Have you ever seen a ghost or apparition? I am sure I have. At least twice. Once about 10 years ago, of all places, at the Henry Lee Irwin Theater of the Ateneo de Manila University in Loyola Heights.
One of the questions I always have a hard time answering is: What’s the most incredible, bizarre, or unique paranormal experience I’ve ever had?
IS IT POSSIBLE to diagnose accurately what’s ailing a perfect stranger simply by looking at him or his picture?
My attention was called to a Letter to the Editor (Inquirer, July 14) written by Dr. Mary Jacquiline T. Romero of the School of Physics and Astronomy of the University of Glasgow, United Kingdom. In that letter, Romero stated that my article about quantum physics, Eastern mysticism and ESP was “terribly misleading.”
Somebody I know asked me recently, “What kind of problems do people consult you about?”
About a week before Halloween, the Inquirer ran stories about numerous encounters with ghosts by people, from celebrities to ordinary folk. Such stories have become an annual ritual of newspapers, magazines, TV and radio shows.
Last week, I discussed teleportation, a paranormal phenomenon where a person disappears from one place and simultaneously appears in another...
Debbie, a radio listener of mine, texted me the following intriguing questions:
There are several often-used terms in the paranormal and occult fields which I wish were never invented, because they tend to confuse rather than clarify.
I was recently interviewed by a 30-year-old Swiss graduate student of anthropology on the topic “Paranormal Anthropology,” and specifically zeroing in on psychic surgery in the Philippines and Brazil, the two countries in the world where this practice is most prevalent or well-known.