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Originally posted by Annee
Originally posted by stereologist
reply to post by buddhasystem
What about harvesting a small lightning bolt, i.e. a spark. That has been done for centuries with a Leyden jar.
Without a conductor?
Originally posted by ManBehindTheMask
"Billy wont sit still in class, has issues listening to teachers, and doesnt follow directions" "aww no its ok hes an indigo child" ...........no your parents spared the rod and spoiled the child , and showed him no sense of direction and authority growing up..........now hes a brat with an attitude.........
hes not an indigo child, its poor parenting..........
Originally posted by stereologist
reply to post by Annee
More than you have I bet.
Originally posted by stereologist
reply to post by Annee
It is possible without a conductor.
There is proof in Aura photography of blue indigo Auras.
The next burst of interest happened with Semyon Davidovich Kirlian, an electrical technician in Krasnodar in Russia. In 1939, he noticed that if he touched high-voltage electronics in a darkened environment, a fuzzy, coloured glow extended around his body.
So what does Kirlian photography really show? Is it the human "bioplasma energy field" or our "life energy"? Nope, it's plain old water.
The high-voltage high-frequency electricity has enough energy to rip the electrons off atoms. So the air around the object becomes ionized, and if the air contains any water, you get this lovely glow. The scientists call this glow a "corona plasma discharge" - but you can also think of it as "slow lightning". Luckily for the photographers, people in an excited state sweat more. The sweat turns into water vapour, which carries the high-voltage high-frequency electricity more easily through the air.
Originally posted by ZombieJesus
reply to post by Annee
There is proof in Aura photography of blue indigo Auras.
Not so sure about that. You may want to have a read . . .
ignore domo1 listen to your self your inner self meditate
Originally posted by ZombieJesus
reply to post by Annee
Nice cop out, short and sweet
Now do you have an actual rebuttal to why the science is wrong?
Or is it because all the other people on the internet that you agree with?
Originally posted by Domo1
reply to post by Annee
Someone doesn't need to be a parent to recognize bad parenting. I don't have to own a cat to realize someone isn't maintaining theirs. Also, I like this picture and wanted to use it again!
Originally posted by Domo1
reply to post by maryhinge
ignore domo1 listen to your self your inner self meditate
And when you do this you will realize that this Indigo thing is utter nonsense. It's just exploiting the naive and ignorant. It's sad to watch people get taken advantage of.
Originally posted by Domo1
reply to post by Annee
I don't want to have kids until I'm 30ish. At 26 I feel like I want to experience some more things before I get tied down.
Originally posted by stereologist
reply to post by Annee
The Leyden jar is a capacitor. The charge is held between 2 conductors.
A good example of a charge stored in a nonconductor is a balloon rubbed in hair or on a sweater and then attached to a wall or ceiling. It will stay there for a while especially in dry weather.
Charge stored on a nonconductor is more likely to dissipate slowly.
In today's world - - money is behind everything. If you do an experiment - - someone is paying you to do it. And they expect the results they are paying for.
Its sad when people close doors to possibilities.