She seemed reasonable enough.... UNTIL SHE OPENED HER MOUTH!!!![]()
"Do not believe all the answers..."![]()
When she "asks" for a the yes and no response from the pendulum, she clearly moves her arm/hand. This woman is absolutely deluded.
I cannot believe she "thanked" her pendulum! Twice, even!
She did introduce herself an "Dr." didnt she? I wonder what type of DR. she is?
On her web site she is Rev. Dr. ... I think that gives you some idea.
BTW, Sydney Skeptics in the pub this Wednesday night will hold a mass spoon bending and post the video online.![]()
Absolutely thrilling, Richard. Is there a similar group in Melbourne? Seems to me the pub's an excellent environment in which to pooh-pooh someone's cherished woo beliefs.
M.
There you have it, my friends.Orangutan said:Nothing says woo like WOOdwind.
Wow - didn’t she provide so much compelling evidence? No stone (pardon the pun) was left unturned in her pursuit for facts.
Yet another leech ready to pray on societies unthinking zombies.
Did she do this under her own free will, or has she relinquished that to the higher power. “Feet flat on the ground” of course!
Simon
What it's based upon is muscle tone. Muscle tone is easily influenced by psychological factors. (Ever gotten "weak-kneed" or had "butterfies in your stomach" or your heart done the "pitter-pat.")
It's not even that. With the arm outstretched like that, a person is very weak compared to the other person who could easily push the arm down with even only two fingers pushing on it. They feel strong when you ask a "yes" question because you're not pushing so hard. Ask a no, and push just a bit harder, barely enough to overcome their strength/leverage threshold and they feel weak. I've done this trick to a few people, not with questions, but by "robbing their energy" as a presentation.