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For Ever Young

1000 years ago, in Blythe California, on the rocky desert plateau, artists did forms of drawings-figures-on the ground. It only came to light in 1932, the age of the aero plane and camera, that a plane traveling from Los Angeles to Phoenix along the Colorado River spotted the figures below. The pilot took out his camera, and clicked away. They are known as the Blythe Intaglios. One mountain lion and two human figures are the three main drawings there; one human figure measures 176 feet long, made by the Indian people to honor the Creator. The reason they are so large, is so the Creator could view them better from the sky.

In Seoul, Korea, Gods are believed to be revealed to the faithful through a ritual called The Dance of the Shaman. The actual ritual involves praying, spiritual cleansing, and walking, jumping, and dancing on sharp knives. The chosen people who perform these rituals believe that the Gods will protect them from the sharp blades of these knives, and that the moment they step on them; they will be possessed by these Gods and act as mediators between the Gods and the people on earth. Once this possession takes place, they claim to see visions of the future, and obtain the ability to dispel curses, and drive evil spirits away. It is believed that the person is blessed and obtained approval of these Gods once the dance is completed.

In Texas, and the state of Washington, both claim to have the most accurate replica of the famous Stonehenge. The Washington replica is made out of solid concrete, and has lasted 80 years. The Texas replica is made out of hollow stones made out of cement, over a frame, and has lasted 9 years so far. But the real Stonehenge has lasted far more, and has lost count of the past, and the future looks very much the same.

Frankenstein's castle really exists? Yep! It's located in Darmstat Germany. But the;weird scientist that did all the experiments wasn't a Frankenstein! His name was Konrad Johann Dippel. He moved in the castle in the 17th century, using the corpses from the Frankenstein's cemetery to experiment on! When the towns people started to suspect him of stealing corpses, he turned to trying the experiments on himself, and died drinking one of these formulas.;

Jekell and Hyde was inspired to be written by Robert Lewis Stevenson thanks to a man called William Brodie. Brodie, a man who by day was a respected man of society and Deacon of Edinburgh, at night he hung out in the lowest parts of the town, and murdered many people. They hung him for his doings, but before doing so, he managed to slip a tube in his throat to prevent his neck for snapping. After the hanging, they cut him from the gallows and rushed him to his home where a private doctor tried to revive him. But did William Brodie escape death? When they opened his coffin- his corpse wasn't there. We might never know.

In Southwestern England the 16th century Longleat house stands. A ghost story is told here. Thomas the Second of Viscount married Louisa Carteret. He was as evil as she was sweet. He suspected her of having an affair with a footman and murdered him with the help of two servants, and hid the body. Louisa died not long after, they claimed, of a broken heart. Thomas started to see her ghost, smell her perfume, and watch as things would move on their own-he fled in fear and never returned. People thought it was just a legend even though her ghost was seen countless times by many. Three centuries later, workmen dug up some flag stones and found a corpse dressed in 18th century attire. The legend was proven to be true. They buried him in a graveyard not far from the house, and from the tomb of Thomas. Murderer and victim were together for all eternity. The Gray Lady of Louisa; as she is now called still haunts the house to this very day

Leonardo Da Vinci made many other things besides paintings. Many items of great resemblance to modern things were also made. A canon model was made as well as flying machines resembling a plane, and helicopter, an item that appeared to be a parachute, and a type of car. He is now known as the man who saw the future

On the outskirts of the small town of Gold Hill Oregon, there is a place that has baffled visitors and professional investigators alike. Nestled in the forest is the Oregon Vortex and house of mystery. There is a crooked shack there where gravity and light play inexplicable tricks; A place where mysterious forces seem to warp the very laws of nature. Here in this strange and remote setting, every visitor is an eye witness to these strange phenomena that defies all logic and common sense. Since 1930, visitors the world over, have gone to this area of mystical energy where bottles roll uphill, broomsticks stand by themselves, and people seem to grow and shrink by changing just a couple of steps. The Indians new of this place even before the white people came there. Their horses wouldn't enter the land,; so they avoided it too, they named it ;The Forbidden Land. If photographs are taken in the area, you get mist like forms, and balls of light that appear in the picture. A plane flying overhead also goes through malfunctions in its instruments, suggesting the vortex travels way; the ground, high above the region. There are 7 vortexes in the region, as the Sedona Vortex, that also has long history in Native American law.

In Thailand, the sanctified bodies of monks are preserved in the belief that the purity of their souls in life has assured that their earthly remains are left uncorrupted. These monks are on public display and are objects of veneration and worship. Strangely, these bodies decay very slowly in an atmosphere of smog, humidity, and heat. They still have teeth, hair, and skin decades after their deaths. No special techniques are used to preserve the bodies. &amp;nbsp;In Haiti, the poison found in the glands of the puffer fish; is used in the powder for the making of Zombies. It brings on a state of paralysis that even though the person is alive, they seem dead to any doctor. This fish is eaten in Japan as a very expensive dinner, defying the poison, as they enjoy this tasty treat. In Western North America, the Datura Flower is used by Native Americans to initiate personal, spiritual journeys. This lovely member of the deadly Nightshade family, has hallucinogenic qualities, and is used as part of a religious right of passage by the Indians of the western U.S and Mexico.

Mexico City, certain people still worship the Sun. Four people climb a 150 foot pole, at the top they attach to their ankles a rope and hanging upside down, spin in mid-air as the rope unwinds. Each represents an element -earth, wind, water, fire. If they reach the ground safely, the Gods are pleased by their actions

Beneath the streets of Paris, lie the catacombs of bones. Six million people are buried there; their bones arranged as walls, skulls become figures of crosses, and archways17. Reincarnated as a Racehorse

Henry believed he was going to return in his next life as a racehorse, (no one ever found out where that belief of his came from). He had a beautiful Stable House built, made with marble, iron, and even carvings to decorate its walls for his return as a horse. Today, only the best bred horses are stabled there, and people wonder, if Louie is among them.

A blend of religious traditions and ancient superstitions, every year before Christmas, the people clean house and burn piles of garbage, in an effort to send the Devil back to hell. A very colorful festivity, they also dance in the streets, some people even in costumes, and by burning an effigy of the Devil at the stake, they hope to rid themselves-and their homes, of bad luck and bring prosperity at Christmas and the New Year

&lt;P&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;In the western Indian city of Puney, a special stone attracts lots of attention at a holy shrine where a revered saint lived decades ago. It is said that a demon tamed by the saint is trapped in the stone. Many people flock to the site to experience the power of the saint through the stone. It is said they must raise the heavy stone at least above their shoulders to feel its power. When they drop the stone, they believe the demon within receives a beating

An apparition of the Virgin Mary appeared to a young girl called Bernadette. In 1879, she died at the age of 39, being a nun at the convent Saint Gildard. She was buried in the convents grounds, but in 1909, her body was exhumed to be moved- and they found, even though her body was never embalmed, to be in perfect condition. You can still see her body today in Nevers, in a crystal coffin, her expression that of serenity, still in perfect condition even though she died over 100 years ago

Founder of The American Association of Electronic Phenomena considers herself a modern medium and try to capture the voices of the dead on tape. New tapes are used each time and highly sensitive equipment so not to pick up ambient sounds or radio signals. The ghostly voices recorded are not heard at the time of recording, but when the tape is played back, and in some cases, they are recorded on the reverse side of the tape. The voices are often recorded at places reputed to be haunted&

In 1979, David Booth had a series of recurring nightmares of a plane crashing- and on May 25, 1979, his premonitions came true. A DC-10 took off from Chicago's O'Hare Airport, flew a half-mile, then turned on its side and slammed into the ground, exploding on impact. The 272 people on board died. Booth's dreams started on May 16th, and after they had continued for seven nights, having seen in those dreams the name of the airline; he went and told people in authority at the airport. They made notes of what he'd told them, but claimed they couldn't just ground a whole airline, so the planes went on as usual- and David Booth's nightmares came

Afraid you're going to be whisked into outer space by those weird craft hovering above your home? Good fellows' insurance company of London, England has a policy that may set your mind at ease. For about $150, the firm will insure you for $1.5 million against alien abduction. A slightly higher premium buys coverage against being impregnated by outer space beings. A spokesman for Good fellows says the policy is owned by about 40,000 people--who must provide visual evidence and pass a lie detector test to collect on a claim

Officials are reporting the discovery of crop circles in remote southern Russia--in the same fields where they were found years ago! Five large concentric circles of wheat were flattened, although the heads of the wheat were not damaged. This means the UFO aliens returned for additional soil samples, not food, according to a spokesperson for the Emergency Situations Department, a government agency

Soul day was instituted by St. Odilo of Cluny in the 10th century as a festival for prayer releasing souls from Purgatory. According to legend, Odilo was persuaded by a pilgrimreturning from the Holy Land that on a particular island the plaintive moans of souls in Purgatory could be heard. Folk traditions observed during this period include the decorating of gravestones and the leaving out of food for hungry returning spirits. The feast is celebrated on November, and is closely associated with the potent magic of Halloween

Russian psychic Djuna Davitashvili has accurately looked into the future in a startling scientific experiment. In the test, a computer was supposed to randomly select a San Francisco landmark. But six hours before it made the selection, Djuna described the landmark the computer later chose. What's more, she gave an incredibly detailed description of the site though she was 6,000 miles away in Moscow at the time

German police have detained a Berlin woman who screamed she was a vampire and thirsty as she attempted to bite people. &amp;nbsp;She tried to bite the necks of three people within a few minutes, The 21-year-old woman, identified only as Laura E., was put under psychiatric observation where she also tried to bite her fingers off. She first tried to bite the neck of a 20-year-old woman at a doctor's surgery; however the victim managed to escape. Shethen went into a fast-food restaurant and bit the neck of a 40-year-old waiter. Police said she then ran out onto the street where she first cut the neck of an 88-year-old pensioner with a piece of broken glass, then bit the elderly woman's ear. Two police officers called to the scene managed to detain her, but she repeatedly bit their hands.

If you're a regular lover of the paranormal, you know that witchcraft flourishes in many parts of rural Africa, much to the chagrin of government authorities, who see it as a threat to their iron grip over the populace. The most recent battle between authoritarian rule and occult belief took place in northeastern Congo, with horrifying results. The Ugandan army, which controls the region, slaughtered 800 defenseless villagers accused of practicing witchcraft. The remote area has few roads, no phone lines or electricity

The London home of classical composer George Frideric Handel is haunted. And the charitable trust that currently owns it is taking no chances. A Roman Catholic priest is being employed to perform an exorcism in the bedroom where Handel died in 1759. A tall, dark shape and a strong smell of perfume have been reported by many who have entered Handel's bedroom. Officials want to clear the house of all spirits before it becomes a museum that will be open to the public in November 2001

A German firm has started selling a liqueur called Dracula--and it has a self-proclaimed descendent of the real Count Dracula furious. Ottomar Rodolphe Vlad Prince Kretzulesco (whew!) has already tried to stop distribution of the powerful liqueur, which has a whopping 24 percent alcohol content. But a Munich court ruled in favor of the manufacturer, which claims that the name refers to the fictional Dracula

In Roman mythology, they're about the same thing. The Romans believed that larvae were the souls of deceased persons that were unceasingly restless because of crimes or violence they committed while alive on earth. Thus, the image of them looks as worm-like creatures that squirm in eternal torment. It was said that larvae could infest the living and cause them to descend into madness--similar to the current-day concept of spirit possession

In a classic display of mind over matter, a British medium levitated a heavy table high in the air--then shattered it into pieces using the power of her mind alone. During a 1923 s&amp;eacute;ance, Stella Cranshaw levitated a table above the heads of her fellow sitters. Suddenly, two legs of the table broke away with a booming noise. Then the tabletop began to splinter. In moments, the entire table was reduced to little more than matchwood

The Doukhobors are a group of Russian language-speaking religious dissenters who migrated to Canada in 1899. Today there are between 30,000 and 40,000 Doukhobors in Canada, and another 30,000 in Russia. They had been persecuted in tsarist Russia for their religious beliefs, which included the conviction that pacifism and non-compliance with militarism is essential to Christian practice because the law of God is greater than the laws of a secular state. These convictions culminated in the 1895 Burning of Arms in Russia, when Doukhobors destroyed their weapons and refused, despite Tsarist persecutions, to serve in the Russian army. This protest might have been the first organized pacifist group protest in modern history. &amp;nbsp;The Doukhobors practice a form of Christianity and believe that Jesus Christ is a spiritually advanced teacher and example to others. They also believe that people are capable of divine reason and can spiritually develop without the help of intermediaries. For them, therefore, there is no need for priests, religious ceremonies, spiritual symbols or temples of worship, although there have been leaders among the Doukhobors who have exercised considerable authority. The only symbols Doukhobors commonly recognize are those of bread, salt and water, the basic elements needed to sustain life. These are on a table at all Doukhobor meetings and important events. The Doukhobors participate in communal living and, like the Mennonite, Quaker and Hutterite groups, in the practices of pacificism, hard work and simplicity in all things. Unlike the above mentioned groups, the Doukhobors also practice nudism, which is possibly the foremost reason that the sect has tended to settle in remote areas, and shun other elements of society. As late as the 1970's, the sect participated in nude parades, which, to say the least, drew considerable interest from the press. &amp;nbsp;Their contention is that nudity is the natural state of man, and that, combined with hard work and comlete pacificism are the keys to a long and healthy life. One of their slogans, coined by one of their leaders, Peter V. Verigin, summarizes this belief as Toil and Peaceful Life. &amp;nbsp;Instead of dependence on a written book such as the Bible, the Doukhobors sing a capella psalms, spiritual songs and hymns in Russian at their prayer meetings and gatherings. These are sometimes based on the psalms of the Old Testament, but others were composed by Doukhobors from the eighteenth century onward. Other psalms and hymns are about Doukhobor history and beliefs. Together, these psalms, hymns and spiritual songs are called Zhivotnaya Kniga; or in English, The Living Book. Because many of their members originally only recognized the authority of God before recognizing the authority of the secular state, the Doukhobors did not always experience peaceful life, although as peasants and migrants they certainly knew about toil. Tsarist governments in Russia kept Doukhobors on the move for more than a century to the furthest reaches of the Russian empire, and the persecution that Doukhobors endured in Russia just before migrating to Canada was severe. In Canada, a series of difficulties led to conflict with Canadian authorities who twice left Doukhobors without the land they worked hard to develop: once in Saskatchewan, and once in the Kootenay region of British Columbia.

One of the earliest forms of medical care is known as laying-on-of-hands. This is a form of spiritual healing in which the practitioner places her/his hands on the body of the patient, acting as an intermediary for a divine healing force. In this way, the healer channels divine power to the diseased or injured person restoring the individual to health and a sense of well-being. Although the practice began in ancient times, it continues to be a popular healing technique to this day.

A new Dutch study proves the existence of the human soul, according to researchers. Doctors interviewed 344 heart attack survivors and found that ten percent of them experienced emotions, visions or lucid thoughts when they were clinically dead. Additionally, some had out-of-body experiences while deceased, cited as proof that the soul has a life independent of the physical body.

Who placed twenty-one carefully arranged massive stones atop Burnt Hill near Heath, Massachusetts? No one knows the answer to the question that has puzzled area residents for centuries -- including famed horror author H.P. Lovecraft. &amp;nbsp;Authorities say the arrangement of the stones doesn't match the work of the Native Americans who were known to roam this part of the country. Nevertheless, some sort of intelligent beings put the 300- to 500-pound stones in place, because they point to nearby mountains, aligned with the solstice sunrise and lunar movements

There are 270 tunnels beneath Los Angeles, arranged in a network. &amp;nbsp;Since they have, for the most part, been sealed up with fences, they are no longer used for street-crossings. &amp;nbsp;There are older tunnels, under Bel-Air estate, UCLA, and El Pueblo de Los Angeles State Historic Park not far from Olvera Street. The latter tunnel is alleged to have hid many during the 1871 massacre of Chinese, recounts Cecilia Rasmussen in one of her article. Hopi Indian legend reports a sub-surface maze existing almost 5,000 years ago. G. Warren Shufelt, a mining engineer, went in search of it during 1934. That year, using a dowsing rod he called a radio X- ray, he claimed to have secretly discovered caves beneath downtown L.A. &amp;nbsp;He claimed to have consulted Little Chief Greenleaf, a Hopi leader, and was told about the Lizard People, who lived circa 3,000 B.C. before the destruction of their culture by meteors or a fire, they were said to have created three underground cities around the Pacific Coast, including one under Los Angeles and another beneath Mt. Shasta. &amp;nbsp;The Lizard people reportedly made the caves housing thousands by using chemicals to melt bedrock. According to the Hopi legend, the city was in a lizard's shape, and extended from Dodger Stadium to the Central Library Whether the Lizard People were reptiles or humans, no one knows. &amp;nbsp;However Apodaca, of Chapman University, said that this account of Hopi history was exaggerated and corrupted (Hopis did have a social division called the lizard clan) But then in March 29, 1996, Los Angeles' Central Library notes that, the Lizard People owned golden tablets which delineated the story of the world since its beginning, the Lizard People's history, and even the origin of humanity

It may sound like something from a science fiction movie, but the second largest form of life known to exist is growing in a forest in the Upper Peninsula. &amp;nbsp;In the early 1990's scientists discovered a giant fungus with an inter weave of mushrooms and tentacles growing near Crystal Falls, Michigan. The fungus was spawned by a single spore and covers an area of thirty eight acres. Researchers estimate that the fungus is at least 1500 years old and is one of the largest and oldest living things on Earth. The Fungus feeds on dead tree roots and grows underground. The only visible part of the gigantic fungus is the individual mushrooms which shoot to the surface each fall. The fungus is estimated to be growing at a rate of eight inches a year. When the giant fungus was first discovered, it was labeled the largest living thing and received national attention.

Ancient writings, carved into earth, called petroglyphs, may be observed in Michigan. They were discovered in the 1880's when a forest fire burned away brush and grass along the banks of the Cass River in the thumb area of Michigan. &amp;nbsp;After the forest fire, more then 100 figures of birds, animals, spirals, crosses, and waves were exposed. The most notable figure is a deeply carved figure of a warrior with his feet apart and his bow drawn. The purpose of the carvings is unknown. It is speculated that the patterns may have been made by medicine men or by an ancient people attempting to express themselves with art. There is now a 240 acre park at the site. A Pavilion protects the most expressive of the designs. Those seeking more information should contact the department of Natural Resources-parks Division in Lansing.

In the Monroe County hills of rural Indiana, a strange new animal has been spotted by local residents. The creature is two-legged and extremely hairy, says Rick Deckard, who discovered unusual footprints on the ground near his property. Deckard is certain that the prints are not human, and other locals share Deckard's belief. In fact, community members are now sharing information on sightings and other signs of the mystery beast&

In 1986, astronomer J. Allen Hynek died on April 27th. He was the Air Force's chief scientific consultant on UFO matters for twenty years departing from Project Blue Book's skeptical stance in the mid-1960. &amp;nbsp;In 1972, he wrote a book called The UFO Experience where in he predicted that UFO's may represent a potential; quantum jump in science. The following year, he co-founded the center for UFO Studies. What is he most famous for? Coining the phrase, encounters of the third kind. On April 30, 1897, according to the Indianapolis Sentinel two farmers near Sailor, Indiana came upon a strange animal that resembles a man. &amp;nbsp;When the creature saw the two men, it fled dropping from two legs to four as it disappeared into the woods. &amp;nbsp;It is said that for at least two years, other people had been reporting same creature - an apelike, forest-dwelling, hirsute biped

Two years ago this month, {April 2002}, a family in West Midlands, England called in a priest for an exorcism. &amp;nbsp;It seems they kept hearing eerie wails and scratches from the walls, but the exorcism failed to stop the poltergeist from making a racket. The noises only stopped when a neighbor discovered and freed their cause: A cat trapped on a chimney

Beginning in 1985, a number of adults and children in rural Argentina claimed to have seen a little black man. He is said to be two and a half feet tall, hairy, and having big eyes and long teeth. The creature once tried to kidnap a five-year-old. This type of story takes inspiration from South American folklore about aggressive fairies who are sometimes called Negroes-of-the-Water, who were believed to dwell in rivers and lakes

If you ever meet a fairy, don't be surprised if he or she pays you no mind. Janet Bord wrote the following in her book: Fairies; Real Encounters with Little People. In most encounters with the Little People, the witnesses only see the creatures for a short time, and rarely have any interaction with them. A fairy might acknowledge the presence of the human being by looking directly at, or even smiling at, him or her, but otherwise usually ignores the surprised onlooker

Do They Exist? - Even though credible witnesses often report them, science does not recognize the existence of black panthers, just before sunset one 1963 evening, Illinois farmer Bill Chambers watched an animal through his binoculars for nearly 15 minutes, and the animal appeared to be a black panther. It was large four and a half feet long and fifteen inches tall at the shoulder, and jet black except for two tawny streaks under the jaw. Since sightings of these creatures are so persistent, yet science says they don't exist, it remains a mystery of American wildlife

In Cupar, Scotland in June of 1842, the London Times reported a peculiar event: Women who were hanging clothing on clotheslines in an open area were said to have heard a sudden detonation, and the clothes shot upward. Eventually, some of the clothing did fall back to the ground, but others kept ascending until they disappeared. Even odder, the clothes were carried off to the north, but chimney smoke in that area indicated that the wind was moving to the south&

In 1899, a storm raged in New Richmond, during the storm, a woman there witnessed a bizarre sight; a kangaroo hopping through her neighbor's yard. This is the first known American kangaroo. During the next hundred years, many more were sighted, but few were ever explained. To paraphrase an old American folk son; where they come from, and where do they go

During a sudden rainstorm near Boring, Oregon, in 1911, a women walking got more than she bargained for. The storm drenched the woman, but with more than just water, with salamanders. She felt what seemed to be large objects hitting her head and shoulders, and when she looked up, she saw hundreds of the critters falling from the sky, literally covering the ground and wriggling and crawling all over

Elaine Sheridan was preparing to feed her three dogs from a tin of dog food she received a big surprise. A live toad jumped out of the tin and across her kitchen floor. One would think the two-inch amphibian would have croaked, literally, after being trapped in a tin from France for three months. But according to Dr. Roger Meek, he believes the toad could have survived by shutting down its metabolism. The Sheridans are keeping the lucky toad as a pet and have named it Buddy after the toads from the Budweiser commercials

A massive ghost hunt organized by Dr. Richard Wiseman of Hertfordshire University in Great Britain has earned a place in the Guinness Book of World Records. The search for spirits took place in April 2001 in subterranean vaults beneath the streets of Edinburgh, Scotland. Approximately 250 people and dozens of high-tech sensors were employed in the probe of the underground space, which stretched for blocks. Despite the record-breaking effort, not a ghost was sighted nor a clanking chain heard

In Dallas in 1958, fish poured down from a seemingly empty sky. The fish were three to four inches long and dark grey, with gold specks and red tails. There were no other kids of fish or freshwater creatures with them, rendering unlikely the local weather bureau's speculation that a tornado had picked up the contents of a river or lake and dropped them on Dallas;

From the 1870's on, Englishman Alfred Smith spent a good deal of time in the African interior.; In a memoir entitled, Trader Horn, he referred to two unknown animals (or maybe one that had two names):The 'Jago-Nini' they say is still in the swamps and rivers...Same as the 'Amali' I've always taken it to be; I've seen the 'Amali's' footprints...About the size of a good frying pan in circumference and three claws instead of five

In the 1970's, American herpetologist James Powell was conducting field research in Gabon. He obtained confirmation of Alfred Smith's account of the mysterious Amali. When he showed pictures of various animals to native informants, they invariably compared the Amali, or N'yamala, to the diplodocus, a long-necked sauropod dinosaur

About one in every 25,000 people has synesthesia, which also may enable them to see numbers and spoken words in color, and flavors as shapes. Experts theorize that synesthesia is caused by a bleeding between the parts of the brain that process color, language and speech

Beginning in the nineteenth century, all the way through 1932, an odd creature was often reported to have been seen in Australia. The bunyip was semi-aquatic, much larger than a retriever but with no tail, having long, black hair. It had a horse-like head and long ears, but was never captured, identified, or catalogued. Today, bunyip refers to any imaginary animal that inspires laughter or fear.

When word of the creature first reached Europe in 1797, everyone though the little guy was a fake. Even when stuffed specimens arrived, people suspected that parts of different animals were all glued together, and naturally, when they heard that it was an egg-laying mammal, they thought for sure it was a hoax. The only way people finally overcame their disbelief is then scientists performed on-site observations of the animal in its natural habitat

In a 1961 issue of Australian Saucer Record, an anonymous contributor wrote claimed a personal visit to a saucer base in Antarctica, located within a 140,000 square mile oasis beyond the South Pole...Yes, I saw fabulous cities of an unknown, advanced civilization whose ancestors belonged to the race that inhabited...Atlantis and Lemuria

If you believe that all occurrences in life are preordained, then you are considered a fatalist by the spiritual community. According to the theory of fatalism, it's not you but a supernatural power that predetermines your entire existence on earth, including events both large and small. Such supernatural powers include: God, your horoscope, numerological symbolism, and so on. Fatalists insist that destiny is foretold, and you are powerless to bring about any changes in your life

When someone close to you dies, it's not uncommon to see a ghostly, luminous form of the person soon after. This is the individual's astral body, which incorporates his or her life force, say parapsychologists. According to the experts, apparitions are simply a form of astral communication between the newly dead and those important people they've left behind. Ultimately, the astral body finds a new level of existence on the astral plane and no longer appears in ghostly form

Surprising as it may seem, the number two is associated with a host of negative meanings in the paranormal sphere. For example, the number represents lack of harmony and division as well as separation from God. For that reason, many numerologists believe the number two is inherently evil. In addition, the number has connections to such unattractive personality traits as following rather than leading, uncertainty, and hesitation

People in Cantillana, Spain on May 4, 1910, heard explosive sounds and watched stones shoot upward from a spot on the ground. This occurred between 10:00a.m and noon that day. The London Daily Mail reported that traces of an extinct volcano are visible at this spot, and it is believed that a new crater was being formed. Well, they were wrong. No crater ever appeared, and the two-hour shower was the whole extent of the volcanic activity...if that's what it

In June of 1962, in northeastern Indiana an animal described as an African lioness was seen prowling around, certainly out of its natural habitat. IF it were an African lioness, that is! The creature attacked and clawed the face of one farmer, and only fled after the farmer fired a gun at it. Later the same month, he and other hunters lay in wait for the creature with rifles; however, two jittery television reporters opened fire before the creature was within range, and it escaped

Most of you probably remember hearing about New World explorer Henry Hudson. Most of you probably DON'T remember ever reading what he wrote in his journal on June 15, 1610: this evening one of our company, looking overboard, saw a mermaid, and, calling up some of the company to see her, one more of the crew came up, and by that time she was come close to the ship's side, looking earnestly on the men. A little after a wave came and overturned the mermaid sending her back to the abyss

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The Fantasy Pages

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