Syntagma Digital
21st-Century Phi
Supernatural

Yeti tracks cause excitement in Nepal

Yeti Sighting Excited Japanese yeti hunters believe that their recent pictures of footprints are conclusive evidence that the elusive “mythical” species exists.

Yoshitera Takahashi, the group leader, claims that the discovery of the eight inch, human-like footprints corroborates local stories and sightings of yetis.

Takahashi’s team, from Nepal’s Yeti Project, had spent 42 days on top of a 25,000 ft peak in the Himalayas hoping to catch a glimpse of the mythical half man, half ape, on film. Although they had based themselves in a yeti “hot spot”, they failed to catch sight of the hairy creature.

Takahashi is one of the many “believers” and claims to have seen a yeti for himself on a previous expedition in 2003. In the 1950s, Eric Shipton took photographs of footprints in the snow that some are still convinced were those of a yeti. And in 2007, a set of 13-inch long footprints was photographed at the foot of Mount Everest.

This latest discovery of footprints comes only a few months after scientists from the UK’s Oxford Brookes University began DNA tests on hairs found in the Meghalaya area of India by yeti enthusiast Dipu Marak, who had followed up a three-day sighting by a jungle forester.

Experts say that the hairs have the same cuticle pattern as possible yeti hairs found in the Himalayas by the explorer Edmund Hilary and donated to the Natural History Museum. By a process of elimination, the hairs have not been proven to originate from any known native creature in the Meghalaya area.

Ian Redmond, from the UN’s Great Ape Survival Project, believes the hairs could come from an unknown species of primate. He suggests that the Megahalayan yeti could actually be a descendant of a 10-foot tall, black and grey ape-like creature called the Gigantopithecus, which was only identified 80 years ago.

Rhian Gibbings

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Samhain – the Celtic New Year

Samhain Cat While children everywhere were celebrating Halloween last weekend, dressed in ghoulish outfits and knocking on doors for a trick or treat, the Pagans in our communities were celebrating Samhain, the Feast of the Dead, the beginning of the Celtic Year.

In Celtic traditions Samhain marks the move from light to darkness, the first day of winter, the time when the veils between this world and the Otherworld are at their thinnest and when Deities, deceased loved ones and ancestors can draw close to us and be remembered. The “Jack o’lantern” pumpkin lamps that we now associate with the Halloween festivities echo the skulls of the ancestors that the Celts placed outside their doors to guide the spirits of their loved ones back home.

The Celts would light a sacred bonfire, play traditional games, such as apple bobbing, and practice divination. This was a joyous celebration, and a time for reflecting on the past and moving forward to the future, as the Pagan view of death incorporates notions of new beginnings and rebirth.

Samhain is a time for wisdom and for calling upon the Crone aspect of the Divine Feminine to transform our darker aspects in her cauldron of transformation.

In the quiet of winter we can withdraw and reflect on the aspects of ourselves that we wish to change and the past hurts that we need to let go of, and in the dark safety of this silent time we can make the preparations to re-emerge, refreshed and renewed at Imbolc (January 31) when Winter becomes Spring.

Rhian Gibbings

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Pink light over London

ET enthusiasts are watching the skies again as a bizarre pink cloud appeared over the Mayfair area of London on October 21.

Pink light
Mysterious pink light over London

The peculiar, bright pink lights seemed to hover and break up, but not before plenty of spectacular pictures were shot.

Although the Met Office has suggested that this phenomena is simply the lights of the city reflected in a cloud, this has not stopped speculation on other, more unusual explanations for the occurrence. Some are saying it was an extra terrestrial portal, others believe it was a light ship and there have even been claims that the event was a symbol of the rising consciousness of humanity.

Whatever the explanation, it is certainly the case that UFO sightings and prophesies of alien visitations are on the increase.

Psychic Channellers are again predicting that our “Galactic Family” is soon to reveal itself and more dates, such as October 24 and November 11, have been deemed to be significant.

The bright, pink light was quite a sight to behold, however, and has only added fuel to the fire for those hoping that we are not alone in the universe.

Rhian Gibbings

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Don’t forget to check the ceiling

Out-of-body Experience Doctors at 25 UK and U.S. hospitals are embarking upon a three-year study to try to understand the “out of body experience.”

Shelving will be set up in resuscitation areas with pictures that can only be seen from the ceiling, and 1500 survivors who have experienced the loss of heartbeat or brain activity will be asked whether they have seen the pictures whilst their consciousness is allegedly outside their bodies.

One hundred cases of the “out of body experience” were documented in the 1975 best seller Life After Life by Dr Raymond Moody. Survivors reported either looking down at their lifeless body lying in the hospital bed from the perspective of the ceiling or moving through a tunnel towards a bright light.

Dr Sam Parnia, of the University of Southampton, says that his own work experience has led him to be less than sceptical about this phenomenon:

“People who have been brought back to life after clinical death often describe a sensation of separating from themselves — that’s called an ‘out-of-body experience’ — and that can be tested and validated scientifically. So if it’s real we should be able to prove it, and if it’s just a trick of the mind we should be able to prove that as well.”

Psychologist Dr Susan Blackmore has a slightly different idea about what is going on:

“All my own research over decades on out-of-body experiences shows that they are convincing, realistic, quite amazing experiences but that nothing leaves the body,” she says.

Let’s hope the pictures that Dr Parnia and his team put on the walls of the resuscitation areas are eye-catching enough to be remembered by the near-death survivors. It would be rather disappointing if they forgot to look, and it’s unlikely that many subjects would be volunteering for a second attempt.

Rhian Gibbings

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