Audible Click said:
This has become quite frightening, at least from my perspective. This recent claim she put forth could actually hurt someone. I hope that Anita would, take a step back, and really examine the potential damage she could do with her supposed healing technique.
Thank you for your concern, and I am concerned also of fraud psychics who exploit people in need. However my motives are not greed or scamming, and I am very careful in my approach.
wardenclyffe said:
On UncaYimmy's website (
www.stopvisionfromfeeling.com), he says that VfF has stopped communication with the F.A.C.T. skeptics meet-up group in North Carolina.
I have not seen that info anywhere else. I assume that this information came from a private conversation between VfF and UncaYimmy. She attended the most recent F.A.C.T. meeting (
http://www.meetup.com/f-a-c-t/calendar/10466099/) and I have not heard anything disparaging from her about them. She seems, or seemed, to have admired Dr. Carlson who helps head up the group.
I hope UY is mistaken and she stays in touch with F.A.C.T.. This group (or individual members of it) can be of great assistance in her future studies. If she hopes to claim the IIG's (
www.iigwest.org) $50K prize, I think she'll probably have to go through F.A.C.T. first. They were the only people who seemed to be able to convince VfF that she was not making a testable claim. They made progress where no one on this board or at IIG seemed to be able to.
I think the report of her coming in third out of four was made before last month's meeting (I could be wrong), and she still went to the meeting.
So if anyone has further information about the reported "break-up" between VfF and F.A.C.T., please let us know.
I am still attending every FACT meeting and intend to ask them to be involved in a local test once I get that far in the investigation. Before that I wish to have more experience with reading people so that a trend would become more obvious. Of course I admire Dr. Carlson, he is a wonderful scientist, excellent skeptic, and a lovely person.
The fact that I came third out of four in the point scale system of the first study is no reason for me to not attend a FACT meeting. I am not opposed to falsification of the claim, no matter how passionately some JREF Forum Skeptics here would love to insist that I should be, as a paranormal claimant.
As a science student I should know better. I mean, you could be in the chemistry lab and months of work could be "ruined" because you ended up falsifying what had seemed to be a promising hypothesis. No scientist would continue to waste time and resources in pursuing the claim further, trying to ignore the truth of the matter. However, I truly believe that the claim has not been falsified quite yet. And trust me if there is no ability then that will become obvious as I gather more data. No conclusion can be made from just five readings that involved scattered forms of information and flaws in the study procedure.
Cuddles said:
There are numerous other far more likely possibilities. Firstly, there's the placebo effect. Contrary to what you probably think, that does not mean you did anything, it simply means that a person might feel better (but not actually have any physical improvement) when they think something has been done. It could be regression towards the mean, which is when normal variation in the severity of an ailment can appear to be improvement attributed to a specific treatment that happened to done when the ailment was at its worst. A related problem is confirmation bias - maybe you tried treating him several times and only on the one time there appeared to be an
effect did you report it.
You are right there could be any number of possibilities. I do not take credit for his improvement, yet I want to explore whether other migraine sufferers would experience the same dramatic improvement after seeing me. And even if all I did were to introduce a placebo, I'd be happy to be the source of such a good placebo that really helps. The vast improvement occurred after the first and only treatment that I had given him. I had not even met him prior to that.
Cuddles said:
Of course, by far the most likely explanation is that you are just lying. You certainly don't have the best track record for honesty.
I might come across as unfocused or incompetent in my investigation, but one thing I am not is a liar, but of course you are entitled to questioning my honesty. After all, you are a skeptic. And skeptics must remain skeptical.
Cuddles said:
We went from seeing some pretty colours to medical diagnosis to meeting with ghosts to being an alien to magically curing illnesses.
The investigation started with medical perceptions and continues with the same. Later I added description of synesthesia into the search for an explanation. As for communication with ghosts, that was mentioned in other threads where I was discussing my experiences with that topic, and it does not form another claim that I want investigated here.
As for being a Star Person (alien), that is a personal characteristic and should be of not much more interest than my political or religious denomination. Star People are simply individuals who feel a strong connection with outer space on a personal level. It doesn't necessarily mean that we are going to insist that we are from outer space, but we feel that we are. To explain some of what Star People are like, you might like to see
http://www.drboylan.com/starkididqstnr.html. I scored between 51 to 60 on the questions, 9 of which are unknown and relate to my early childhood and I would have to ask my mother about them, and 3 no, out of a total possible of 67. It was only brought up since there was a Skeptic site that asks "Are you human?" before you can register and one would have to answer yes. At first I said no and couldn't register. Then I said yes, but then I emailed them and asked them to withdraw my registration and that's where all this mess came from.

And as for curing illnesses, we don't know that yet but I am intending to find out if I can. I'm just expressing #24, #25, #26 and #27 on the questionnaire.
Cuddles said:
Of course, this is not amazingly unusual, there are frauds and liars all of the place claiming similar things. What does seem odd, however, is that you persist in this nonsense despite the fact that not a single person appears to actually believe you. Even the most obvious frauds usually manage to get some kind of following after this length of time, how exactly do you manage to be so unconvincing?
I am not here to gain followers. I am sharing my investigation with skeptics because "psychics" rarely offer any insight and scrutiny into their claims. We are arguing because there is a lack of data.
Cuddles said:
VisionFromFeeling method, otherwise known as making things up.
Actually, what I call "vision from feeling" are things similar to synesthetic perceptions, I am describing what I perceive and I am not making them up. In the same way as I perceive the number 2 is orange. I don't make it up, I just describe what I see.
Cuddles said:
If something you do has an effect, you need to work out how and why it works, what the limits are, what the side effects might be, and so on. If you actually can't do anything, then you need to know that, otherwise you end up believing you actually have magical abilities to cure people and will either end up causing serious harm to someone or simply end up in jail for fraud.
I know that. I totally agree, and that is what I am working on.
desertgal said:
Do you understand, Anita, that what you claim to have done with this man, and what you are proposing to do with others in the future is illegal?
No I don't understand that. I visualized colored light into the perception I had of the inside of a man's brain. And then I gave a gentle (and quite comfortable and relaxing) massage with my fingertips. Most people would love to sit down and get a massage. Desertgal, just cool down.
desertgal said:
Not only fraudulent and potentially harmful, but also a violation of the medical practice statutes nationwide. You are putting an awful lot at risk here, including your academic career and your right to remain in the United States.
I am aware that the incident of attempting to heal a man who was suffering from constant migraines and experiencing a coincidental dramatic improvement in his condition after the treatment might stir things up in my career or VISA status, however, all it was was visualization and a gentle massage and neither of those things are illegal. I charged no money and emphasized that he continue to rely on conventional medicine and medications and that what I do must be considered as nonsense and useless. Yet it either coincided with a dramatic healing or it had some effect, whether placebo or otherwise. A foreign student wanting to give headache sufferers a relieving head massage is definitely not grounds for not granting them employment or for having them deported. It should show that I am a caring individual. Besides, something happened, and I intend to find out whether it can happen again.