The Most Beautiful Suicide

‘The Most Beautiful Suicide’, originally released on May 12, 1947 in LIFE Magazine

Sixty-nine years ago today, May 1st 1947, Evelyn McHale committed suicide by jumping from the 86th floor observation deck at the Empire State Building around 10:40 AM. The 23-year-old woman landed on a United Nations Assembly Cadillac Limousine that was parked on 34th Street approximately 200 feet (61 meters) west of 5th Avenue. Despite having fallen 1,050 feet (320 meters), her body appeared to be intact, even serene, as though she were sleeping. Her ankles are folded in a lady-like pose appropriate for the time, a gloved hand clutching her pearls, the only sign of damage is a tear in her hose. In contrast, the limousine her body rests on is crushed and broken glass surrounds the young woman. A patrolman named John Morrissey spotted a scarf drifting down from the Empire State Building which was shortly followed by Evelyn’s body. Her body landing atop the car created a cacophonic crash which alerted bystanders to the spectacle. Photography student Robert C. Wiles was across the street when he heard the loud, crunching of metal marking Ms.McHale’s suicide. In awe of her body’s unscathed appearance and leisurely posture, he snapped a photo approximately four minutes after her death. The photo was entitled “The Most Beautiful Suicide” and originally appeared on a full-page spread in the May 12, 1947 edition of Life Magazine with the caption, “At the bottom of the Empire State Building the body of Evelyn McHale reposes calmly in grotesque bier, her falling body punched into the top of a car.”. Unfortunately, not much is known about the life of Evelyn McHale, nor is there much known as to why she felt the need to take her own life.

Evelyn McHale

Evelyn was born on September 20, 1923 in Berkley, California to Vincent and Helen McHale. She was the 6th child born to a family of 7 children. When she was still very young, Evelyn’s mother, Helen, left the family for “material reasons” and her parents got a divorce. Her father retained full custody of the children and moved them to Washington, D.C. where he worked as a bank examiner. The family later moved to Tuckahoe, New York where Evelyn attended high school. After graduation, she joined the Women’s Army Corps and was stationed in Jefferson, Missouri. Eventually, she made her way back to New York State, living with her brother and sister-in-law in Baldwin, Long Island and got a job as a bookkeeper. Evelyn met Barry Rhodes, who was attending Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania and had recently been discharged from the Air Force. They became engaged and were set to be married in June 1947 at Barry’s brother’s home in Troy, New Jersey. McHale had even been a bridesmaid in Barry Rhode’s younger brother’s wedding. On April 30, 1947 Evelyn took the train from New York to Easton, PA to visit Barry on his 24th birthday. On the morning of May 1, everything seemed normal, according to Barry Rhodes. He took his fiancé to the train station, kissed her good-bye, and at 7AM she boarded a train heading to Penn Station in New York City. Barry later told investigators, “When I kissed her goodbye, she was happy and as normal as any girl about to be married.”. Less than four hours later, Evelyn McHale was dead.

1947 article on the suicide of Evelyn McHale. Though her age is listed as ’20’ she was in fact, 23.

Detective Frank Murray discovered a few personal items belonging to Evelyn which were left behind on the observation deck: a tan (or gray, reports vary) cloth coat which was neatly folded and placed n the observation deck wall, a brown make-up kit filled with family photos, and a black pocketbook containing a suicide not. The note Evelyn McHale left, the only explanation of why she leapt to her death read, “I don’t want anyone in or out of my family to see any part of me. Could you destroy my body by cremation? I beg of you and my family- don’t have any service for me or remembrance for me. My fiancé asked me to marry him in June. I don’t think I would make a good wife for anybody. He is much better off without me. Tell my father, I have too many of my mother’s tendencies.”. Despite her near perfect appearance, according to reports, when her body was moved she “fell apart”, the impact having liquefied most of her organs. Ultimately, her body was identified by her sister, Helen Brenner. However, her final wishes were respected in that she was cremated, and there is no grave for Evelyn McHale. Whether she would be pleased by it or not, the entire world remembers Evelyn McHale, as she was immortalized for her serene suicide. Evelyn was the 12th person to ever jump from the Empire State Building since its completion in 1931. She was one of five people who jumped from the building in a three week period, an event which prompted the construction of a 10 foot tall (3 meters) wire mesh barrier, and the employment of guards trained to spot jumpers, in an effort to prevent any more suicides at the location.
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‘The Most Beautiful Suicide’, colorized

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Mummified Corpses of Little Girls Transformed into Russian Dolls

 During his childhood, Anatoly Moskvin’s parents would often take him for walks through graveyards in his hometown of Nizhny Novgorod, Russia. Today he is a 48-year-old writer/historian and expert on historical cemeteries in his native country. Moskvin has published thirteen books, speaks thirteen languages and has been described by many as a “genius”. 

Anatoly Moskvin

Despite his success in life, he was still living in a flat with his parents, Elvira (78) and Yury (78), in 2011. Moskvin’s parents would stay at their country home each summer leaving their son alone at their flat in Nizhny Novgorod. When the elderly couple returned early in the summer of 2011 they made a grisly discovery;  The mummified corpses of 28 little girls aged 3-12 were dressed to look like Russian dolls and arranged throughout the residence in demure poses. Anatoly Moskvin had, for several years, spent his summers digging up corpses; He visited over 700 cemeteries in Russia and estimates he dug up 150 bodies during his active years. 

 The faces of many girls found in his apartment were wrapped in a light-beige fabric to hide the effects of decomposition. Most were wearing dresses, stockings and knee-length boots or snow suits. Some were dressed as brides and one was made to look like a teddy bear. All were wearing make-up and were found with music boxes inside their rib cages. Anatoly Moskvin took meticulous notes, even recording the girl’s birthdays on the wall in his bedroom where he kept his dolls out of sight from his parents. He hosted birthday parties and tea parties for the girls he mummified, and gave them all new names.  One girl whose body became one of Moskvin’s dolls was ten-year-old murder victim, Olga Chardymova. She was killed the first time her parents allowed her to walk by herself to her grandmother’s house after protesting, “I’m ten already. I can go myself.”. Olga took her favorite green bag and blue umbrella and set off for her grandmother’s house which was one block away from her own after her parents had left for work.

Olga Chardymova

Olga never even made it out of her building; A drug addict waiting in the lobby forced Olga back to the top floor where he robbed her of her earrings. The ten-year old girl was hit in the head with a metal bar and killed for trying to escape the thief. Her remains went undiscovered for five months; Olga’s body was eventually found wedged behind pipes in the attic of the building. Olga Chardymova was buried in a cemetery in Nizhiny Novgorod on October 2, 2002. Her parents, Natalia (44) and Igor (46) had built a metal fence around their daughter’s grave and began painting it on May 7, 2003. The following day when they returned to complete their painting, they noticed a wreath on Olga’s grave had been moved and sensed someone had been there. Shortly afterwards, they began finding notes on their daughter’s grave, addressing her as “Little Lady” and congratulating her on special events as though she were still alive. According the Olga’s parents, the anonymous person left notes on every holiday including the first day of school in September and the last day of school in May which would read similar to, “Happy last month of your 6th year at school.”. Each disturbing letter was signed “D.A.” meaning ‘Dorby Angel’ (‘Kind Angel’). Each was hand-delivered by Anatoly Moskvin who would regularly visit the graves of the girls whose remains sat in his bedroom. Each New Year, Olga’s parents would find their daughter’s grave had been decorated and would often discover stuffed animals and other soft toys on Olga’s grave which had been stolen off of other graves in the cemetery. Natalia Chardymova, Olga’s mother told reporters, “We shivered in fear each time we went to the grave, not knowing what to expect.” “Imagine what it was like for us, her grieving parents, reading these notes about our murdered daughter. It was not at all like some sick joke but a spear through our hearts.”. In June of 2003, Natalia and Igor were able to purchase a proper headstone for their daughter’s gravesite. Anatoly Moskvin penned threatening messages on it including, “If you don’t erect a great monument which she deserves, we will dig her body out.”.  Moskvin later destroyed the headstone with an axe. The Nizhny Novgorod police were appalled when informed by the grieving parents of what they had been subjected to by the anonymous psychopath. Unfortunately, there was nothing they could do at the time to track down the person but told them, “If you find him, do what you want to this barbarian, we wont object.” Natalia later stated, “If I’d met him at Olga’s grave, Id have killed him with my own hands.”. Notes and toys continued to be left on Olga’s grave and often, a metal cross on the site was found bent. After complaints of similar occurences at the graves of many other young girls in Ninzhny Novgorod, the police decided to open Olga’s grave on October 5, 2012, nearly ten years to the day since she had been buried. Olga’s parents and police found a hole in her coffin through which the girl’s remains had been removed. Investigators later discovered through Anatoly’s notes that Olga Chardymova’s body had in fact been removed in May 2003 when her parents originally suspected an unwanted visitor had been at their child’s gravesite. “You can’t imagine it”, Natalia explained,”That somebody would touch the grave of your child, the most holy place in this world for you. We had been visiting the grave of our child for nine years and we had no idea it was empty. Instead, she was in this beast’s apartment.”. During his hearing, Anatony accusingly told the parents of the young girls he had mummified and kept in his apartment, “You abandoned your girls in the cold- and I brought them home and warmed them up.”. After three years in a psychiatric hospital, Anatony Moskvin was determined to be not mentally well enough to stand trial. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia and while he is lucid most of the time, he becomes obsessive when talking about “his girls”. He had tried to adopt a girl of his own but was refused because he is unmarried.

 When asked why he exhumed and mummified the bodies of young girls he stated, “I am waiting for science to find a way for these girls to live again… I wanted to be an expert in making mummies… I wanted to communicate with these girls.” and explained how he chose which girls to take home, “I lay on the grave and tried to get in touch with her. I listened to what she said. Often they asked me to take them out for a walk.”.  Anatoly’s crimes were in no way sexually motivated and police claim, “He loathes sex and thought it was disgusting.”. Anatoly was raped as a child and claims his interest in necrology began when he was forced to kiss the face of an 11-year-old girl at her funeral. Psychiatrists believe there is little chance Anatoly will ever be rehabilitated and released from the psychiatric institute where he will remain for the foreseeable future. The stress of Olga’s death and the disturbance of her remains caused Natalia and Igor Chardymova to separate for fourteen months. Natalia explained the reason for their separation, “I just could not live in the block where my daughter was murdered. And Igor did not want to sell the flat, he would go into Olga’s room and stare at her things. Finally, I left and went to live with my mother.”.

Natalia and Igor Chardymova with son, Alexi.

The couple now have a son, Alexei, who they say has restored their faith in life. The couple moved to a new home, but still have a daily reminder of their daughter’s unfortunate end and the torment they suffered for nine years; From the kitchen window, the couple can see the psychiatric institute where Anatoly Moskvin still resides. Natalia and Igor fear he will one day convince his doctors he is cured and will be released. 

 The couple also question Moskvin’s parents’ knowledge of their son’s grave robbing tendencies, unsure how anyone could overlook the presence of 28 corpses in their home. Anatoly Moskvin’s mother, Elvira maintains, “We saw these dolls but we did not suspect there were dead bodies inside. We thought it was his hobby to make such big dolls and did not see anything wrong with it.”. Natalia and Igor chose to never see the “doll” Anatoly Moskvin created with their daughter’s remains. Police advised the couple against it, “The sight was too grotesque, they said. But I have seen the pictures of some of the other girls. I still find it hard to grasp the scale of his sickening work but for nine years he was living with my mummified daughter in his bedroom. I had her for ten years, he had her for nine.”. 
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Is “Kicking the Bucket” For Catholics Only?

The phrase, “Kick the Bucket” was first mentioned in The Dictionary of Vulgar Tongue, published in 1785, and defines it as simply meaning, “To die.”. This idiom, which may imply a hanging death either by one’s own hand or execution is of unknown origin, though there are many theories on what spawned the widespread use of this popular saying.
Again in 1823, the phrase was published, this time in John Badcock’s Slang Dictionary along with a brief, plausible explanation: “One Bolsover having hung himself from a beam while standing on a pail, or bucket, kicked the vessel away in order to pry into futurity and it was all UP with him from that moment: Finis.” This anecdote about a Bolsover (Bolsover is a town in England, in this instance the word is used to describe a resident of Bolsover) hanging himself with the aid of a bucket may be the actual origin story of the phrase, or just an early example of an incredibly crass and morbid joke. Either way, it would make perfect sense to most that the term, “Kicking the Bucket” would come from a person dying at the end of a noose once a bucket is removed, or kicked out from underneath them. However, many more obscure explanations have been offered up over the years.
Alternatively, in past centuries, the word “bucket” has been used interchangeably with the words “beam” and “yolk”, therefore, it is speculated that the saying refers to the “beam” or “bucket” on which pigs are hung to be slaughtered. In this instance, “Kick the Bucket” would describe the struggling, suspended pigs kicking the beam they are hung on before death.
It could even date as far back as the 16th century, to a Latin Proverb known as ‘Capra Scyrica’. Found in the Emblemata, a collection of Latin Proverbs published by Italian writer and jurist Alciati in 1524, ‘Capra Scyrica’ reads, “Because you have spoilt your fine beginnings with a shameful end and turned your service into harm, you have done what the she-goat does when she kicks the bucket that holds her milk and with her hoof squanders her own riches.”. This, of course, is a more metaphorical interpretation regarding the death of one’s reputation, as opposed to one’s actual demise; However, it is possible the phrase did arise from a less literal origin.
Catholics insist this phrase came from their religion’s traditional use of holy water buckets, postmortem. In Relics of Poetry, The Right Reverend Abbot Horne explains, ” After death, when a body has been laid out… the holy water bucket was brought to the church and put at the feet of the corpse. When friends came to pray… they would sprinkle the body with holy water.” As you may already know, when people die, their muscles relax completely which would inevitably cause them to stretch out their legs. Reverend Horne confidentially asserted, “It is easy to see how such a saying as “Kicking the Bucket” came about. Many other explanations of this saying have been given by persons who are unacquainted with Catholic custom.”

From the same demented mind that brought you The Post-Mortem Post: FREAK

Evidence Supports Sixth Sense (PSI) in Humans

Today, many people claim to have extraordinary abilities, or a “sixth sense”: There are psychics who claim to know the future, mediums and spiritual sensitives who communicate with spirits of the dead, and telepaths who can read the minds of others, to name only a few. Unfortunately, “mediums” like Helen Duncan have caused the human race to lose all faith in people who claim to have “abilities”. When the “ectoplasm” that would manifest from her during séances so mysteriously began to take the form of a terrifyingly kitschy haunted house prop, her audiences were baffled. That was pretty short-lived once people caught on her “ectoplasm” was nothing more than cheesecloth. Since Helen, there have been dozens of high-profile frauds just like her. A couple of decades ago, it was mostly telephone psychics with late-night infomercials and regular slots on daytime TV talk shows. Now, with reality TV pumping out ghost investigation shows left and right, each one has their own resident psychic and/or medium, who is most likely just an actor. If you’ve seen ‘The Dead Files’ (which is an incredibly entertaining show on many levels, I must say), you’ve probably also seen “Physical Medium, Amy Allan”‘s camera man rolling his eyes at her in the background. Most recently, there’s been incredibly strong accusations of fraud surrounding mediums Theresa Caputo and Chip Coffey. When everyone you’ve ever known to claim these sort of abilities turns out to be a fraud, it is entirely logical to come to the conclusion that anyone who claims these abilities is a fraud. Unfortunately, the problem with that conclusion is, the real people with the real abilities will never go out on national television and start advertising it. They will never go up to perfect strangers in public and deliver a message from their deceased mother. For every John Edwards and Miss Cleo out there looking to make a quick buck running scams on the more vulnerable and naïve of us by assuring that a dead relative is happy in the afterlife, or that you can buy that house because you will get that new job, there are ten people with legitimate abilities who are not looking to make money off it. Usually, individuals who do sense spirits or future events try to suppress it. It’s not necessarily a pleasant ‘gift’, and the attention one would receive for such abilities would be incredibly overwhelming for most people. Think if it were you: You’re seeing things on a daily basis no one else can see, but could never possibly provide enough evidence to prove it- do you advertise that? No- you would end up in a psychiatric institute for the next several decades with your loved ones patronizing you for the rest of your existence. If you were aware of a massive terrorist attack that was about to take place, would you call up the government and inform them of all the details of the attack? No! Your house would be swarmed with Blackhawk helicopters ready to whisk you away to some secretive government prison in an unknown location for waterboarding. When normal people with everything to lose and no intention to gain anything (aside from information on what they are experiencing) claim to have extraordinary abilities, the least we can do is give them the benefit of the doubt and look into the possibility.
In 2010 social psychologist Daryl Bem, a professor emeritus at Cornell University conducted a series of nine experiments on 1,000 people to test the legitimacy of psychic abilities. In one of the experiments, participants were shown a list of words and asked to remember as many as possible. After students recalled all the words they could, a computer generated sort of words from the list were printed out. The students taking part in the study were asked to type the words on their list. Despite the fact that these words had been randomly chosen by a computer system after the word recall portion of the study was complete, the findings showed participants were better able to remember words which they would later type. Professor Bem believes these results were possible due to precognition. In another test performed, a separate group of students were shown an image of two curtains on a computer. They were told that one of the curtains would reveal an “adult” image. Although the image behind the curtain would not be generated until one curtain had been chosen, the participants chose the erotic image “more often than could be explained away by chance”, according to Daryl Bem. He believes the participants of his study were able to mentally manipulate which image would be revealed to them, after being given the suggestion the photo would be pornographic. Out of the nine experiments, all but one ruled in favor of psychic abilities, with a 74 billion to 1 chance the test results were a fluke. After reading about Bem’s astounding findings in The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Professor Ritchie of Edinburgh recreated the experiments and received completely opposite results. Both professors agree, there is no explanation to the widely varied results of these two identical and in-depth experiments. Dr. Alan Hugenot is an architect/engineer and Naval Captain who claims a ‘believer’ and a ‘skeptic’ can conduct the same experiment and receive opposite results due to the way in which the two individuals perceive consciousness [Click this link for more on his theory]. In 1893, French sociologist Emile Durkheim first put forth the theory of a “shared mind” or “collective consciousness” [Click here for more info] Lyall Watson, a South African zoologist and ecologist, along with his colleague, scientific author Lawrence Blair, devised a theory in 1975 known as ‘The Hundredth Monkey Effect’ based on the findings of Japanese scientists. The scientists had observed macaques on the Japanese island of Koshima in the 1950s and found that once the group of macaques inhabiting the island learned how to wash sweet potatoes, the behavior spread to separate clan of macaques on a neighboring island, without the two groups having ever come into contact with one another. This same evidence of a collective consciousness has also been observed in a species of bird called the blue tit. In 2011, blue tits in Southampton discovered they could break into bottles and drink the milk inside from the top. Shortly afterwards, the exact same behavior occurred in different groups of the same species across Eurasia. Considering the fact that blue tits are non-migratory, there is absolutely no chance the groups exhibiting this behavior, spread so far apart, ever came into contact with each other. Surprisingly, this skill may also exist in humans. For instance, many astounding comparisons can be made between origin stories from religions practiced by separate groups of humans living great distances apart in ancient times. As far as historians and scientists know, these groups would not have had the ability to come into contact and share information. This phenomenon of species seemingly communicating new information telepathically could have a natural explanation. It is likely rather than literally using psychic abilities to pass on new techniques to the rest of the species, animals have uniform thought processes that solve problems in the exact same way as others of their own species. While this ability is not paranormal, it certainly is astounding and makes us wonder what other bizarre gifts nature may have given us that we have yet to acknowledge or utilize. Mother Nature has proven herself to be a creature of habit and Rupert Sheldrake has a theory that may offer an explanation as to why the behaviors of living beings in our universe seem to be constantly repeating themselves. Sheldrake is a biochemist, cell biologist, plant physiologist, and parapsychology researcher who believes not all memories are stored in our brain. He believes in an “extended mind” which stores a collective memory from all previous beings within the species that have come before, and is inherited by every new member of the species as a sort of self-preservation. Think of it as a type of evolved instinct- humans today are not doing quite as dumb things (as a whole) as they were 1,000 years ago. Not because anyone explicitly taught them not to, but because a part of us remembers from 1,000 years ago that we should not do that dumb thing anymore. Under this theory, the same would be true for tuna fish, okapi, red ants, chihuahuas, and every other living species that exists. It is a difficult theory for some to wrap their head around, but if you are a believer in reincarnation, it may make sense as an effect of living a lifetime, dying and being momentarily enlightened. When you return to Earth in a new life with only vague, subconscious fragments of your past life and between life experiences, perhaps this “extended mind” is a way to describe these leftover memories. As evidence to support his claim, Rupert Sheldrake cites the natural crystallization of new chemicals which crystallize very slowly the first time but become faster with each following attempt. According to him, the “Laws of Nature” are more like “Habits of Nature” that are expanded upon with each generation. It is a widely accepted fact that many animal species do possess a sixth sense and it is possible that it exists in humans, as well. The cryptochrome gene is a protein found in the retina of numerous animals such as butterflies, fruit flies, migratory birds, sea turtles, and foxes to name a few. Cryptochromes allow for accurate navigation in the dark because at the very least, the animal has an incredibly strong sense of the Earth’s magnetic field; However, it is likely some, if not all of these species have the ability to literally see the magnetic field laid out like a grid before them as clear as you can see your hand in front of your face. There is evidence supporting the theory that humans have this cryptochrome gene and the potential to tap into the abilities it provides. Unfortunately, scientists believe humans have lost all practical use for it due to the electromagnetic world we live in today. If you don’t use it, you lose it, and with modern computer apps, we have no need to use the mapping and navigation abilities nature has bestowed upon us. However, it does not necessarily suggest every single person in the world has completely lost every aspect of this ability. In fact, there are numerous “sixth senses” that only a select few members of the human race have retained, but may have, at one time, been present in a larger percentage. Perhaps many of the rare “sixth senses” that exist today will eventually evolve and be passed to future generations as a normal human function.
Take synesthesia for example: Synethstesia is a rare neurological condition or trait- no one really know exactly what causes it. It could be a defect in the neurological structure, cross-wiring in neurotransmitters, or possibly caused when a newborn’s body fails to properly “untangle” the part of the brain which analyzes our five senses. It tends to run in families, so it could even be a genetic disorder engrained in the synethstite’s DNA. Whatever the case may be, it gives the person the ability to see sounds, taste words, and hear physical feelings. Really, any combination of senses may be perceived in the brain of a person living with synesthesia. While there is no way to diagnose this condition, it exists in an estimated 4% of the population, in some form. The mixing of senses in a person with synesthesia is completely involuntary, it is experienced, not imagined. When someone with the condition hears the word “triangle”, they may see yellow because triangles are yellow and smell pears because triangles smell like pears. These associations will never change. “Triangle” will forever be yellow and smell like pears because to the synesthstite, that IS a triangle. Letters, numbers, weekdays, months, and other “common” words have a specific color and/or smell which comes in handy in helping these lucky individuals remember things. When trying to remember someone’s name, they may remember it was a dark purple name- “D” is dark purple- and the name smelled like chocolate chip cookies- names that end in a long “O” sound smell like chocolate chip cookies: The name was “Diego”. This may seem like an incredibly complicated way to remember a name, but someone experiencing synesthesia would think you’re an idiot for not being able to remember that Diego is dark purple and smells like cookies- DUH! Diego has always been dark purple and smelled like chocolate chip cookies, how could you not know that? Some people go through their entire lives with this condition, never realizing they are perceiving the world far differently from everyone else. I had gone my entire life (up until a few weeks ago) without realizing I have some form of synesthesia. I was under the impression everyone had specific, unwavering, colors, smells, or sounds they associated with certain things. From my own experience, I can assure you when I hear the word “death”, for instance, I smell a very distinct smell as though… Well, as though there actually were something there to smell. Although I do not know what the smell is, I know it smells puce green, which incidentally, is also the color of “death”. Puce green has always, and will always, smell like death: No exceptions. When I hear (or imagine the sound of) scraping on a chalkboard, I get a vivid, lingering metallic taste in my mouth as though I were sucking on a set of keys. It’s not anything I put thought or effort into, I just taste keys with no explanation as to why. Another incredibly bizarre “sixth sense” is the ability to see imaginary colors. Many people claim to see colors that do not exist within the color spectrum such as a blue-ish tinted yellow that is in no way similar to green. You may be doubting this is possible and wishing there were a way you find out for certain. Luckily, there’s a way to simulate this “imaginary color” phenomenon to decide for yourself if its legit: Imagine the color pink. Can you see it? Yes? …Are you aware pink is one of these imaginary colors? Although it is the only imaginary color everyone can see, it does not exist in the rainbow, and therefore, does not exist in the color spectrum at all. A rainbow is a representation of all colors present in the visible spectrum; Beginning, we have red, followed by orange, yellow, green, cyan, blue, and ending with violet. Our eyes have red, green, and blue light cones that decipher what shade we are seeing. When blue and green light mix, they create cyan, red and green light create yellow, every color we see is created by some combination of red, green and/or blue light- except pink. Pink is technically referred to as “magenta” (which is just a specific shade of pink for those of you not familiar with crayons) and magenta can only be created by mixing red light and violet light. If you were to take this horizontal color spectrum spanning from red to violet and visualize it curling up into a color wheel made up of colors in our visual spectrum, there would be a gap between red and violet. Everything to the side of red is an infrared form of light, everything to the side of violet is an ultraviolet form of light, due to this it is impossible for humans to visually mix red with violet. With our limited light cones unable to actually see magenta, our brain invents an imaginary color. Therefor, pink, magenta, wild strawberry, ‘mauvelous’, and any other catchy Crayola (TM) color that describes the hue created by red and violet is an imaginary color.
The human brain can achieve bizarre and amazing things. The world has recently learned two people can observe the same dress, but one person perceives a blue and black dress while another perceives it as white and gold. We can see imaginary colors, never questioning whether or not they are real, and some of us can vividly taste every color in the rainbow without ever opening a bag of Skittles. If some people’s brains can perceive sound when they observe a color, it’s not such a leap to assume there are humans who can hear the dead and see the future. Whether or not you’re sold on the idea of paranormal abilities being more normal than previously believed, leave here with this: Scientists know, without a doubt, it is absolutely possibly to predict the future, and deduce the past with 100% accuracy and they know how to do it. Our entire universe is composed of particles, due to this fact, if you knew the initial velocity (u), displacement (s), and acceleration (a) of every single particle in the universe, you could plug-in an amount of time (t) and know the future. Using the equation  s=ut + 1/2at^2  you would find the only place the particle can be at that exact moment in time and by knowing the exact position of every single particle in the universe, you will know the only possible future that can exist. Though some scientists dismiss parapsychology as pseudoscience, if we ignore the subject all together, we may never realize the human race’s full potential. At the very least, we can dismiss it and will certainly walk away with more knowledge on the paranormal (or lack thereof) than we have today. Scientists and intellectuals should strive to walk in the footsteps of the great Albert Einstein who believed, “To raise new questions, new possibilities… requires creative imagination and marks real advance in science.”.

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To learn more about Daryl Bem and read his entire article from The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology visit his website: http://dbem.ws/