science
The Science Behind Relationships; Humans Media explores the basis of our attraction, contempt, why we do what we do and to whom we do it.
Did you eat too much sugar?
I was young. Maybe ten years old, and I’d been Type 1 Diabetic for most of my life. I’d educated adults on what insulin was, how it worked and how I had to take it and test my blood sugars on a regular basis to determine how much insulin I needed. But it was the first time someone had asked me this question, and put my disease on my shoulders.
By Amanda Rabski McColl5 years ago in Humans
Magical powers?
Did you know that the human mind possesses a supernatural ability? Along with the metaphysical gifts of the human mind, there is a scientific skill that can be learned by anyone, called remote viewing. Remote viewing was first introduced by the Russians. Of course, being America, we didn't walk up to them to ask how they performed this feat, we sort of snipped it. In doing so, the US military gathered a group of researchers at Stanford University, to conduct an eighty yearlong experiment, on if remote viewing was a legit skill or not. The results were so astonishing, they opened up a division within the military branch, of professionally trained remote viewers. They called it, project stargate. So what is remote viewing you ask? In short, its the ability to bilocate using the mind. Sounds trippy right? but how does it work? Turns out , this isn't a metaphysical or spiritual skill at all, rather a scientific one. Its about energy and consciousness. It is proposed that the subconscious mind is omniscient. Scientists across the world are slowly discovering more evidence of this fact. What does that have to do with bilocating? Well, if it is true that the subconscious is everywhere, then remote viewing is the skill that teaches you how to access this "everywhere." This skill requires two main assumptions to be made first. One: The universe is a giant 'pan-brain' with connecting signals to every thing, thought, event, and timeline. (almost hinting that reality itself is not as physical as it may seem) and two: Energy carries data and information through out our atmosphere in the form of light, and delivers it to like-minded energies. For your average, everyday human, that's decoded in the eyes and other physical senses, but to a trained remote viewer, more data can be detected and decoded in a sixth sense. Everything visual in our physical reality, is made up of light frequencies and dense energy. The human eye can only perceive about one percent of the total light available. So where are the rest of the frequencies? Well, they are undetectable to you...for now, but tuning into the right frequency , you can access your omniscient mind, essentially, unlocking physic abilities. Now to the good stuff, how do we do this? While meditation can definitely give some individuals an advantage, this isn't a requirement. All it takes is the ability to turn down your conscious mind, which screams out fallible information, draws conclusions and is clouded with imagination (we can thank our biology for that) and instead tune into your subconscious mind, which is softer, connective and picks up on micro frequencies you've called to you; frequencies that are all around you. Calling these frequencies is sort of like setting an intention and allowing the subconscious to direct its awareness there. For example, lets say you wish to know what the inside of a engine is like. You'd create a quiet space in your home, set up a que in the form of writing , and assign it two sets of random numbers. Numbers are the language of the universe and these numbers would act as an 'address' within your personal vernacular. Sort of a symbolic link for your consciousness to connect to. That's setting the intention. Then clear your mind and let go of what you THINK it looks like, and allow yourself to perceive the energies coming into you. Next, you record the numbers on a piece of paper and allow your autonomic nervous system to produce what is called an ideogram. An ideogram is your body's automatic response to unconscious signals. Its just a squiggle your hand create. Don't focus on it to much and don't try to hard, just allow your hand to produce the squiggle. The ideogram represents a gestalt of information in line form. The information you're receiving, must to go through your physical and mental filters, as it travels from your subconscious to conscious mind. As a result, the signal may show up as symbols, words, senses etc. Your job is to decode what those symbols mean at the end of the session. During the session how ever, you're on autopilot, allowing your hand to just move. You will get intuitive pulls towards certain senses like tastes, temperatures and sounds. Record them AS they come in. Your mind is searching for information related to the signal its receiving. If you think about it to much, imagination will overtake the session and ruin the signal line. After the basic senses are recorded, allow you hand to simply draw archetypes. Don't try to make sense of it, don't try to make it look pretty, and don't get to complicated with the details, in the first few stages. You're simply detecting energies in their simplest form and sketching their archetypical expression. There will come a stage for more detailed and analytical sketches. For now, let go of what you think and let your autonomic nervous system Draw the target in bits and pieces. You'd do this a few times, until you have multiple doodles. At the end, you'd fit the drawings together like a puzzle and you'll be shocked how these random doodles you drew, came together to create a full singular picture. A picture that shows what the inside of an engine looks like. Sounds neat right? This will not work with limiting beliefs, an over active or stubborn mind. It requires you to clear your mind and remain "uncertain" until the end. No judgement, conclusions or guessing until the end. This is where the "skill" part comes in, because naturally, the mind will attempt to guess, fill in the blanks, introduce imagination and jump into conclusions prematurely, which you'll quickly learn, will lead you astray in this field. Learning remote viewing has taught me how to control my thoughts and emotions. It also teaches you how the mind really does wonder off in fallible ways constantly, without you really noticing...that is, until you're trying to learn how to get out of your own head. Remote viewing is a science. It works by picking up on signals in the atmosphere, and giving you small snippets of those signals in pieces, like finding a piece of a puzzle. It is not mind reading, seeing the future or hocus pocus. It is initiating the conversation between your conscious mind , which is here and now, and your subconscious mind ,which is everywhere, within all times. In the late 90s, the secret got out about the US military using physic spies and they declassified that -QUOTE: “We have tested the value remote viewing in the past, but no has ended our research with no evidence of this skill being useful to us.” UNQUOTE. However, despite that LIE, many ex military officers have come forward to spill the tea and they offer classes on this subject and how to build this ability. You can find hundreds of classes around the world, by respected military officers, revealing their secrete and teaching classes. It sounds crazy when you think about it, and feels illegal to know haha, but its actually a real skill and a legit community of professional and respected people, dedicated to educating interested learners. That's what makes this so cool, because a lot of people don't know this. I’ve taken one of these classes myself for the past four years, and if I've learned anything at all, it is this: 1: There is far more to the physical world than what we physically perceive. 2: The human mind is vastly connected to advanced frequencies and concepts, in which our primitive minds cannot, yet comprehend. And three, its becoming a loosely kept secrete, as more people find out their true magical powers.
By Dwayne White5 years ago in Humans
Heart Strings: As Understood by a Prosector and Romantic
I will never forget the first time I held a human heart. Although it was stiff and strangely plastic due to the embalming process, it was unmistakably fragile. The heart protected within the cage of my own ribs was divided: it both fluttered with curiosity and ached with the gravity of mortality. I imagined the moments this heart had pumped through; the immense human suffering, unbridled joy of being alive and the fleeting moments of happiness before it stopped forever. I lost track of my own heartbeat.
By Emma Bradley-Island5 years ago in Humans
Why continual headaches might reveal you have Coeliac Disease
The chances are that right up to the 2000’s you will not have heard of Coeliac Disease. While more and more people are now diagnosed with the condition its not a new illness, its always been here but relatively recent scientific revelations mean that a Coeliac diagnosis can mean the difference between life and death.
By Spencer Hawken5 years ago in Humans
Pebbles and Stardust
They'd call me the Pebbles crazy fool. But there ain't no madness about me. I just spend time collecting rocks. Not regular ones. Only special ones. Smaller stones, medium-sized ones, or big heavy rocks, as long as they look special or different to me. I've been doing it for years now and spent maybe a little too much time around it to look like the normal guy.
By Jacinthe Lafrance5 years ago in Humans
A notebook at the end of the universe
There is a notebook at the end of the universe. Its pages are pristine, its cover the deepest black, leather never cracked or faded. It sits in perfect orbit around a nearby black hole, and watches the event horizon the way a rabbit watches a nearby fox - wary, scared, and resigned to the fact that it could never move fast enough to escape.
By Clare Molloy5 years ago in Humans
Promise
The gentleman gave off an unnatural feeling. He stood a little too close, his clothes were slightly too big for his frame and his glasses were strange in their proportions. The lenses only just bigger than the eyes, the wiring rigid and straight, bent in the centre to help perch on his small ratty nose.
By Harry Smith5 years ago in Humans
Last Call
Harry pushed through the heavy wooden door and shuffled into Hair of the Dog, his favorite dive. Dragging his feet across the chipped linoleum floor, he collapsed into one of the worn fake leather stools at the end of the bar. Harry took a deep breath. The faint smell of cigarettes and stale beer clung to the air, and the din of country music and pool balls cracking filled his ears, but they were a welcome distraction from his thoughts.
By Nicole Werner5 years ago in Humans
Ah, That's Some Robust Theory You've got there!
Science communication is broken. And I don't just mean when scientists are communicating to the average person. Scientific papers are riddled with poor terminology that illustrate a severe lack of understanding of the mechanisms that underlie scientific inquiry.
By Daniel Goldman5 years ago in Humans
My Mutated Eye
You have a half hazel and half blue eye? What could that mean? Gasp! It's heterochromia! When I was younger, about 8 or so, I went to a music concert my sister was performing at with my parents. As we were standing out in the lobby, the dazzling (yet oh so bright) chandeliers made it very easy for my parents to notice and point out my multi-colored left eye. This was something I shrugged off because at that age, I really didn't care about much besides cartoons and pizza. That is, until the color change became more drastic. At first it had started out as a tiny sliver of brown, and then over the next couple years it gradually changed to where exactly one half was hazel, the other half remaining blue.
By Grace Linn5 years ago in Humans






