Saturday, February 04, 2012 12:44

Archive for April, 2010

Dealing with Demonics

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Is demonic possession real? What are the signs of demonic possession? What would you do if you were under demonic attack? Do demonic exorcisms work? How are demons dealt with if they are real? Can the world of the occult hold secrets to dealing with demonics? Tune into this weekend’s episode on ISIS Paranormal Radio to find out!

Patricia Gardner and Dayna Winters will be interviewing author and occult demonologist Katie Boyd on Sunday at 6 PM Eastern Time. If you have ever been curious about the reality of demons or if you are interested in becoming a demonologist yourself, this is a show you won’t want to miss! Tune into a discussion about demons in a variety of cultures, the history of demons, the signs, and symptoms of a demonic presence and more. Listen to the live stream broadcast and join in on the conversation in the show’s chat room. You can listen to the live broadcast on:

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/isisparanormal.

Don’t have time to tune in this Sunday? You can hit up the show in the archives after the show airs. Download the show to your personal computer or access the show through iTune podcasts. All ISIS Paranormal Radio shows are free for you to listen to. The show airs every weekend with regular airings on Sundays and special episodes on Saturday evenings. Find out more about the show on:

http://www.isisinvestigations.com/isisparanormalradio.html.

About Katie Boyd

Katie Boyd is a demonologist and Occult Sciences Expert. She grew up in a haunted house which had severe poltergeist activity, and she now helps those who are dealing with similar issues. With over nineteen years studying, training, and experience, Katie handless all types of cases: everyday spirit hauntings, demonic entities, demonic hauntings, exorcisms, possessions, and occult crime cases from around the world. Katie is also one of the co-founders of the paranormal group called Ghost Quest Paranormal Research Society. Books she has authored or co-authored include:

*Devils & Demonology In the 21st Century (ISBN 978-0764331954) is a 160 page book published by Schiffer Publishing. The book covers a variety of topics related to demonology including basic occult sciences, real cases, and modern day exorcism statistics. The book is illustrated, and explores the history and existence of demons, Catholic demons, evil in different cultures, negative thought forms, demonic attacks, occultism, various occultists, working with magical seals and sigils, Ouija boards, the history of exorcism, and more.

Additional books by Katie Boyd include:

*Ghost Quest: New Hampshire’s Paranormal Research Society, coauthored by Beckah Tolley and Raven Duclos, (ISBN 978-0764328862), which examines paranormal events in New Hampshire. *Rhode Island’s Spooky Ghosts (ISBN 978-0764333880), a book that examines Rhode Island’s most famous and legendary haunting, and *Creepy Legends, and Haunted Closets: True Tales of The Boogeyman.

Find out more about Katie Boyd on her website at:

http://www.katieboyd.net.

The Myriad Advantages of Meditation

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

The Inner Workings of the Brain

Image by Sal Salvador

There are so many benefits to the practice of regular meditation. You are probably already fully aware that meditation can help you relax and it can be used as a way to stimulate mental clarity, but did you know that meditation can increase the amount of gray matter in your brain, or that it can help you achieve altered states of consciousness? Did you know that meditation can help you control your emotions, that it causes short term and long term changes in how the brain operates, and that it can improve your observation skills too?

More Gray Matter

Some researchers have revealed that the regular practice of meditation actually increases the amount of gray matter in the human brain. In an article entitled “Meditation increases brain gray matter,” appearing on PhysOrg.com in May 2009, it was revealed that a UCLA research group conducted brain scans on individuals that meditate. The study’s findings were released in NeuroImage which suggest that various parts of the brain in meditators who have practiced meditation over the long term were larger than the brains of individuals in a controlled group. In fact, meditators proved to have bigger orbito-frontal cortex areas, more gray matter in then inferior temporal gyrus, the thalamus, and the hippocampus. The latter areas of the brain are associated with one’s ability to regulate his or her emotions.

In a similar article appearing on LiveScience entitled “Meditate on This: Buddhist Tradition Thickens Parts of the Brain,” researchers have found that the cortical areas of the brain responsible for the regulation of visual, auditory, and sensory and internal perception along with the regulation of one’s breathing and heart rate, are increased through regular meditative practices. What’s more, researchers from Yale University have argued that the frontal cortex of one’s brain benefits since meditation slows the thinning of the region: an issue that is associated with the natural aging process.


Altered States of Awareness

In an article appearing in a 2005 issue of the Washington Post entitled “Meditation Gives Brain a Charge, Study Finds,” by Marc Kaufman, it is revealed that meditation allows people to develop a “mental discipline,” that alters how the brain works and further permits the individual to “achieve different levels of awareness.” Researchers from the University of Wisconsin discovered, after conducting a study of Tibetan monks, that the left region of the prefrontal cortex has increased activity during meditation. What’s more, researchers concluded that a brain that is regularly trained via meditation practices is not only altered for the short term, but positive changes are seen in the long term too.

Mental Clarity and Increased Observation

In an article on LiveScience by Charles Q. Choi entitled, “Meditation Sharpens the Mind,” it is explained how three months of intense meditative practices can increase one’s ability to observe his or her environment and it can also improve one’s mental clarity. Researchers from the University of Wisconsin revealed that extensive meditation practices, as much as 10 to 12 hours a day for a period of three months, reduced the “mental distractions” a person experiences, intensified a person’s awareness, and improved a person’s ability to take in more information than before meditation practices were engaged in. While 10 to 12 hours of meditation a day for the average individual may not be feasibly possible, the daily practice of meditation can still provide significant benefits over the long term.

The Releasing of Negativity

One common practice in meditation is the releasing of negative emotions. This act of releasing negative emotions has positive effects on the human brain. In an article entitled, “Brain Scans Reveal Why Meditation Works,” by Melinda Wenner and published on LiveScience, it is revealed that researchers have found that meditation can help alleviate negative emotions and it can generate a tranquil state in the mind. A UCLA study in 2007 suggests that mindfulness meditation practices help people focus more deeply on their emotional state; this focus allows for the individual to partake of “emotional labeling.” When a person applies words, whether spoken or thought, to negative emotions, it causes changes in the brain’s amygdala. Such changes cause the individual to experience a calmed emotional state.