About a week after that incident, I went back to the place of Apo Ina, with the late actor and UFO investigator Roy Alvarez, who was interested in paranormal phenomena.
How do you know if a person you’ve met is your soul mate? And what do you do when you fall madly in love with that person, but both of you are happily married to someone else?
I often get many questions, either through text or e-mail, from readers about all sorts of topics. Here are two recent ones, from the nature of soul mates encounter to the appearance of spirits in the afterlife.
A RECENT item in Yahoo News caught my attention. It says that Samsung is doing research “that would allow users to control a computing device with their thoughts alone.”
One question that has been bugging me for years is why no researcher or medical scientist has ever been able to explain adequately the phenomenon of paranormal healing in general, and psychic surgery in particular.
A news item in the Feb. 21 issue of the Inquirer about the technical possibility of extracting or mining “rare earth” minerals or elements in outer space, i.e. outside the earth, caught my interest.
Before Trinley Thaye Dorje’s arrival, Inquirer sent him a questionnaire specific to certain Philippine situations, put together by a panel of mostly Inquirer writers—social anthropologist and columnist Michael Tan, author and columnist Jaime T. Licauco; world-renowned entertainer Lea Salonga; award-winning filmmaker Ferdinand Balanag, a practicing Buddhist; and animal rights activist Nice Rodriguez.