Tuesday, April 3, 2018

You might want to consider talking to your salad from now on


Your plants, pets, and even your food read your mind at all times! The proof of that is described in detail in Cleve Backster's book Primary Perception . Cleve Backster began by attaching a polygraph to a dracaena plant, just for kicks and giggles.
Cleve Backster was a polygraph expert. In a polygraph a tiny bit of electricity is passed through the electrodes, which are attached to each of the two fingers of a person. The polygraph measures changes in blood pressure, pulse, and respiration. So Cleve hooked up the electrodes to the leaves of the plant, and then he thought - what if I were to get a match and burn one of the leaves. The plant was 15 feet away when he thought that, but at the moment of him thinking it, the polygraph pen jerked up sharply – the plant was clearly terrified!
Another exciting thing Cleve found, that if the plant’s caretaker left the building and at some point decided to return, the polygraph recorded a reaction at the moment. The plant seemed to remain tuned in to its person, no matter how far he went. Then Cleve noticed that the plant was also reacting to other life forms nearby! When Cleve made tea and poured boiling water down the sink the plant yelped. Cleve scraped some grime from the sink drain and took a look under the microscope – sure enough, there was a jungle of life in there. Then he noticed that when someone flushed a toilet which was located on the other side of the lab wall, the plant reacted. Apparently, the janitor used a super strong disinfectant in the toilets, which killed the whatever living cells were in the waste, so it upset the plant. The plant was equally very upset when Cleve killed some brine shrimp (fish food), and when Cleve cracked an egg. Cleve decided to try to get a reading directly from an egg by attaching the electrodes to the egg. He observed weird pulse-like beats on the chart, which were consistent with the pulse rate of a chicken embryo. The strange thing about it was that the egg was non-fertile - it was just a regular food egg from a grocery store. The egg’s reaction was off the chart when Cleve put two other eggs in the boiling water to make himself breakfast – the egg was upset by having its carton pals cooked!
Cleve recalled that yogurt has live bacteria in it, so took a bit of yogurt and attached electrodes to that. The yogurt reacted to some chicken being cut and cooked, it had a very big reaction to himself stirring some yogurt into vodka. And when he took some yogurt from the same source and put it into a dish with antibiotic, there was a really huge reaction.
 The next step was to try human cells. He took some white cells from the mouth and connected the sample to the electrodes, which he connected to an EEG type machine. Next Cleve thought about trying to cut his hand, and his mouth cells in the dish reacted to that thought. Then he took some cells from a mouth of his friend, gave him a Playboy magazine and observed the cells’ reaction – the lines were bouncing up and down all the way to the top and bottom of the screen. When the magazine was taken away from his friend, the bouncing stopped. Cleve tried taking mouth cells from other people, and they showed reaction every time the donor was emotional about something, such as a conversation with a family member or watching a war movie.
The implications are many. Perhaps people who thank God for their dinners are getting better nutrition? Maybe, even better, would be to thank the food directly, especially yogurt and salads. Child molesters could be monitored by having some of their live cells sitting in the lab with electrodes attached – the reaction of the cells could show the intention of committing a crime, and, just like in case with a Playboy magazine, the cells would react miles away to the molester doing something like watching the kids’ playground. This could be instantaneous communication, and possibly could provide a link to people traveling far into space, where other methods would fail, because it would take years for a radio signal to reach the Earth.

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