention during a televised broadcast of a Kiev healing session in October 1989, was the most famous of these Kremlin-approved psychics. At the height of his celebrity, the former weightlifter and qualified psychiatrist regularly topped polls to find the most popular public figure, easily beating the still sober Boris Yeltsin into second place. His live appearances at venues from Moscow to Vladivostok saw crowds sobbing and writhing to his command, a mass casting-out of demons, Soviet-style.

“They idolise me,” Kashpirovsky said of his countrymen at a 1989 joint news conference with a foreign ministry spokesperson. “I can reverse what was once thought irreversible. I tap the inner resources of the body.”

Such high-level patronage led to immediate and widespread comparisons with the mad monk Grigory Rasputin, the mystic healer whose malign influence over the royal family played a large part in the collapse of the Russian monarchy and the rise of the Bolsheviks.

This, then, was no Uri Geller-type spoon-bending novelty. If the Israeli psychic’s shows were something of a joke for most people in the west – a few moments of entertainment before the big match – Kashpirovsky’s appearances were a genuine cultural and social landmark, his name a byword for all that was bizarre and unfathomable during the final years of the Soviet Union. Indeed, by pointing to another reality beyond the party line, the Ukrainian-born healer may well have even contributed to the downfall of the “Evil Empire”.

Clad entirely in black, his piercing eyes staring into apartments across the vast territory of the USSR, Kashpirovsky “treated” millions, his voice both reassuring and oddly threatening.

“For those of you with high blood pressure, your blood pressure will lower… whoever has hip injuries, they will heal…” he droned, his litany of the suffering and the saved a potent lullaby that plunged the nation into a communal trance.

Who cared if the country was collapsing around them, if the shops were almost empty, and the threat of separatist violence in the Caucasus was moving ever closer? The USSR turned on, tuned in and switched off.

“The streets would empty whenever Kashpirovsky came on,” journalist Katya Murzina tells me. “I was just a kid, but I remember we all talked about his shows at school. Everyone was convinced he really could heal the nation.

“We had never seen anything like this on TV before,” she goes on. “You have to remember, there were basically no adverts on Soviet TV. Everything was taken at face value. So if state TV presented him as possessing these incredible powers, most people believed it.”

Kashpirovsky’s great rival was Alan Chumak, a white-haired figure for whom the word eccentric could have been invented. During his show, after a brief matter-of-fact introduction, Chumak would silently and slowly, like some Soviet Zen master, move his hands for half-an-hour or so, “charging” with healing energy the jars and saucepans full of water that his millions of viewers had placed around their flats.

“On Fridays Chumak will help viewers to overcome their allergies,” a helpful announcement for one of his shows stated. “People with stomach problems should tune in later.”

The post-Soviet period saw Kashpirovsky’s star fade quickly, as claims that his mass hypnosis sessions had driven hundreds if not thousands of people out of their minds grew stronger. In 1995, after a brief flirtation with politics during which he was elected to the state Duma, Kashpirovsky left Russia for the US, where he reportedly found work treating immigrants from the former USSR.

In his absence the Russians’ centuries-long passion for the occult and the paranormal mushroomed, with all manner of psychics and sorcerers popping up to offer so-called “magical services”.

Behind the facade of today’s Russia is a bizarre place unknown to most westerners, a world where businesspeople turn to urban witches for solutions to their problems and lawyers consult psychics to predict the results of upcoming cases. Although it’s hard to get exact figures, there are an estimated 100,000 professional occultists and psychics in Russia, with the business worth at least $15m in Moscow alone.

But Kashpirovsky’s hold over Soviet society remains, for many people here, something they would rather forget. His manhandling of their psyches has left some uncomfortable memories. Indeed, a recent opinion poll showed that while almost 90% of the Soviet Union watched Kashpirovsky’s healing sessions, only 13% of Russians old enough to have done so will admit to having tuned in.

Nevertheless, despite warnings by health officials over Kashpirovsky’s “record of causing serious harm to the nation”, the man-in-black returned to Russia’s TV screens in late 2009 as the host of a show dedicated to “paranormal investigations”.

And then, this spring, he announced the restart of his mass healing sessions, including his first public appearance in the Russian capital for some two decades. With Russia struggling to emerge from a period of economic downturn and public discontent with the ruling Putin-Medvedev tandem at unprecedented levels, there was something undeniably symbolic about the return of the man whose rise to fame coincided with the collapse of the USSR.

Or was there more than mere coincidence to the timing of Kashpirovsky’s second coming? There are those, among them Kashpirovsky’s one-time professional colleagues in the field of human psychology, who believe that the psychic healer’s comeback is an attempt by the authorities to placate Russian society, to divert attention from falling living standards and rising state brutality. But, if so, this plan may well turn out to be a double-edged sword.

“Kashpirovsky’s reappearance at a critical moment for society is no coincidence,” Boris Yegorov, head of the ethics committee of the all-Russian league of professional psychotherapists, tells me. “But his mass healing sessions are being permitted by people who know nothing about the psychology of the masses. They are counting on being able to calm people down, to remove some of the tension in society. But the authorities have lost touch with reality and are simply encouraging aggression,” he adds. “When the public’s hopes for Kashpirovsky are not justified, they will turn on those in power.”

Kashpirovsky is reluctant to give face-to-face interviews, preferring to communicate via emails. Ahead of his return to Moscow, with the psychic in the middle of an Israeli tour catering to the vast number of immigrants from the former USSR, I fire off a letter giving him a chance to answer his critics.

“These are the ravings of crazy people,” he replies, his fury losing none of its edge over the internet. “There will always be unrighteous critics. Their weapons are lies and slander. Their overwhelming motive is envy and their own inadequacy.”

He never was one for pulling either his figurative or literal punches. I once saw a Russian talk show where he had attacked a fellow guest who was giving him a hard time, scrapping on the floor like an ageing street fighter. For the man who had kicked open the doors to a new, stranger reality for the Soviets, somehow it just didn’t seem becoming.

While modern Russia has changed beyond recognition since Kashpirovsky’s glory days, the country’s passion for the esoteric is stronger than ever. But was the man who started off the whole craze impressed with his successors?

“This was all given a kick-start by my televised operations and programmes. After this, the public split into two parts – one half wanted to treat and the other half to be treated.”

I liked that image: 50% of the nation seeking someone to psychically heal, the other 50% desperate to submit their cancers, growths and warts to extrasensory probing.

“This is coming to its inevitable end though,” he continues. “This is down to the new saviours’ inability to come up with the goods.”

Was this a touch of jealousy? Or envy? Did he miss the days of glory, the years of Soviet-wide fame when his shows could empty streets?

Bizarrely, Kashpirovsky is not the only Russian psychic to have been the subject of political conspiracy theories. In 2005, prospective presidential candidate Grigori Grabovoi (“My first act will be to ban death”) achieved immediate nationwide notoriety when he offered to use his otherworldly powers to resurrect, at a cost of $1,500 a corpse, the children killed in the Beslan terrorist act. An article in the Mikhail Gorbachev-funded opposition Novaya Gazeta paper claimed Grabovoi had been used by the Kremlin to discredit the Mothers of Beslan pressure group and their attempts to uncover the truth behind the attack. If so, the authorities were guilty of abandoning their man – Grabovoi was jailed for 11 years on fraud charges in 2008.

“I doubt if he was as much a danger to Russia as the people who so cruelly punished him,” Kashpirovsky says. “I don’t believe the allegations against him.”

Kashpirovsky declines to comment further. Still, I couldn’t fail but be impressed by this touching show of unity among psychics.

“It is not for nothing Anatoly Kashpirovsky calls his DVDs and photographs his heavy artillery,” an authoritative female voice announces over the concert hall’s sound system as the clock ticks down to the big comeback show.

“They possess a universal and remote healing effect. Even when his stay in your town or city is over, by using his material, it is as if Anatoly is really with you, gazing into your eyes,” she goes on. “Some people place the DVDs under their pillows at night and others, mainly those suffering from heart problems, wear his photo under their shirts.

“At least 16 people were healed of total blindness last year by staring at Kashpirovsky’s photograph,” she concludes, before the pre-recorded message starts over again.

Actually, I’m not sure I got that last part right. Surely I must have misheard? Or does Kashpirovsky have such a low opinion of his followers that he has taken to outright mockery?

In any case, the punters don’t need much persuading to part with their cash. Sales are frantic, with grannies jostling each other for a place in the ever-expanding queue.

“Give me the latest show, the freshest, the best,” a red-faced, overweight pensioner says, thrusting forward a 1,000-rouble (£22) note along with her superlatives.

“That will be the Vladivostok show,” the woman at the stall replies. “We’ve got a good one from Donetsk [eastern Ukraine] as well.”

Next to part with their cash is a middle-aged couple from one of the former Soviet Central Asian republics. They are with their teenage son, who is in a wheelchair, and are clearly counting on him walking home after Kashpirovsky is through. They buy all the discs on offer, plus a large selection of photos.

When the last person has been served, the show finally gets under way, some 30 minutes behind schedule. Straightaway there is a surprise as a pre-recorded up-tempo acoustic rock number featuring vocals by Kashpirovsky himself kicks things off.

“I’m no sorcerer… but I can replace a million doctors,” the psychic growls in an unexpectedly competent, Johnny Cash-style performance –albeit sung in Russian with a strong Ukrainian accent. As the last note fades away, Kashpirovsky makes his entry. The crowd stands up and applauds as if greeting royalty. Our host for the evening, clad in a black jacket and a crisp white shirt, grimaces and gestures impatiently for silence.

“How should I address you?” he ponders, gazing into the crowd. “Spectators, friends… citizens? None of these seem quite right.”

“The sick?” someone suggests, the voice coming from just behind me.

“Computers,” he says, giving no sign that he has heard. “You are computers ripe for programming.”

Around me, people close their eyes and start to trance out – the lecture itself is apparently part of the healing process. It’s not the words that are so important, but rather, as Kashpirovsky puts it, “the movement at a molecular level” that is going on while he litters his talk with enigmatic yet essentially meaningless phrases such as: “Man is far from the stars, yet the stars are even further from man.”

“The most powerful medicine can only be obtained through non-medical means,” he announces. “For example, if we hear the sound of shattering glass, we’re frightened. Is that medicine? No. And when the sun warms your body – is this medicine? No, this is biochemistry… We must awaken the medicine within.

“I don’t need your belief,” Kashpirovsky states, spitting out the words as his monologue finally comes to an end. “Why would I? Does the violinist need the violin to trust in him? Does the sculptor the sculpture? Do I need this piece of paper to believe in me before I crumple it up and throw it away?”

Satisfied he has made his point, Kashpirovsky then invites members of the audience to join him on stage, to submit to his magic touch. The security guards are nearly trampled in the rush. I think about becoming part of the throng, to experience whatever powers Kashpirovsky claims to possess at first hand, but something holds me back. To be honest, I’m still not sure what.

Given the prevalence of pensioners in the audience, there is a remarkably sexually charged atmosphere in the hall, and the trance techno that suddenly starts blasting out of the speakers only adds to the air of abandon. The pounding drums and bass hammer through me and I can only imagine what the music is doing to the rest of the crowd, most of whom will never have experienced such rhythms before. “Hardcore, funky bass,” declares a robotic voice and the keyboards kick in. This is a long way from the Soviet ballads and stirring proletariat anthems the majority of people here grew up on.

The “computers” approach Kashpirovsky one at a time. Some are hesitant, taking tiny steps, while others stride joyously across the stage. Kashpirovsky touches them, stares into their eyes for a second and they slump to the floor.

“But they do not sleep!” he declares, and indeed they do not, one of the woman on stage taking care to adjust her skirt to make sure she doesn’t inadvertently flash her knickers.

I glance over to the boy in the wheelchair. His parents are arguing furiously with a security guard who will not allow them on stage. On the other side of the hall, a woman attempts to lead her blind husband up the steps to Kashpirovsky.

“No, no, no!” the psychic shouts. “He could hurt himself when he falls. Take him away. I will deal with him remotely.”

The woman, distraught, her hopes for the evening dashed, whimpers something in reply, but the music drowns her out. There will be no healing tonight for the lame and the blind.

Before long, the stage is almost covered in fallen bodies. The scene reminds me of nothing so much as a processing line at a slaughterhouse. A few members of the crowd rise from their seats and begin to dance waltzes with unseen partners, ignoring the techno that continues to shake the building.

What must it do to a man’s ego, this ability to stir up hysteria at the flick of a hand? With Kashpirovsky, it appears to have hardened his contempt for the great unwashed masses. It strikes me that his popularity might have something to do with the Russians’ well-known longing for an iron fist, for authoritarian leaders. Just as I start to scribble the thought down in my notebook, the techno subsides, and Kashpirovsky begins to walk among those members of the crowd still in their seats. Instinctively, with the speed of a schoolboy concealing notes passed in class from the teacher, I hide my pen and paper.

Two rows over, a pensioner is sobbing, tears streaming down her face as Kashpirovsky stops in front of her to offer some life advice. Curiously, this consists mainly of: “Go home and eat vegetables for supper tonight,” but we are beyond language, the woman’s face crumpling immediately in a mixture of joy and sorrow, passion and regret.

The next day, the newspapers will round on Kashpirovsky, publishing reports stating that his “odious” performance had led to a number of people seeking medical assistance for psychosomatic illnesses ranging from intense headaches to ulcer pains.

The madness continues. A woman in her twenties, the one who concealed her knickers from the crowd, rises from the stage and glides towards Kashpirovsky. The look on her face reminds me of footage I have seen of the Manson family girls at Charles’s trial. Devoted, blissed out, confused. She stands next to him, waiting for the object of her undivided attention to turn away from the pensioner. Kashpirovsky brushes her aside, barely glancing in her direction as he passes. “That’s not how we do things,” he says.

And then, as if he has had enough of the insanity all around him, as if he has tired of being worshipped, he gives the signal for the fallen to rise. Which they do, a little shaky at first, but with massive smiles on their faces.

“We’ve had a good evening,” Kashpirovsky says. “And we’ve got plenty of DVDs in stock. If you do buy them, don’t forget, never lend them to anyone.”

And with that, he is gone.

The post-show atmosphere reminds me of the scene after the raves I attended in the early 1990s. Saucer-shaped eyes, streams of consciousness, strangers embracing one another. I half expect the loved-up pensioners to head off to a chill-out club.

I take the opportunity of all this comradeship to ask some questions. What I really want to know is as simple as this: were these people sick and, if so, do they now feel better?

“We were in a car crash six months ago,” the overweight woman who wanted the “best” Kashpirovsky DVDs tells me, gesturing at her husband, a skinny fellow dressed all in black. “We suffered internal injuries,” she goes on, an odd hint of pride in her voice.

And now?

“I felt my liver move in there,” she says. “I’m going to get better, I’m sure.”

I refrain from suggesting that the earth-shaking bass might have had something to do with that.

“It’s bad that you are sceptical,” her husband says, reading my expression. “Kashpirovsky is a wonderful man.”

The girl whose undergarments just escaped public scrutiny is holding court a few feet away. “I just felt like I had to get up and go to him,” she says. “He was like a magnet.”

The grannies around her are hanging on her every word.

“Did he make me do that?” she wonders.

“Of course, love,” one of the women whispers. “Everything he makes us do is for our own good.”

I get in my questions.

“No, I’m not suffering from any illness,” she says, not at all put out by my query. “My brother’s schizophrenic though, so I thought I’d go and check out the show. To see if it could help him. I’m so glad I came.”

The next people I talk to, a pair of middle-aged women who have the habit of finishing each other’s sentences, are less enthusiastic.

“We have both been suffering from nasal problems for many years,” the first says, sniffing as she speaks. “I can’t say there has been a distinct improvement,” the other adds. “But we will certainly watch the DVDs,” her friend goes on, “and I’m sure that will do the trick.”

I don’t begrudge Kashpirovsky’s followers their conviction that everything will turn out for the better, that their illnesses and pains will somehow miraculously disappear. This ability to believe passionately, for a short time at least, in the promises of charismatic figures is a very Russian trait.

From the Stalinist shockworkers who laboured in mines to hasten the dawn of communism to the Perestroika-era crowds who supported Yeltsin in his struggle against Kremlin hardliners, the Russians have always been ready to invest everything in the quest for a brighter day. But invariably their hopes have never lasted long, and the line between love and hate is so small here as to be barely discernible.

As I make my way to the exit, I pass the Central Asian couple and their disabled son. The mother is weeping openly, the father’s face red with anger. The boy, a pile of Kashpirovsky products balanced in his hands, looks uncomfortable, bemused by all the commotion, as if he alone doubted all along that he would rise miraculously from his wheelchair.

A couple of pensioners comfort the mother, telling her that she must have faith, that the discs and the photos will eventually work their magic. She looks unconvinced, and her sorrow shows signs of turning to rage. Perhaps the warning that the public’s inevitable disillusionment with Kashpirovsky.

I wonder where the conversation will go next and, simultaneously, where Russia’s eternal passion for the paranormal and the occult will take it. But for now I have had enough and walk out into the Moscow night.

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jun/06/marc-bennetts-anatoly-kashpirovsky-russia-rasputin

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Chinese Astrology and The Tarot Connection

June 4th, 2010 admin No comments

As reported by booshnews.com, there is a strong connection between Chinese Astrology and the tenants of tarot. If you want to go for tarot reading, you have to know what to expect from the reading. Usually people will opt for tarot reading or astrology when they are facing problems in life. They will seek guidance and help from a reader.

A true tarot reader is a person who has extraordinary abilities, which can surprise you. For instance, they can tell accurately about the events which will occur in the future. They may also be able to figure out a person’s problems without being told. At times, they can also predict the death of a person.

It will be better if you can get access to a tarot reader who is willing to predict things in your life without charging a fee. A good tarot reader will be able to pinpoint your problems without being told and should also be willing to give you suggestions how you can resolve these problems. In addition, a good tarot reader has to be honest and truthful. So, a good and reliable tarot reader must have the ability to tell a person the truth. When you are taking any advice from the tarot reader, expect some honest information.

Tarot reading has been in existence from time immemorial. In the past, the readers used to come in the form of prophets. They told the future basing on astrology. Some forecasters or prophets also told about the future directly.

In the Chinese astrology system, there are particular sets of rules that need to be followed. Based on these rules, classifications are done. For example, the year of birth of a person is not only indicative of a person’s age, it also gives details about the phase of time under which the person will be categorized. The phases are again differentiated using the rules and guidelines of Chinese astrology system. The phases depend on the sixty year old cycle.

As per Chinese astrology, the planet system has five planets — Venus representing metal, Mercury representing water, Mars representing fire, Jupiter representing wood, and Saturn representing Earth. So, one can use these planets to decipher a person’s destiny or future.

The 12 zodiac signs of the Chinese astrology are represented by animals. The first zodiac is the rat, followed by ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, ram, monkey, rooster, dog and pig. These signs are also representative of the month, day and hour. So, using a combination of these signs, one can get accurate results.

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Debbie Malone: St Mark’s Ghost Photo Not Real

June 1st, 2010 admin No comments

POLICE medium Debbie Malone has revealed she does not believe ghosts photographed at St Mark’s Anglican cemetery in January were “real”.

Port Macquarie resident Renee English’s photo of two alleged ghost children created international headlines after it was taken during a Picton ghost tour on January 9.

But Mrs Malone said ghost photographs did not generally feature such well-formed figures.

“Photographed spirit energies generally tend to be in the form of an orb or ectoplasm, which looks like a fog,” she said.

“I’ve seen the photos, but I’m very sceptical.”

But Mrs Malone insisted Picton was “crawling” with ghosts, which she believes is due to the town’s age and heritage atmosphere.

“I think a lot of (spirits) from the early days are proud of what they achieved and don’t want to go,” she said.

“There have been a lot of accidents on roads out that way and I think it is like a gateway.”

Mrs Malone recalls one terrifying experience while driving home from a ghost tour on Friday the 13th some years ago.

“I was driving home and two alsation dogs came on to the road and ran in front of the car. I swerved to miss them, but when I stopped, there were no dogs at all,” she said.

“On the bridge further up the road, I saw a man standing on the road and he jumped on the bonnet of my car and came onto the windscreen.”

Mrs Malone is heading to Picton for an all day seminar followed by an evening of ghost tours on Saturday.

Source: http://macarthur-chronicle-wollondilly.whereilive.com.au

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Dating Advice: How To Be Sure?

May 28th, 2010 admin No comments

When you meet a person and he seemed nice, it is but normal for you to wish for a date with that individual. Dating is a way to know another person better. If during the date the two of you clicked, what comes next could be a deeper relationship. But how do you know if he’s really right for you or not? What if you don’t want to go through all the pain again as this person might just hurt you? If you want to know for sure whether the person you’re seeing is Mr. Right, you can request for dating help from an intuitive counselor. Intuitive counselors are experts at dating, love, and relationship, among many others. These professionals can give you dating tips, which you can follow on your first or subsequent dates with somebody. Consulting with these experts is like orchestrating your meetings with your special someone so that they become right the first time – especially if the counselor says he’s your perfect match. How does the counselor know that? Intuitive counselors are clairvoyants who can see your future. If your concern is the person you’re dating, she can tell you outright whether or not he is into you for the long haul. These counselors can feel and see things that might happen in the future. This is how they can help you with your dating, relationship, and marital problems, whichever is applicable.

Dating is a crucial stage. It is a phase wherein both parties put their best foot forward. What you’re looking at may not be the real person behind the mask. For all you know, he’s just luring you with his charming personality to serve purposes of his own. You need not be told that you have to be very careful when choosing someone to love. And if you’re the type of person who wants to go into a relationship if and only if it’s for keeps, then it becomes mandatory that you seek the services of intuitive counselors. They can help you enlighten your mind, make the right decisions, and even transform yourself and your life for the better.

To know when to start a relationship and when to end it is critical. Whenever you are in doubt of your relationship with someone, it is best that you seek relationship help from an expert. If you can’t decide on your own, a person with the capacity and better knowledge of the things that surrounds you should be consulted. This is where intuitive relationship counseling comes in. This is not your ordinary type of love counseling wherein you talk to a psychiatric expert and tell her all your love problems.

It maybe similar but instead of a psychologist, you’re going to talk to a psychic reader. She is a person who can see the elements about you and around you, including all things that could affect you now and in the future. If there’s anybody who can help you most in your love problems, it would be this person. Here, you will talk to the counselor for an hour or so and you’ll be free to ask her questions about anything that concerns you and your relationship with somebody. And if she’s really good, then this isn’t the only topic that you can talk about. You should be able to ask for career and personal advices too, apart from the usual relationship help that you needed.

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World Renowned Psychic Sylvia Browne to be interviewed

May 26th, 2010 admin No comments

World Renowned Psychic Syvlia Browne is to be interviewed on 7th wave radio Tuesday, May 25, 2010 at 9 AM Pacific Time/ Noon Eastern Time.

Hilgers and Browne, will be taking callers from listeners who want to ask questions or get advice from Sylvia. The toll-free call in number is: 1-866-472-5795

On the show, Sylvia Browne will be announcing the release of her new book, PSYCHIC: My Life in Two Worlds (HarperOne; Hardcover; $25.99; ISBN 9780061966729), her intimate no-holds-barred memoir.

Sylvia Browne is the author of twenty-two New York Times bestselling books, including the #1 bestsellers Life on the Other Side and The Other Side and Back. She has been at the forefront of America’s obsession with the supernatural, and was one of the first psychics to share her gift openly with the public. Her visions have offered insights into celebrities, aided police investigations, and changed the lives of thousands of people both through her standing-room only events across the country and her many media and television appearances including one (as herself) on The Young and The Restless. She is recognized around the world for her psychic abilities, and her gifts have been highlighted on The Montel Williams Show, Larry King Live and many other media outlets.

Sylvia and LeAnn will be discussing Sylvia’s journey from her humble beginnings in Missouri through her rise to a world renowned spiritual guide, her first psychic experiences, and for the first time she will open up about the legal troubles, health issues and the painful details behind her three failed marriages before Mr. Right finally, impossibly came along.

“I am so excited about this show!” claims Hilgers, “I am a huge fan of Sylvia’s and have read many of her books over the years.” Hilgers encourages listeners to call in and ask Sylvia a question. “This is your chance to ask Sylvia the question burning in your mind! It is time for us to move forward and create our best future. We can all relate to Sylvia’s very real, down-to-earth advice and then use it to design our best life.”

Hilgers offers life strategies and easy guides for living your dream life. On the Dream Big Revolutionâ„¢ it is our mission to turn this country around, so everyone can be and feel successful! In order to do this, we are bringing you the best of best ““ the most inspirational stories and the most successful people in the world to – help you achieve!

Hilgers is a well-known inspirational speaker, television and radio host who survived a deadly illness to later become a national martial arts champion and strategy professor. The Dream Big Revolution as well as LeAnn Hilgers Motivational Minute can be heard online at: www.7thwavenetwork.com or can be downloaded from: www.LeAnnHilgers.com.

Source: http://bignews.biz/?id=875366&pg=2&keys=sylvia-browne-hilgers-radio

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