Dude, let me explain something to you. Critical thinking and evidence based science are heavily promoted by the JREF, and in this forum anecdotal evidence is not accepted because anybody can make up anything and say whatever they want. Here, we demand proof for your claims.
I can tell you that I led a meditation session last night and we actually
succeeded in liberating John the Baptist. You can't prove me wrong, can you? Does the fact you can't disprove me make my claim true? No. You can see why anecdotal evidence is looked down upon.
I can say "prayer and meditation have absolutely no effect on anyone besides the person engaging in the activity," because there is ample proof (ie:
empirical evidence) for that statement.
Here's some right here.
See the difference?
I mean, you can still say whatever you want, but when you make claims that are easily disproven, ignore word definitions, avoid damaging evidence, and only provide anecdotes to support your statements... well, good luck with that.