Saturday, February 26, 2011

Drifting: Racing born on the mountain roads of Japan

Drifting:

Racing born on the mountain roads of Japan

Drifting is a style of racing that was born on the mountain roads of Japan in the 1990s. And as we know that extreme sports help mind and body unity - this one surely does. You have to focus, you have to visualize and see it, you have to gain the control...


It’s the Lifestyle aspect of the shot we’re looking for. It’s not action, it’s not static, it’s the moments when the action has or is about to happen. It’s the moments when there is nothing to see perhaps and your just waiting.
drifting off I stop breathing, Drifting is a style of racing born on the mountain roads of Japan
"When I am drifting off I stop breathing and then have to take a deep breath"
drifting off I stop breathing, Drifting is a style of racing born on the mountain roads of Japan
After five minutes or so, ask your breath to slow down. Focus on lengthening the exhalation. Let your thoughts drift. Start to see with your blue mind. Don't be afraid of what you find. No, don't be afraid of what you find (Don't stop your heart) Cause I am drifting ..
drifting off I stop breathing, Drifting is a style of racing born on the mountain roads of Japan
Personal Testimony
Jesus guided me to Rev. Moon in a dream
Experience with God:
I looked to the sky and I read: "The Messiah is on the Earth
The power of thinking
Anti-stress therapy - Unification Family Therapy
drifting off I stop breathing, Drifting is a style of racing born on the mountain roads of Japan

Compact semi submarine - Video: Magic Sea World

Тhe world’s first compact semi submarine

The clear view gives the user a terrific view of the life aquatic, which is perfect for those that want to see fish up close without getting wet. Best of all, the EGO is eco-friendly as it is mostly electric-powered. On a 6-10 hour charge, the user is able to get about four hours worth of cruising time.

Тhe world’s first compact semi submarine that doesn’t needs extensive training to be on your own in your underwater excursion. This battery powered boat-cum-submarine can be operated like a car, which explains its electric-car-like looks. An electronic accelerator pedal is applied instead of a throttle lever in the boats to work like the accelerator pedal of a the car. You can control the navigation by adding the direction switch.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Mystery of 4-year-old’s Out-of-Body Experience

Mystery of 4-year-old’s Out-of-Body Experience: Religion or Science?
A Child in a Out of Body Experience
The mystery of 4-year old boy. He recounted rising up out of the operating room. Several studies found that NDEs are quite common


Is there a scientific explanation? Around 20 percent of heart attack survivors report events such as moving toward a bright light, feelings of peace and joy, or profound spiritual experiences.

Several years ago, when Colton Burpo was 4 years old, he underwent cardiac arrest and was resuscitated during emergency surgery for a ruptured appendix. Four months later, Colton started saying strange things to his father, a Nebraskan pastor named Todd, and his mother, Sonja, about his near-death experience (NDE).

Colton recounted rising up out of the operating room, looking down on the doctors and his praying parents from above, and floating away to heaven, where he met his dead grandfather, his unborn sister who had died in a miscarriage, Jesus and God. In the New York Times bestseller "Heaven is for Real" (Thomas Nelson 2010), Todd Burpo tells the story of his son's trip to heaven and back.

Judging by book sales, this young boy's out-of-body experience in the operating room has given a great deal of encouragement to many people's religious beliefs. But what about those who don't believe in the Christian idea of heaven, but who also don't feel comfortable calling a 4-year-old a liar? Is there a scientific explanation for what happened to Colton?

Recent research seems to show that there is.

Several studies, such as a study by Slovenian researchers published in the journal Critical Care last year, have found that NDEs are quite common. Around 20 percent of heart attack survivors report events such as moving toward a bright light, feelings of peace and joy, or profound spiritual experiences.

According to the study, that subset of patients also had elevated levels of carbon dioxide in their blood compared with patients who did not have NDEs, a condition that causes ”anoxia,” or oxygen deprivation in the brain.

Anoxia, in turn, causes euphoria, visions of light tunnels, hallucinations and other typical symptoms of NDEs. In other words, anoxia is likely what causes the phenomena.

That may not be the end of the story, however.

A research collaboration called AWARE (AWAreness during REsuscitation), led by Sam Parnias at the University of Southampton in the U.K., is studying NDEs and out-of-body experiences in the hope of learning more about consciousness and the relationship between the mind and the brain. In 2009, Parnias told the press, "At least 10 to 20 percent of people who have been brought back to life will tell us they had consciousness present, and a proportion of them will tell us they were able to see doctors and nurses working on them as if they’re looking from above.

"When people have died, their brain goes into a flatline state, so consciousness shouldn’t be present. But it could also be that [doctors] did something amazing to get blood into their brains.”

Parnias is also testing the possibility that the mind really does momentarily separate from the brain during death. He has initiated the placement of boards with symbols on them in intensive care units in 21 hospitals worldwide. The symbols are unobservable to people in hospital beds, but they are visible to observers looking down from above. Over the next three years, Parnias and his colleagues will collect data on whether or not patients who have out-of-body experiences report seeing the symbols.

The researchers hope to provide a definitive answer to the question of whether out-of-body phenomena are real, or merely hallucinations arising in oxygen-deprived brains.

This article was provided by Life’s Little Mysteries, a sister site to LiveScience.com. Follow Natalie Wolchover on Twitter @nattyover.

Mystery of 4-year-old’s Out-of-Body Experience: Religion or Science?