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|Abominable Snowman |An unidentified manlike or bear like animal said to exist in the Himalayas. A creature |

| |usually described as a shaggy man-beast that is only ever briefly seen moving across |

| |snow swept landscapes, leaving behind very large footprints. The abominable snowman is |

| |also known as the yeti. |

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|Akasha |Is believed by some doctrines to be a mystical, spiritual substance where "memories" |

| |are stored since the beginning of time.  It is one of the five elements in Hindu |

| |philosophy and is often described as a form of atmosphere or ether.  The Akasha is |

| |thought by some to contain a record of everything that has ever happened, but also |

| |everything that will ever come to pass in the future.  Theosophists believe that persons|

| |with special psychic powers can tap into the Akasha or "Astral Light".  They achieve |

| |this by using their astral bodies or "astral senses" to search for spiritual insights |

| |which have been stored for all eternity. |

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| |According to ancient Indian tradition the universe consists of two fundamental |

| |properties.  These are motion and the space through which motion takes place.  This |

| |space is called the Akasha (Tib.: nam-mkhah).  It is also believed to be the substance |

| |that enables things to step through into reality and gain visible appearance, extension |

| |and corporality. |

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| |The Akasha relates to the three dimensional space of our sense perception and this is |

| |called the "mahakasha".  The nature of the Akasha is limited not only to this three |

| |dimensionality, indeed it is made up of infinite dimensions comprising all possibilities|

| |of movement not only physical but spiritual as well. |

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| |"Akasha" is derived from the root kash, meaning "to radiate, to shine"  It also has the |

| |meaning of "ether" believed to be the medium of movement. |

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| |The Akasha is thought to be indivisible, eternal and all pervading. |

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|Akashic records |A memory bank or storage place for all happenings and experiences since the beginning of|

| |time.  The Akashic Record supposedly holds records of all thoughts, feelings, events and|

| |actions.  These are not just things which have come to pass but also things that will |

| |ever happen in the future.  The "Akasha" or "Astral Light" is believed by Theosophists |

| |to contain records that persons such as clairvoyants or spiritual beings can tap into.  |

| |They do this by using their "astral bodies" or "astral senses" to gain access to these |

| |stored spiritual insights. |

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|Alchemy |An ancient pseudoscience set to study and discover the transmutation of base metals into|

| |gold, a single cure for all diseases, a way to prolong life indefinitely, and the |

| |manufacture of artificial life. Alchemy was a mystical art for human spiritual |

| |transformation into a higher form of being and a way of unlocking nature. |

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|Alien |A foreigner: a person who comes from a foreign country; someone who does not owe |

| |allegiance to your country. |

| |A stranger: anyone who does not belong in the environment in which they are found. |

| |A being or from or characteristic of another place or part of the world; "alien |

| |customs"; |

| |An extraterrestrial being: a form of life assumed to exist outside the Earth or its |

| |atmosphere. A non-native species for the area. |

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|Amulet |An item that is worn as a charm to help combat disease, evil and or witchcraft.  It is a|

| |preservative piece of jewellery and used for the protection of an individual against |

| |things that are generally considered to be bad. It can be an ornament or small piece of |

| |jewellery worn as a charm against evil and is something which is thought to give such |

| |protection. |

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|Ancient Mysteries |Secret rituals of pagan religions taught and known only to initiates who had developed a|

| |higher spirituality. Such mysteries were kept from the popular worshippers, and the |

| |initiates took a binding oath of secrecy. This is why even today the knowledge of these |

| |mysteries is partly conjectural. |

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| |The typical mystery cults were those of Eleusis in Greece in the 15th century BC, which |

| |may have part of their origins in the mystery religions of ancient Egypt and the |

| |mysteries of Mithras, a Persian deity. Traces of Mithraism still exist in Britain. Many |

| |present secret societies claim their rituals descend from ancient traditions. |

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| |Definition provided by The Mystica @ |

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|Angel |A typically benevolent celestial being that acts as an intermediary between heaven and |

| |earth, especially in Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and Zoroastrianism. A representation |

| |of such a being, especially in Christianity, conventionally in the image of a human |

| |figure with a halo and wings. |

| |Christianity- The last of the nine orders of angels in medieval angelology. From the |

| |highest to the lowest in rank, the orders are: seraphim, cherubim, thrones, dominations |

| |or dominions, virtues, powers, principalities, archangels, and angels. |

| |A guardian spirit or guiding influence. |

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|Animism |Religious practices based on the belief that all living things and natural objects have |

| |their individual spiritual essence or soul. |

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|Apparition |This is a phenomenon where the ghost takes on a form that can be physically viewed. |

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|Astral |The word astral on its own means relating to, resembling or emanating from the stars. |

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|Astral Body |The word astral on its own means relating to, resembling or emanating from the stars.  |

| |However an astral body can be defined as the ethereal counterpart of a human or animal |

| |body.  In other words it is a super sensible part of the body which theosophists believe|

| |exists alongside the human or animal body and it is that part which survives the death |

| |of the human, animal or physical body.  It is also thought to be the super sensible part|

| |of the body used to travel on the astral plane and through the Akasha. |

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|Astral Plane |The astral plane however can be likened to the Akasha, namely a place where all the |

| |thoughts, memories, fantasies and dreams of everyone in the world exist. The astral |

| |plane is thought to be a fantastic place to travel in, with many different travellers, |

| |entities and levels to it.  It is said to operate at a much higher frequency than the |

| |physical plane we inhabit. |

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| |It is thought that the etheric body, spirit or mind can travel on the astral plane which|

| |is said to appear more solid than the physical plane we all inhabit, this is because in |

| |order to travel it the etheric body has to be existing and operating at the same higher |

| |frequency.  The astral plane is believed to be far more mutable than the physical and is|

| |said to be changed and altered simply by the power of thought. |

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|Astral travel/astral projection |Actual Astral Projection is thought to be the process whereby our etheric body, spirit |

| |or mind separates from the physical body, whilst maintaining a level of consciousness.  |

| |Once separated from the physical body this etheric body then begins to operate at a |

| |higher frequency allowing it to travel on the astral plane.  This astral plane also |

| |operates at a higher frequency than that of the physical plane and can possibly be |

| |likened to the Akasha.  It, like the Akasha, is a place where all the thoughts, |

| |memories, fantasies and dreams of everyone in the world exist. The astral plane is |

| |thought to be a fantastic place to travel in, with many different travellers, entities |

| |and levels to it.  When astrally projecting it is believed that although the conscious |

| |mind tries to impose a 'body' on the traveller, he/she has no 'body' as such but can |

| |change their form simply by thinking about it. |

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| |When travelling on the astral plane it is said to appear more solid than the physical, |

| |this is because in order to travel it you have to be existing and operating at the same |

| |higher frequency.  The astral plane is believed to be far more mutable than the physical|

| |and is said to be changed and altered simply by the power of thought.  Some persons |

| |believe that they can achieve astral projection at will and there are many stories from |

| |persons claiming to have left their bodies, having operated and existed at a higher |

| |level.  In order to verify the experience and to ensure that the experience is not a |

| |dream, many persons engaging in this activity tend to project etherically first.  This |

| |is so that they can confirm they have really left their physical body and are not simply|

| |imagining the experience. |

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|Atlantis |Atlantis is one of the most known legends throughout the world which was first written |

| |by Pluto (c.428-c.349). In his book, Timaeus and Critias, Atlantis was an island |

| |continent west of the straits of Gibraltar and inhabited by an advanced civilization |

| |10,000 years ago. According to Pluto, disaster hit when an earthquake caused the land to|

| |sink to the bottom of the Atlantic. Information about Atlantis comes from an Athenian |

| |scholar called Solon who learnt of it from Egypt. Today, the lost continent is still |

| |debated while there are those who still hunt it. |

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|Aura |An emanation, breath or radiation that is invisible to the naked eye. It is often |

| |thought to be an invisible surrounding glow emanating from each individual.  Some |

| |persons believe that they can actually see the aura of a person and depending on its |

| |colour and form; this is taken as an indication of the mental and physical well being of|

| |that person.  Kirlian photography deals with the supposed art of photographing this type|

| |of phenomena. |

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|Auric Healing |In treating a person through auric healing one attempts to improve the condition of a |

| |person by changing the colour configuration of his aura. This is another phase of |

| |healing. For example when treating conditions of the nervous system use colours of blue |

| |and lavender to soothe and quiet the individual; to invigorate the person use the colour|

| |of green grass; to inspire use yellows and oranges. When working with the blood and |

| |organs of the body, use dark blue to soothe, green to invigorate, and bright reds to |

| |stimulate. |

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| |Auric healing is similar to colour healing where the technique of visualization is used.|

| |When the patient complains of an ailment the practitioner visualizes the colour which is|

| |lacking within the patients aura which would effect the condition. The following are |

| |examples: Blue for fever, high blood pressure, hysteria. Red for chills or lack of body |

| |heat. Light green for stomach ache. Dark blue or lavender for nervous headache. Dark |

| |blue for cuts |

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| |Definition provided by The Mystica @ |

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|Automatic writing |The act of a person using a writing instrument like a Ouija Board. Sometimes used |

| |blindfolded and sometimes not, the person let's a force guide their hand to "write out" |

| |a message. Automatic writing is said to be using the "living human" to channel the |

| |spirit and allow them to communicate. |

| | |

| |Definition by The Toronto and Ontario Ghosts and Hauntings Research Society. |

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|Avalon |Avalon, according to legend, is an enchanted isle where King Arthur Pendragon lies |

| |asleep. When Arthur was injured he was taken to the isle to rest and heal for the day |

| |when he would return. There are some stories that say that the sword Excalibur was |

| |forged on Avalon. The isle was named after its lord Avallach and is a place where |

| |spirits would take refuge but now Arthur is the only one to reside on it. Avalon comes |

| |from the legend started by Geoffrey of Monmouth. |

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|Bean Sidhe |A female spirit whose wailing warns of a death in a house; a |

| |woman of the fairies |

| |Pronounced: banshee; |

| |Alternate: ben side |

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|Bermuda Triangle |A segment of the Atlantic Ocean bordered by Bermuda, Puerto Rico and Fort Lauderdale |

| |form a triangle. The term Bermuda Triangle was not used until 1964 in a magazine but has|

| |also been nicknamed the Devils Triangle. This area is most famous for the disappearance |

| |of ships over the past few centuries and aircrafts within the past 60 years. Many |

| |theories exist from strange magnetic fields to alien involvement. |

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|Bigfoot |Is the name given to a creature or creatures thought to exist in wild and remote parts |

| |of North America.  These creatures are commonly referred to as Big Foot, but are also |

| |known as: Sasquach, Skunk Apes and Swamp Apes.  Apparently the first sighting of a |

| |Sasquatch by a white man happened in 1811 near what now is the town of Jasper, Alberta |

| |Canada. A trader called David Thompson found strange footprints, fourteen inches long |

| |and eight inches wide, with four toes, in the snow.  To date scientists continue to be |

| |defied by this creature and it has still not been positively identified by scientific |

| |authorities.  The animal is generally described as being large, hairy, around seven to |

| |nine feet tall, weighing between 600 and 900 pounds and ape-like in appearance, yet |

| |walking upright like a man. |

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| |In Canada the bigfoot is more often referred to as the Sasquach, which is Indian for |

| |"hairy giant" and the term is mentioned in several native American legends. |

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| |There is some evidence in the form of film footage, photographs and casts of footprints |

| |to suggest that Big Foot or Sasquach exists.  However sceptics insist these are simply |

| |clever hoaxes. |

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| |In 1967 Roger Patterson took film footage of a large hairy creature reported to be a |

| |Sasquatch.  However, there has been much speculation that it may have only been Mr. |

| |Patterson's tall associate Jerry Romney wearing a fur suit. |

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|Bogey Man |The bogeyman is the image of nightmares to many, when mentioned, for it represents the |

| |darkest of fears within everyone. In legends, the creature is described to be hideous |

| |and small in size and can be anywhere, such as in the closet or under the bed. The |

| |bogeyman has been known to have the abilities to shape change and disappear at a blink. |

| |In some stories, they are harmless but in others they are evil beings who snatch |

| |children from their beds. |

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|Cauldron |The cauldron is a symbol of transmutation, germination, and transformation. But above |

| |all it symbolizes the womb, and therefore, is a Goddess symbol as well. In Celtic lore |

| |the cauldron is the symbol of the Underworld. In Greek and Roman mythology the cauldron |

| |was hidden in a cave. From this, the cauldron is a mystery symbol of Wicca/Witchcraft. |

| |The Cauldron Mysteries are an integral part of the Wiccan Mythos. Some of the most |

| |famous cauldrons are found in Celtic lore. For example, the Dagda cauldron that provided|

| |sufficient food for everyone, and the cauldron of Bran the Blessed that conferred |

| |rebirth. There is also the Gundestrup cauldron. |

| | |

| |The belief that the cauldron symbolizes the womb of the Great Goddess arises from the |

| |concept that everything is born out of it and returns to it. The original cauldron |

| |symbols were gourds, wooden vessels, or large shells. Eventually the symbolism of metal |

| |cauldrons became linked to the hearth and home because they were used to cook meals. |

| |This latter aspect merged the Great Goddess with the Great Mother, as the cauldron |

| |combined them into a single deity. |

| | |

| |Cauldrons have held a magical significance in many cultures throughout the centuries. In|

| |ancient Ireland, it was believed, cauldrons were magically refilled with food during |

| |feasts. In ancient times they were used for human sacrifice, which was related to death |

| |and rebirth. In Greek mythology the Witch Medea restored people to youth in a magic |

| |cauldron. Some relate the cauldron to the Holy Grail (since the Grail is supposedly the |

| |chalice used by Christ at the Last Supper), and speculate this was why some Christians |

| |were not too eager to seek the Grail because of its association with the cauldron and |

| |the Goddess. |

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| |Also the caldron has alchemic associations to some of the vessels used by alchemists in |

| |their experiments. |

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| |Definition provided by The Mystica @ |

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|Celestial |Is a term which refers to something of, or relating to: heaven, the divine, or the |

| |spirit, for example: a heavenly being, a God or an angel.  The term can also refer to |

| |the supremely good or sublime for example, celestial happiness and celestial peace. |

| |Planets are described as celestial bodies as they also relate to the heavens and the |

| |sky. |

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|Centaurs |Centaurs exist in Greek mythology where they are described as having the body of a horse|

| |with the head and torso of a human. |

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|Chakra |The seven occult centres of life and consciousness in the spine and brain, which enliven|

| |the physical and astral bodies of man. These centres are referred to as chakras |

| |("wheels") because the concentrated energy in each one is like a hub from which radiate |

| |rays of life-giving light and energy. In ascending order, these chakras are muladhara |

| |(the coccygeal, at the base of the spine); svadhisthana (the sacral, two inches above |

| |muladhara); manipura (the lumber, opposite the navel); anahata (the dorsal, opposite the|

| |heart); vishuddha (the cervical, at the base of the neck); ajna (traditionally located |

| |between the eyebrows; in actuality, directly connected by polarity with the medulla) and|

| |sahasrara (in the uppermost part of the cerebrum). |

| |The seven chakras are divinely planned exits or "trap doors" through which the soul has |

| |descended into the body and through which must re-ascend by a process of meditation. By |

| |seven successive steps, the soul escapes into Cosmic Consciousness. In its conscious |

| |upward passage through the seven opened or "awakened" cerebrospinal centres, the soul |

| |travels the highway to the Infinite, the true path by which the soul must retrace its |

| |course to reunite with God. |

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|Channelling |An ability a person can use to summon ghosts or spirits and allow the entity to possess |

| |that person's body to communicate through. |

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|Charm |An object, act, or word(s) supposedly having occult or magic power; a thing worn to |

| |avert evil etc; an amulet |

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|Clairaudience |Clairaudience, which is similar to clairvoyance, is the psychic ability to hear things |

| |from afar. Both phenomena can occur in a normal state of consciousness, but also can be|

| |induced by drugs, fasting, illness, hyperesthesia, or scrying. The word Clairaudience |

| |means 'Clear Hearing'. |

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|Clairaudient |The psychic ability to hear voices and other auditory phenomena not present to ordinary |

| |hearing. |

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|Clairsentient |A Clairsentient is an individual who perceives (as in a "sixth-sense") by feeling or |

| |having knowledge about an object. A good example of this extreme psychic ability is that|

| |a clairsentient is able to visualize an item without seeing an image of the specific |

| |item. Like a radar detector, a clairsentient possesses the internal power to see and |

| |feel radiation from objects that are invisible and out of site. A clairsentient can read|

| |"auras" of people and objects to discover their personal histories. In doing so, a |

| |clairsentient can sometimes see visions of the future. Not only this, a clairsentient |

| |can even sense the presence of spirits and discover events surrounding that individual's|

| |death. |

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|Clairvoyance |Clairvoyance is the psychic ability or power to see objects, and visions, or to gain |

| |information regardless of its distance. The visions may also be in the future, and |

| |sometimes in the past. Clairvoyance is an umbrella term which often refers to telepathy,|

| |spiritualism, psychic research, second sight, prophetic visions, and dreams. |

| |Definition provided by The Mystica @ |

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|Cleansing |To make clean or purify from sin or guilt. With regards to paranormal – to make clean |

| |and purify negative energy from a home, an area, person or object |

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|Cold Spot |An area where the temperature is lower than the surrounding environment. Cold spots are |

| |believed to be created when a ghost is present within that area. |

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|Cord, Silver |An umbilical cord silver in appearance that is attached between the astral body and the |

| |physical body that has been reported as being observed by persons during out-of-body |

| |experiences (OBEs). In pioneer research of astral body projection this phenomena seemed |

| |common; however, later data tend to show it to be rare. British parapsychologist Celia |

| |Green reported that 3.5 percent of her subjects reported seeing the cord, while |

| |Australian psychical researcher Peter Picknell reported just 2 percent of his subjects |

| |observed it. |

| | |

| |Definition provided by The Mystica @ |

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|Crop circles |Cereology : in it's simplest form, a crop circle consists of a single circle, within |

| |which all the corn stems are flattened to the ground but not broken, simply bent at |

| |their base. |

| |Often the circle has an outer ring whose stems are also bent, but almost invariably in |

| |the opposite direction to those within the remainder of the circle. |

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|Cryptozoology |Cryptozoology is the study of hidden animals (whether large or small), to date not |

| |formally recognized by what is often termed Western science or formal zoology but |

| |supported in some way by testimony (in its broadest definition) from human beings. It is|

| |not an exact science as much of it goes beyond scientific explanation and more into the |

| |metasciences. |

| |The term 'cryptozoology' derives from the Greek word 'kryptos', meaning 'hidden', |

| |'unknown’, 'secret’, 'enigmatic’, 'mysterious'; hence literally the 'study of hidden |

| |life'. |

| |The term Cryptozoology was coined by Dr. Bernard Heuvelmans in his personal |

| |correspondence among colleagues in the 1950s, after the 1955 French publication of his |

| |book ‘On the Track of Unknown Animals’. The first published use of the word |

| |Cryptozoology was in 1959 by Lucien Blancou. |

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|Crystals |A mineral is by definition a crystal. A crystal is a substance that has a constant |

| |regular shape. Even when ground down the substance retains the shape of the original |

| |crystal it came from – microscopically. A gemstone is a mineral (crystal) that has |

| |properties such as colour to make them attractive, incorporating the colour vibration as|

| |well. For example Opal, Amber, Jet are considered gemstones. The stones emit an energy |

| |that is electromagnetic of nature. |

| |There are two types of crystal – one is man-made and the other is natural (grown in |

| |nature). Most are from Earth except Tektites or Moldavite, which are believed to come |

| |from outer space. The man-made crystal (Austrian, German and Bohemian) is really glass |

| |with approximately one-third lead oxide added to make it easier to cut and polish giving|

| |off the beautiful rainbow effect. These are great for bringing in the rainbow vibration.|

| |Natural Quartz Crystal is silicon dioxide and is one of the most widely found minerals |

| |in the Earth. It is mainly found as milky-white (Clear Quartz - feminine quality); clear|

| |(Clear Quartz - masculine quality); purple ranging in shades (Amethyst); yellow/gold |

| |(Citrine); pink (Rose Quartz) and smoky-grey to dark brown (Smoky Quartz). The quartz |

| |family does not only consist of these five crystals but these are the main ones with |

| |terminations or points at one or two ends. |

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|Curse |A solemn utterance intended to invoke a supernatural power to inflict destruction or |

| |punishment on a person or thing. Also the evil supposedly resulting from a curse; a |

| |thing that causes evil or harm |

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|Daemon |A guardian spirit who communicates inspiration and advice. See also Guardian Angel. |

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|Dead sea scrolls | |

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|Demon |There are those who believe that ghosts and spirits are actually demons in religions and|

| |legends. They are entities that existed on earth for thousands of years and are consumed|

| |with hatred and anger. These demons are evil and will bring harm or attack anyone they |

| |come across. |

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|Devil |In Christian and Jewish beliefs: the supreme spirit of evil; Satan. An evil spirit, a |

| |demon, a superhuman malignant being; a personified evil force or attribute. A wicked or |

| |cruel person; a mischievously energetic, clever, or self-willed person. |

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|Divination |From the earliest stages of civilization people have used various means of divination to|

| |communicate with the supernatural when seeking help in their public and private lives. |

| |Divination is most often practiced as a means of foretelling the future, and sometimes, |

| |the past. It is one of the primary practices used by witches, wizards, medicine men, |

| |sorcerers and shamans. These various groups of persons are often called diviners, who |

| |often belonged to special classes of priests and priestesses in past and present |

| |civilizations, and are specially trained in the practice and interpretation of their |

| |divinatory skills. |

| | |

| |The methodology for practicing the divinatory skills seems to divide into two |

| |categories: the first is the observation and interpretation on natural phenomena and the|

| |second is the observation and interpretation of man-made "voluntary" phenomena. Natural |

| |phenomena includes two major subcategories of activity: astrology, and hepatoscopy. To a|

| |lesser degree the observation of the following occurrences also can be listed under |

| |natural phenomena: unexpected storms, particular cloud formations, birth monstrosities |

| |in both man and animal, howling or unnatural actions in dogs, and night-marish dreams. |

| | |

| |Man-made or "voluntary" phenomena is defined as being deliberately produced for the sole|

| |purpose of soothsaying and includes such acts as necromancy, pouring oil into a basin of|

| |water to observe the formation of bubbles and rings in the receptacle, shooting arrows, |

| |casting lots, and numerous other acts. |

| | |

| |The ancient Romans favoured augury and haruspicy. The Egyptians, Druids, and Hebrews |

| |relied on scrying. The Druids also read death throes and entrails of sacrificed animals.|

| | |

| |The Greeks had their oracle which spoke for the gods. In the Middle Ages grain, sand or |

| |peas were tossed onto a field in order to read the patterns after the substances fell. |

| |As far back as 1000 BC. the Chinese had "I CHING," an oracle which involved the tossing |

| |and reading of long short yarrow sticks. Another ancient Chinese divinatory practice |

| |which is still used is "feng-shui," or geomancy, which involves the erecting of |

| |buildings, tombs, and other physical structures by determining the currents of invisible|

| |energy coursing through the earth. Presently people also are using this principle for |

| |the arrangement of furniture in their homes. |

| | |

| |Many divinatory methods are still used today, especially in paganism, witchcraft, voodoo|

| |and Santeria. Most Christians would probably disagree but prayer might also be |

| |considered a divinatory act. Many practitioners today do not feel signs of divination |

| |are absolute or fixed, but believe they still have free choices in their future. They |

| |believe divination helps them in making better choices |

| | |

| |Definition provided by The Mystica @ |

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|Doppelganger |An exact copy of a persons soul would appear which, in legend, would foretell of one's |

| |own death. The spirit would at times roam freely into the world as a copy of a person |

| |and ?? sometimes ?? can take a physical form. There is a warning that if a person meets|

| |up with his or her doppelganger, death will soon follow. |

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|Dowsing |A technique to locate a person, object, or substance by using a stick, pendulum, etc. |

| |Dowsing has been used to find water, coal and even in treatments for illness. The |

| |technique has been around since ancient Egypt and was practiced in times of war to find |

| |mines. |

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|Dragons |Dragons are one of the most common images in folklore and mythology throughout the |

| |world. It exists in every culture as something to be feared or praised and even today |

| |has become a well known source for fantasy. The common characteristics of dragons with |

| |all legends are huge serpents with large fangs and ??hours??, covered with scales that |

| |could be red, black, green or gold. The western dragons are said to have bat-like wings |

| |while the eastern ones are described as wingless. The most accepted belief of dragons |

| |is that they are magical creatures who can fly and breathe fire. |

|[pic] |

|Druid |An ancient Celtic priest, magician, or soothsayer of Gaul, Britain or Ireland. A member |

| |of a Welsh Druidic order, esp. The Gorsedd. A member of any of various groups that are |

| |held to be present-day representatives of ancient druidism. |

| | |

| |Knowledge of the druids is based chiefly on the hostile accounts of them in the writings|

| |of Julius Caesar and Tacitus. Caesar reports that they had judicial and priestly |

| |functions, and were proficient in physical science; they also worshipped in groves |

| |(clearings in the forest), cut mistletoe from the sacred oak with a golden sickle, and |

| |were believed to offer human sacrifices. The religion was stamped out by the Romans |

| |with unrelenting ferocity. Druidism of the roman period may well have contained |

| |elements of older faiths and, although its association with Stonehenge is now generally |

| |rejected, the modern druidical order seeks to make ceremonial use of this and other |

| |sites. |

|[pic] |

|Druidess |see druid |

| | |

| | |

|E |

| | |

|Ectoplasm |A semi-fluid substance believed to be created when a ghost or spirit materializes into a|

| |form. |

| |Etheric Projection is believed to be the commonest form of astral projection and the |

| |term that is most often confused with it.  Etheric projection is said to be the result |

| |of a conscious effort to separate from the physical body.  Unlike astral projection this|

| |time the etheric body stays on the physical plane but simply separates from the physical|

| |body.  It is often reported by persons who have experienced this phenomena that they |

| |find themselves next to their physical bodies or floating above them.  Subjects often |

| |report the ability to move at speed across rooms, streets, cities, even counties and |

| |planets on the physical plane that their bodies normally exist in.  As with astral |

| |projection the etheric body is said to operate at a higher frequency so this enables it |

| |to move through solid objects such as doors or walls.  In many respects it is similar to|

| |an out of body experience, the main difference being that etheric projection is achieved|

| |by a conscious effort to do it. |

|[pic] |

|Electrokinesis |Is the term used to describe the generation of electricity from the mind. This |

| |electricity can then be used to do a variety of things, such as charging watches and |

| |batteries. Electrokinesis is the purported ability to manipulate electricity and |

| |electrical phenomena via conscious will alone. Like most paranormal subjects, these |

| |claims have not been scientifically verified. Even among the psychic community, claims |

| |of possessing such ability are rarely made. |

|[pic] |

|Elemental Spirits |A spirit associated with one of the classical four elements (fire, earth, air and |

| |water). See also animism. |

|[pic] |

|EMF |Electro Magnetic Field is believed to be generated by the presence of a ghost or other |

|Electro-magnetic field |entity that can be detected by using EMF detectors. Paranormal investigation claims the |

| |unexplained EMF reading can be used as evidence of ghosts. |

|[pic] |

|Empath |Someone who shows considerable empathy, especially of the apparently psychic type. |

|[pic] |

|Entity |An entity is something that has a distinct, separate existence, though it need not be a |

| |material existence. It could be a company, organization, etc. In general, there is also |

| |no presumption that an entity is animate. |

|[pic] |

|ESP |Extra Sensory Perception. This describes the possible ability of some people (or |

| |sometimes, it is said we all have this ability to a degree,) to have psychic abilities. |

| |Some say that this ability is like the senses of touch, smell or sight but remains |

| |undeveloped in most people. |

|[pic] |

|Etheric |The energetic counterpart of the physical body, composed of seven major centres |

| |(chakras) and 49 minor centres, a network which connects all the centres, and |

| |infinitesimally small threads of energy (nadis) which underlie every part of the nervous|

| |system. The etheric body penetrates the entire living thing, it is united and not |

| |composed of separate parts as is the human body, and it maintains life. However, just as|

| |the etheric body gives life to the physical body, the astral body, the third part of |

| |man, gives life to the etheric body. |

|[pic] |

|Evil |Morally bad; wicked. Harmful or tending to harm, esp. intentionally or |

| |characteristically. Disagreeable or unpleasant. Unlucky, causing misfortune. An evil |

| |thing, an instance of something evil. |

|[pic] |

|Evil Eye |The evil eye is a belief that a person possesses the supernatural ability to bring harm,|

| |bad luck or death by just glancing. This power comes from black magic where a person can|

| |cast spells or summon evil spirits by simply looking. Protective devices such as |

| |amulets, magical signs, mirrors, etc, were started from the fear of the evil eye. |

|[pic] |

|EVP |Electronic Voice Phenomena. It is the recorded voices or sounds from sources believed to|

| |be the dead where there is no other physical presence around the area that could produce|

| |the audio recording. |

|[pic] |

|Excalibur |Excalibur exists in the legends of King Arthur Pendragon as the Sword in the Stone. The |

| |sword was said to possess supernatural powers that Arthur used to become King and defeat|

| |his enemies. When the Pendragon was killed in battle he had Excalibur returned to the |

| |Lady of the Lake to await for his return. |

|[pic] |

|Exorcism |An Exorcism is the expulsion of troublesome evil spirits, ghosts or demons believed to |

| |interfere with the mental, physical and spiritual health of human beings by special |

| |rites. These rites exist within many cultures and societies performed by those trained |

| |in the necessary skills, such as priest, shaman or medicine woman. |

|[pic] |

|Exorcist |An exorcist is any one who exorcises or professes to exorcise a demon from a place or a |

| |person believed to be possessed. The common image of the exorcist is a priest, most |

| |likely from the Roman Catholic Church. But they also include shamans, medicine men or |

| |women, healers, psychics or anyone performing an exorcism. |

|[pic] |

|Extraterrestrial |Originating beyond planet earth. |

| | |

| | |

|F |

| | |

|Fairy |Small, human-like mythical being. May be benevolent or malevolent. |

|[pic] |

|Fairy Mound |One of the megalithic tombs the gods were supposed to live in. |

|[pic] |

|Fairy Ring |A fairy ring or fairy circle, also known as a pixie ring, is a naturally occurring ring |

| |or arc of mushrooms. The rings may grow over ten meters in diameter and become stable |

| |over time as the fungus grows and seeks food underground. Even if no mushrooms are |

| |present, the underground presence of the fungus may sometimes be detected by observing |

| |the withering of grass directly above. |

|[pic] |

|Faith Healing |The ability to heal oneself and others by simply believing it can be done. |

|[pic] |

|Fey |A Welsh term for fairy-like qualities, usually of clairvoyant nature. fated, bewitched, |

| |unlucky, one who’s fate is known or prophesised. Faerie folk. Slightly insane. |

|[pic] |

|Flying Saucer |A term, coined in 1947, to refer to unknown disk-like aerial objects, often believed to |

| |be extraterrestrial spacecraft. The term has now been largely superseded by "UFO". |

| | |

| | |

|G |

| | |

|Ghost | |

|[pic] |

|Ghost Phenomena |Activities or phenomena that can be classified as coming from or being related to a |

| |ghost. Things such as phantom footsteps, unexplained sounds, objects moved without human|

| |intervention, apparitions, etc. The phenomena is usually related to a haunting but this |

| |is not always the case as ghostly phenomena can (apparently) happen almost anywhere to |

| |anyone. |

|[pic] |

|Ghost Ship |The appearance of a ship known to have been wrecked before, either years or centuries |

| |ago, to forewarn of impending disaster. This term has also been used to refer to ships |

| |found to be empty where the crew and passages had mysterious disappeared. |

|[pic] |

|Ghost vehicle |Trucks, cars or other land vehicles that suddenly appear on the road travelling at high|

| |speeds, then to only disappear. They are said to be the spirits of those who died in |

| |traffic accidents repeating their deaths. |

|[pic] |

|God |A superhuman being or spirit worshipped as having power over nature, human fortunes, |

| |etc.; a deity |

| |An image, idol, animal, or other object worshipped as divine or symbolizing a god |

| |In Christian and other monotheistic religions- the creator and ruler of the universe; |

| |the supreme being. |

|[pic] |

|Goddess |a female deity |

|[pic] |

|Guardian |Ghosts or spirits who appear to the living to warn of danger or offer guidance. They are|

| |usually deceased love ones who appear to a family member or a friend to offer aid in |

| |moments of distress. Also can refer to spiritual guides. |

| | |

| | |

|H |

| | |

|Haunting |A phenomena where the spirit or the ghost of a deceased continues to revisit or remain |

| |within a certain location causing paranormal activities such as appearing, sounds, |

| |inducing smells, etc. A haunting is often repeated and experienced by those who enter |

| |the area. |

| |The unexplained appearance of an image of a person, animal or inanimate object. When an |

| |"Apparition" appears, it may not behave intelligently (it may not try to interact with |

| |you or even recognize you are there). This kind of "ghost" may simply go through the |

| |same motions again and again, like a replay of past events. It seems that the |

| |environment has a memory and has recorded these events. Under certain conditions, |

| |possibly related to weather, our moods and emotions, the environment replays the event, |

| |with more emotion-laden ones coming through "louder" and "stronger". This can be thought|

| |of as a loop of video or audio tape playing itself over and over. While you see the |

| |event, you cannot interact with the "ghost". It is also a kind of “catch all” phrase to |

| |describe any place that is paranormally active. |

|[pic] |

|Henge |a large Neolithic monument consisting of a circular bank and ditch, and frequently |

| |containing a circle of standing stones, eg: Stonehenge, Avebury |

|[pic] |

|Holy Grail |The holy grail is mostly known in the Arthurian legends as the cup that Jesus Christ |

| |used during the last supper that was brought to Britain by Joseph of Arimathea. |

|[pic] |

|Hypnoanalysis |The use of hypnotherapy to develop personal insight and self-awareness in order thereby |

| |to bring about a therapeutic result. (Deriv. from 'hypno-' and '(psycho)analysis.') |

|[pic] |

|Hypnosis |Hypnotic trance; an altered state of awareness ('trance') in which unconscious or |

| |dissociated responses to suggestion are enhanced in quality and increased in degree |

| |('hyper-suggestibility'). |

| |Hypnotic induction ('hypnogenesis'); the process by which hypnotic trance is induced in |

| |the operator ('auto-' or 'self-hypnosis') or in others ('hetero-hypnosis'). |

| |Hypnotism; the field of study which encompasses, among other things, hypnotic trance; |

| |its induction, management, and application; and related subjects such as the phenomena |

| |of 'waking suggestion' and naturally occurring ('hypnoidal') trance states. (Abbrv. of |

| |'neuro-hypnotism' meaning 'sleep of the nervous system.') |

|[pic] |

|Hypnotherapy |The use of therapeutic techniques or principles in conjunction with hypnosis. |

| | |

| | |

|I |

| |

|Incubus |(n) A male demon believed to lie on sleeping persons and to have sexual intercourse with|

| |sleeping women. One of a race of highly improper demons who, though probably not wholly |

| |extinct, may be said to have seen their best nights. |

| |A situation resembling a terrifying dream. |

| |Someone who depresses or worries others. |

| |For a complete account of incubi and succubi, including |

| |incubae and succubae, see the Liber Demonorum of Protassus (Paris, 1328), which contains|

| |much curious information. |

| |Victor Hugo relates that in the Channel Islands Satan himself -- |

| |tempted more than elsewhere by the beauty of the women, doubtless --sometimes plays at |

| |_incubus_, greatly to the inconvenience and alarm of the good dames who wish to be loyal|

| |to their marriage vows, generally speaking. A certain lady applied to the parish priest|

| |to learn how they might, in the dark, distinguish the hardy intruder from their |

| |husbands. The holy man said they must feel his brow for horns; but Hugo is ungallant |

| |enough to hint a doubt of the efficacy of the test. |

|[pic] |

|Instinct |An inborn pattern of behaviour that is characteristic of a species and is often a |

| |response to specific environmental stimuli. |

| |A powerful motivation or impulse. |

| |An innate capability or aptitude. |

|[pic] |

|Inter-dimensional portal |A portal (often hidden, camouflaged, or unreachable) through which translocation into |

| |other realms may be possible. |

| |The act of translocating into other worlds spontaneously, or via a |

| |Zwischenweltdurchgang. |

| |Verb (intransitive): to travel to another dimension/realm/world/planet. |

|[pic] |

|Intuition |Instinctive knowing (without the use of rational processes) |

| |An impression that something might be the case; [syn: hunch, suspicion] |

| | |

| | |

|J |

| |

|Jinn |In Arabian and Muslim folklore jinns are ugly and evil demons having supernatural powers|

| |which they can bestow on persons having powers to call them up. In the Western world |

| |they are called genies. |

| | |

| |In the Old Testament King Solomon had a ring, probably a diamond, with which he called |

| |up Jinns to help his armies in battle. The concept that this king employed the help of |

| |jinns probably originated from 1 Kings 6:7, "And the house, when it was in building, was|

| |built of stone made ready before it was brought there, so there was neither hammer nor |

| |axe nor tool of iron heard in the house, while it was in building." |

| | |

| |In Islam, Jinns are fiery spirits (Qur'an 35. 15) particularly associated with the |

| |desert. While they are disruptive of human life, they are considered worthy of being |

| |saved. A person dying in a state of great sin may be changed into a Jinn in the period |

| |of a barzakh, separation or barrier. |

| | |

| |The highest of the Jinns is Iblis, formerly called Azazel, the prince of darkness, or |

| |the Devil. The Jinns were thought by some to be spirits that are lower than angels |

| |because they are made of fire and are not immortal. They can take on human and animal |

| |shapes to influence men to do good or evil. They are quick to punish those indebted to |

| |them who do not follow their many rules. |

| | |

| |Definition provided by The Mystica @ |

| | |

| | |

|K |

| |

|Karma |The law of cause and effect. Religious doctrine that each rebirth in the cycle of lives |

| |is based on the sum of the merit accumulated by an individual during his previous lives.|

| |Karma establishes the general tendency of a life but does not determine specific |

| |actions. In each life, the interaction between individual character and previously |

| |established karma forms the karma of succeeding lives. Literally, action. Spiritual |

| |merit or demerit that a being acquired in a previous incarnation and is acquiring in |

| |present existence. A basic concept common to Hinduism, Buddhism, and New Age groups. The|

| |doctrine holds that one’s state in this life is the result of physical and mental |

| |actions in past incarnations and that present action can determine one’s destiny in |

| |future incarnations. Karma is a natural, impersonal law of moral cause and effect. |

|[pic] |

|Karmic debt |Something you supposedly owe another person - or they owe you from another time line. |

|[pic] |

|King Arthur |Around the 5th century, Britain was in chaos as kingdoms fought for power and raiders |

| |ravage the land. Arthur Pendragon became king by pulling Excalibur from the stone and |

| |brought order to the land. He united the people of Britain and drove all his enemies off|

| |the land. Camelot was Arthur's kingdom but as quickly as it appeared it also ended |

| |along with the king's life during a civil war. There are many legends and stories of |

| |Arthur that have been told throughout the centuries and yet to this day no one can prove|

| |whether Arthur Pendragon was real or not. |

|[pic] |

|Kirlian Photography |A photographic process that captures the auras or biofields of persons or objects within|

| |the photograph. The technique involves the photographing of subjects in the presence of |

| |a high-frequency, high-voltage, low-amperage-electrical field, which display glowing, |

| |multicoloured emanations known as auras or biofields. |

| | |

| |The process of Kirlian photography is named after Seymon Kirlian, an amateur inventor |

| |and electrician of Krasnodar, Russia, who pioneered the first efforts on the process in |

| |the early 1940s. Even though the process has produced results it still is controversial.|

| | |

| | |

| |There seems to be no evidence that Kirlian photography is a paranormal phenomenon. Some |

| |experimenters think it reveals a physical form of psychic energy. Another theory is that|

| |it reveals the etheric body, one of the layers of the aura thought to permeate all |

| |animate objects. The understanding of this latter aspect of the process gives rise to |

| |the prospects of beneficial benefits of gaining significant insights in medicine, |

| |psychology, psychic healing, psi, and dowsing. Critics repudiate the process by saying |

| |that it shows nothing more than electricity being discharged which can be produced under|

| |certain conditions. |

| | |

| |Experiments in photographing objects in electrical fields, prior to Kirlian, was called |

| |"electrography" or "electrographic photography." Little value was seen in the process, |

| |so scant attention was given to it. Electrographic photographs were exhibited as early |

| |as 1898 by the Russian Yakov Narkevich Yokdo (also given as Todko). Research in the |

| |fields was published by a Czech, B. Narvratil, also in the early 1900s. The published |

| |evidence of photographs of leaves coronas was presented by two Czechs, S. Pratt and J. |

| |Schlemmer, in 1939. |

| | |

| |The initial Kirlian experiments were simple. In his first experiment Kirlian just |

| |photographed his hand, noting a strange orange glow radiating from the fingertips. His |

| |wife Valentina was a biologist, and together they photographed both animate and |

| |inanimate objects. Over the years, they refined their equipment and graduated from black|

| |and white to colored photography. |

| | |

| |The principle of Kirlian photography, as well as all electrography, is the corona |

| |discharge phenomenon, that takes place when an electrically grounded object discharges |

| |sparks between itself and an electrode generating the electrical field. When these |

| |sparks are captured on film they give the appearance of coronas of light. These |

| |discharges can be affected by temperature, moisture, pressure, or other environmental |

| |factors. Several Kirlian techniques have been developed, but the basic ones generally |

| |employ a Tesla coil connected to a metal plate. The process is similar to the one which |

| |occurs in nature, when electrical conditions in the atmosphere produce luminescence’s |

| |and auras, such as St. Elmo's fire. |

| | |

| |Kirlian's work mainly gained attention in the west during the 1960’s. Its reception was |

| |mixed. However, scientists met on the process at Alma Ata in 1966. Biophysicist Viktor |

| |Adamenko theorized that the energy field was the "cold emission of electrons," and the |

| |patterns they formed might suggest new information concerning the life processes of |

| |animate objects. One finding of Adamenko and other Soviet scientists was that the |

| |biological energies of human beings were brightest at 700 points on the body which |

| |concurs with Chinese acupuncture. |

| | |

| |There is evidence that Kirlian photographs do give indications of the health and |

| |emotional changes in living things by changes in the brightness, colour, and patterns of|

| |light. At the University of California Center for Health Sciences, a plant's leaf showed|

| |changes when being approached by a human hand and pricked. Even when part of the leaf |

| |was cut off, the glowing portion of the amputated portion still appeared on film. |

| | |

| |Other researchers have found that changes in the emotional conditions of humans can be |

| |detected by changes in the brightness, colour and formation patterns in the photographs.|

| |When psychic healers and the psychokinetic metal-bender Uri Geller were photographed |

| |flares of light were seen streaming from their fingertips as they performed their |

| |respective activities. |

| | |

| |Many Kirlian enthusiasts declare that the leaf phenomenon is evidence for the existence|

| |of an etheric body. But, critics state the phenomenon completely disproves Kirlin |

| |photography. The latter contention is that "If the method truly photographed a biofield,|

| |then the aura should disappear when an organism dies. The effect is produced solely by a|

| |high-voltage electric field breakdown of air molecules between two condenser plates." |

| | |

| |Supporters of Kirlian photography do, however, foresee its applications in diagnostic |

| |medicine. It has been used in the detection of cancer with only a sporadic success rate.|

| |Some envision that it will eventually be connected to computerized tomography (CT) |

| |scanners (advanced versions of axial tomography or CAT scanners, which utilize a thin |

| |beam of X-rays to photograph an object from 360 degrees) and magnetic resonance imaging |

| |(MRI). This latter method uses no X-rays, but employs magnetic fields to produce images |

| |of body cells and water in tissues. |

| | |

| |Kirlian photography has been used by the Soviets in sports psychology to access an |

| |athlete's metabolic process and fitness |

| | |

| |Definition provided by The Mystica @ |

| | |

| | |

|L |

| |

|Legend |A story about mythical or supernatural beings or events. |

| |A traditional story sometimes popularly regarded as historical but unauthenticated; a |

| |myth |

| |A popular but unfounded belief. |

| |A person about whom unauthenticated tales are told; a famous or notorious person. |

|[pic] |

|Levitation |The ability to raise a person or an object into the air and float with means that would |

| |only be considered as supernatural. Levitation defies gravity when something hovers in |

| |the air without any devices to suspend or support it. |

|[pic] |

|Leys |Leys, pronounced "lays", are thought to be patterns of invisible tracks or lines having |

| |a complex power in the ground which seems to link sacred places and natural magical |

| |sites. It is theorized, in modern witchcraft and neo-paganism, that these patterns or |

| |alignments are vital for their apparent connection to the forces of the elements, the |

| |basis of natural magic. |

| | |

| |The original leys theory was put forth in 1925 by Alfred Watkins (b.1855) in his book |

| |‘The Old Straight Track’ published in London in 1925. Originally the term leys was |

| |thought by philologists to mean only a pasture or an enclosed field. However, Watkins |

| |challenged this meaning in his work. |

| | |

| |Watkins described the various place-named forms of the term occurring in the world, |

| |"lay," "lee." "lea," or "leigh." From these different word forms he concluded the term |

| |leys predates the terms pasture and enclosed field. Furthermore, Watkins observed that |

| |man-made sacred places such as burial grounds, megoliths, churches, and pagan |

| |worshipping sites, as well as natural peaks, magical springs and wells, and other |

| |earthworks seem to align with one and another. |

| | |

| |The leys, as Watkins named these alignments, had been "old straight tracks" discovered |

| |by prehistoric ley hunters, or Dodman surveyors, who scouted and mapped the countryside |

| |seeking to find power spots for sacred constructions, trading routes, and astronomical |

| |sites. Watkins' listings of such sites for alignment is controversial because he not |

| |only included sites of prehistoric societies, but also those of pre-Reformation |

| |churches. |

| | |

| |Three years after the publication of The Old Straight Track in which he documented his |

| |investigations which tended to show a vast network of tracks across Britain, aligned |

| |with either the sun or a star path, he claimed evidence of the existence of similar |

| |tracks in various parts of the world. |

| | |

| |Although most scientists reject the concept, the leys idea enjoyed popularity until the |

| |1940’s and then decreased. It was not until the 1960’s and 1970’s that it revived. |

| |Speculation is that the latter was mainly due to the increase in psychic and occult |

| |interests. Some use the term ley lines when referring to leys which many feel is |

| |inappropriate. |

| | |

| |Not all alignments signify genuine leys. Modern ley-hunters who map leys have |

| |established some requirements: there is a straight line within a certain distance |

| |extending between two or more aligned sites, such as a standing stone, a church site, a |

| |pagan sacred site, a burial mound, or a mountain, etc. Some alignments are astronomical,|

| |such as where the sun rises at Beltane, the solstices or equinoxes. Some ley-hunters say|

| |at least five alignments within ten miles are required, while others say five within 25 |

| |miles. In addition, dowsers require the energy line be dowsable. |

| | |

| |Points of leys, or leys centres, are places which radiate energy from at least seven |

| |lines over magnetic fields or blind springs, a primary spiral of converging primary |

| |geodetic lines (the shortest lines between two points on a curved surface). There is |

| |speculation that ancient pagan people sensed these points of energy radiation and |

| |situated their sacred worshipping places atop or around them. |

| | |

| |The vital force of the energy charge is classed as either male or female depending on |

| |its rate of vibration, and it is believed to be present in all living material. This |

| |charge may be natural or artificial. In centres the artificial charge can be introduced |

| |by handling of stones or metals. Whether natural or artificial, charges dissipate over |

| |time unless they are fixed by hammering, heating, or a magnetic field is present. |

| | |

| |Stones themselves can be charged and fixed with a certain magnitude of charge or power. |

| |This has been stated by J. Havelock Fidler, a British agricultural scientist and dowser.|

| |The stones employed in constructing megalithic monuments, churches, holy wells and |

| |temples are charged by handling, and then fixed by being shaped and fitted in place by |

| |blows from axes and chisels. Fidler said the stone's charge was increased according to |

| |the number of blows it received. |

| | |

| |Therefore, the charge in megaliths was considered to be very great. Also, helping to |

| |increase the megalithic charge, Fidler speculated, was the raising of the cone of power |

| |by witches and pagans. During his experiments Fidler discovered he could impact greater |

| |charges to stones during the full moon, the time of greatest magical and psychic power. |

| | |

| |According to British folklore, the ground itself can be charged and fixed. There was an |

| |ancient custom known as "beating the parish bounds." The priest and choirboys of a |

| |church would go around the parish perimeter using rods with which they would beat the |

| |ground. Presumably this procedure was believed to erect a protective barrier around the |

| |parish. |

| | |

| |It is thought fire also fixes a charge. Charges were found at cremation pits, burials |

| |(such as those at Stonehenge), sacrificial pits, and the burning of wood. |

| | |

| |Also, Fidler discovered that while the geomagnetic forces surrounding the ley centres |

| |emit beneficial energy, the stones themselves seem to emit a type of energy detrimental |

| |to animate objects. This latter energy is apparently counteracted by the leys |

| |themselves, which redirect the energy to other centres where it can be neutralized. |

| | |

| |Charges at one time may have been deliberately masked. Certain types of wood, such as |

| |elm and elderberry; metals such as iron; and mineral substances such as salt, quartz |

| |crystals, amethyst, jasper and flint have been shown to mask charged stones. (It is |

| |interesting to note that iron, salt, elm, and elderberry are all revered in folklore for|

| |their protective properties against bewitchment, illness, demons and bad fortune.) |

| | |

| |Definition provided by The Mystica @ |

| | |

| | |

|M |

| |

|Manifestation |A clear appearance; |

| |A manifest indication of the existence or presence or nature of some person or thing; |

| |Materialisation: an appearance in bodily form (as of a disembodied spirit) |

| |An expression: expression without words; |

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|Medium |Person believed to act as a bridge between the dead and the living. They act as the |

| |relay for a spirit who is communicating. |

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|Merlin |Merlin is part of the legends of King Arthur and Excalibur going back around the 5th |

| |century. He is described as a wizard, enchanter and a prophet who planned Arthur’s birth|

| |and climb to the throne of England. As part of the story goes, Merlin was born of no |

| |mortal father in which his parent was said to be either a demon or a nature spirit. |

| |There are many oral and written tales of the man. |

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|Mermaid |A legendary sea creature with a woman’s head and upper body and a fish’s tail – in early|

| |use the mermaid is often identified with the siren of classical mythology, a beautiful |

| |feminine being who beguiles unsuspecting sailors to their destruction; until the 18th |

| |century there were reports of sightings in many parts of the world. The mermaid is |

| |conventionally depicted (esp. in heraldry) with long flowing golden hair and a comb in |

| |the left hand and a mirror in the right. Some sailors claim to have seen mermaids; what|

| |they actually saw are probably manatees. A freshwater mermaid-like creature having two |

| |tails is a Melusine, or a Nixie. |

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|Monolith |Single stone block, monument or pillar. This word comes from the Greek monos(one) and |

| |lithos(stone) |

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|Monotheistic |The belief of honouring Divine Unity. A religion with only one God. |

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|Myth |A traditional story accepted as history; serves to explain the world view of a people. |

| |A myth is often thought to be a lesson in story form which has deep explanatory or |

| |symbolic resonance for preliterate cultures, who preserve and cherish the wisdom of |

| |their elders through oral traditions by the use of skilled story tellers. |

| |An anonymous tale emerging from the traditional beliefs of a culture or social unit. |

| |Myths use supernatural explanations for natural phenomena. They may also explain cosmic |

| |issues like creation and death. Collections of myths, known as mythologies, are common |

| |to all cultures and nations, but the best-known myths belong to the Norse, Roman, and |

| |Greek mythologies. A famous myth is the story of Arachne, an arrogant young girl who |

| |challenged a goddess, Athena, to a weaving contest; when the girl won, Athena was |

| |enraged and turned Arachne into a spider, thus explaining the existence of spiders. |

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|N |

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|Nature Spirits |Those imperfectly evolved elementals or elemental spirits which in their unthinkably |

| |vast aggregate form the entire background of all the manifested cosmos in its seven-, |

| |ten-, or twelve-fold ranges of being. The beings in hierarchies further advanced in |

| |evolution than the human kingdom are termed dhyani-chohans. The nature spirits of the |

| |three higher cosmic planes are of incomprehensibly greater power as well as even |

| |possibly of lofty spiritual and intellectual development than those of the four lower |

| |cosmic planes, although unevolved monads or spiritual elementals exist in multitudinous |

| |hosts on these three spiritual cosmic planes likewise. |

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|Nostradamus |Name of Michel de Nostradame (1503-66). French Astrologer and Physician. His |

| |predictions, in the form of rhymed quatrains, appeared in two collections (1555; 1558). |

| |Cryptic and apocalyptic in tone, they were given extensive credence at the French court,|

| |where Nostradamus was, for a time, personal physician to Charles IX. Their |

| |interpretation has continued to be the subject of controversy into the 21st century. |

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|O |

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|Occult |Eclipse: cause an eclipse of (a celestial body) by intervention; Become concealed or |

| |hidden from view or have its light extinguished; |

| |Supernatural: supernatural forces and events and beings collectively; |

| |Hidden and difficult to see; |

| |Occult practices and techniques; |

| |Mysterious: having an import not apparent to the senses nor obvious to the intelligence;|

| |beyond ordinary understanding; |

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|Occultism |Philosophical system of theories and practices on, and for the attainment of, the higher|

| |powers of mind and spirit. Its practical side connects with psychical phenomena. |

| |The study and/or practice of that which is occult, especially (in this century) in |

| |reference to the powers of the mind. |

| |The study of the supernatural. A belief in supernatural powers and the possibility of |

| |bringing them under human control. |

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|OOBE |OOBE (Out of Body Experience) is probably one of the most reported and documented forms |

| |of astral projection.  It is thought to be when a person's consciousness leaves the |

| |physical body.  Out of body experiences are often associated with accidents or |

| |anesthesia. An example of this is the case where a patient on an operating table will |

| |report being able to see and hear the entire operation including the surgeons, from a |

| |vantage point above the table. Here the consciousness is said to have left the physical |

| |body, but will remain close. |

| |Another example of this kind of projection, it is said, can occur when an accident |

| |abruptly halts the physical body, with the non-physical body continuing on in the |

| |direction it was going. This type of sudden halt projection is also believed to be |

| |invoked by falling off a ladder, falling in the street, fainting, etc.  In these cases |

| |the projection of the non-physical body is involuntary and not a conscious choice, and |

| |usually the physical body is believed to be unconscious for the duration of the |

| |experience. |

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|Orb | |

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|Ouija board |An instrument which allegedly can be used to contact or channel spirits of the deceased.|

| |A modern day Ouija board is usually a wooden or cardboard device, inscribed with the |

| |alphabet, the words 'yes', 'no', 'hello', 'goodbye' and the numbers 0 to 9. There is |

| |usually a slide-able piece of apparatus on rotating castors or wheels with a pointer. |

| |The operators of the board lightly place their fingers on the slide-able device and wait|

| |for it to move. When the pointer comes into contact with, or moves over one of the |

| |letters, numbers or words printed on the board it is attributed to spirit communication.|

| |A game using a board which is marked with letters, numbers and the words "yes" and "no."|

| |A pointer on a raised platform selects a character or word. One or two players place |

| |their fingers on the platform, which moves -- apparently by magic. Many conservative |

| |Christians believe that this game is profoundly evil and dangerous and that the pointer |

| |is moved by demonic forces. Scientists who have studied the physics of the board have |

| |generally concluded that the pointer is unconsciously moved by the players. |

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|P |

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|Pagan |A heathen: not acknowledging the God of Christianity and Judaism and Islam |

| |A person who does not acknowledge your God |

| |A practitioner of an Earth Religion; from the Latin paganus, a country dweller. |

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|Palmistry |Is the broad field of divination and interpretation of the lines and structure of the |

| |hand. |

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|Paranormal |Beyond the normal of human or scientific explanation. |

| |Phenomena that are out of the realm of that which is explainable through conventional |

| |science. |

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|Pendulum |A divinatory tool, consisting of a device hanging from a string; and the deciphering of |

| |its movement. This tool contacts the Psychic Mind. |

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|Philology |The study of ancient texts and languages. |

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|Phobia |An abnormal fear or aversion |

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|Plancette |Pointing device used to indicate choices on an Ouija board |

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|Polytheistic |The belief of honouring the Divine through various God and Goddess forms or aspects. |

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|Portal  |A door, entrance or gateway |

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|Possessed |Influenced or controlled by a powerful force such as a strong emotion; |

| |Amuck: in a murderous frenzy as if possessed by a demon. |

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|Premonition |Knowing something is going to happen before it happens. Premonitions can be both |

| |negative and positive. |

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|Prophesy  |A prophetic utterance, esp. biblical |

| |A prediction of future events, the faculty, function or practice of prophesying |

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|Prophet |A person who foretells events |

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|Psychic |(of a person) considered to have occult powers, such as telepathy, clairvoyance, etc; |

| |eg: a medium |

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|Psychometry |The ability to receive & interpret vibrations from inanimate places & things. The |

| |practice of gaining paranormal insights or knowledge from a physical object which is |

| |used as a focus. |

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|Q |

| |

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|R |

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|Reincarnation |The belief in the birth and rebirth of a person's soul over and over again in different |

| |human bodies throughout history. Some forms of reincarnation include incarnations into |

| |animals, plants, or inanimate objects. The purpose of reincarnation is to allow the |

| |individual to learn spiritual lessons through life so that he/she may return to God from|

| |whence the soul came. Reincarnation is closely tied to Karma. |

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|Religion |The belief in a superhuman controlling power, esp. in a personal god or gods entitled to|

| |obedience and worship. |

| |The expression of this in worship |

| |A particular system of faith and worship |

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|Remote Viewing |The ability to perceive people, places, events, and objects by directing the |

| |consciousness to any destination provided via specified coordinates. There is no limit |

| |as to whether it's current or past, large or small, near or far. Developed largely by |

| |Ingo Swann working under contract for SRI International, formerly known as Stanford |

| |Research Institute. |

| |A form of clairvoyance by which a viewer is said to use his or her clairvoyant abilities|

| |to "view" that which is hidden from the physical view of the viewer. |

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|Ritual |A prescribed order of performing rites |

| |A procedure regularly followed or done as a ritual or rites |

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| | |

|S |

| |

|Sage |A mentor in spiritual and philosophical topics who is renowned for profound wisdom |

| |Having wisdom that comes with age and experience |

| |Aromatic fresh or dried gray-green leaves used widely as seasoning for meats and for |

| |ritual cleansings |

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|Shroud of Turin |This is the sindon or burial shroud that is thought to have been used to wrap the body |

| |of Jesus after his death. It has a human image preserved on it which is thought to be |

| |the image of Christ himself. The shroud is described as being a pale sheet of linen |

| |measuring 4.34 metres (14 feet 3 inches) in length, by 1.09 metres (3 feet 7 inches) in |

| |width. It's earliest confirmed history was when it was displayed in 1353 at Lirey in |

| |France by it's then owner Geoffrey de Charny I, who was a Knight. |

| |A yellow strip of linen bearing bloodstains and the brownish image of the body of a |

| |bearded man which, for centuries, was believed to be the shroud in which Jesus was |

| |buried. |

| |The Shroud of Turin is a linen cloth bearing the image of a man who appears to have been|

| |physically traumatized in a manner consistent with crucifixion. It is presently kept in |

| |the royal chapel of the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist in Turin, Italy. Some |

| |believe it is the cloth that covered Jesus when he was placed in his tomb and that his |

| |image was somehow recorded on its fibres at or near the time of his imputed |

| |resurrection. Sceptics contend the shroud is a medieval hoax or forgery. |

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|Spirit |The vital principle or animating force within living things |

| |The general atmosphere of a place or situation and the effect that it has on people; |

| |A fundamental emotional and activating principle determining one's character |

| |Any incorporeal supernatural being that can become visible (or audible) to human beings |

| |Emotional state: the state of a person's emotions (especially with regard to pleasure or|

| |dejection) |

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|Spirit Guide |Non-physical souls who support our growth, help us complete our life tasks, and in |

| |general provide the spiritual assistance we need. Often we are spirit guides to others |

| |when we are not incarnate. |

| |Non-physical being from whom a medium receives information. |

| |A Spirit, either of an animal, a human or a deity that works with an individual for the |

| |purpose of protection and guidance. These spirits have become (or have been created to |

| |be) allies or servants of a Shaman, Mage or Witch. |

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|Spook |Creep: someone unpleasantly strange or eccentric |

| |Frighten or scare, and often provoke into a violent action |

| |Ghost: a mental representation of some haunting experience |

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|Sprite |This is a general name for a fairy, although it is not usually used for fairies that are|

| |connected to the earth (like gnomes or dwarves). Sprites can either be good or bad. |

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|Succubus |a female demon believed to have sexual intercourse with sleeping men |

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|Supernatural |Not existing in nature or subject to explanation according to natural laws; not physical|

| |or material |

| |The supernatural refers to conscious magical, religious or unknown forces that cannot |

| |ordinarily be perceived except through their effects. This word is often used |

| |interchangeably with preternatural or paranormal. Unlike natural forces, these putative |

| |supernatural forces can not be shown to exist by the scientific method. Supernatural |

| |claims assert phenomena beyond the realm of current scientific understanding, which are |

| |often in direct conflict with current scientific theory. |

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|T |

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|Talisman |Amulet: a trinket or piece of jewellery thought to be a protection against evil |

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|Tantra/Tantric |Any of a class of Hindu or Buddhist mystical and magical writings, dating from the 7th |

| |century or earlier; also, adherence to the doctrines or principles of the Tantra’s, |

| |involving mantras, meditation, yoga, and ritual. In Hinduism tantric practice may |

| |involve indulgence in normally forbidden taboos and is designed to awaken the energy of |

| |sakti. Tantrism is an important element in Tibetan Buddhism. |

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|Tarot |Divination by interpreting a set of 78 cards which carry pictures and symbols used to |

| |connect the diviner with the collective unconscious. The cards can be used to determine |

| |the past, present and future of an event or person and can become powerful tools in |

| |magical workings and rituals. The Tarot is divided into the 22 Major Arcana or Trump |

| |cards that depict dominant occurrences and the 56 Minor Arcana or Suit cards that assist|

| |in fleshing out the situations indicated by the Trump Cards, or indicate smaller |

| |occurrences. The Minor Arcana is also known as the Lesser Arcana. |

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|Telekinesis |The moving of an object without touching it by using the power of the mind. |

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|Telepathy |Communication between minds by some means other than sensory perception. |

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|Teleportation |Paranormal transportation of an object from one location to another, even through solid |

| |objects. |

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|Time travel |Usually any movement through time that is not equivalent to the normal course of time, |

| |in particular a person's travel leading to the past or faster than usual to the future.|

| |Time travel to the past may be connected with paradoxes or causality loops, if an effect|

| |becomes apparent before the cause exists. |

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|Totem |An object, usually an animal or plant, revered by an individual or a particular social |

| |group. A group totem represents the bond of unity and is often considered the ancestor |

| |or brother of the group’s members; marriage between those of one totem is often |

| |prohibited as incest. The group’s symbol and protector, the totem may be pictured on the|

| |body or masks, or carved on totem poles. |

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|Trance |Enchantment: a psychological state induced by (or as if induced by) a magical |

| |incantation |

| |A state of mind in which consciousness is fragile and voluntary action is poor or |

| |missing; a state resembling deep sleep |

| |Capture: attract; cause to be enamoured |

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|U |

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|UFO |Unidentified Flying Object, popularly believed to be of extraterrestrial origin, |

| |especially as alien spacecraft. Others say they are from another dimension or time. Most|

| |raw UFO reports are later found to be miss-perceptions of conventional objects or of |

| |optical and celestial phenomena, or hallucinations or outright hoaxes. A small |

| |percentage of the reports remain unexplained. |

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|Unicorn |A unicorn is a one-horned animal that looks almost like a horse because of its mane and |

| |tail. The bottom of the Unicorn's horn and body is white. The middle of its horn is |

| |black, and the horn has a sharp tip on it. |

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|V |

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|Vampire |The vampire is an 'undead' being who gains energy by sucking the blood from living |

| |victims. In some schools of thought a bite from a vampire causes the victim in turn to |

| |become 'undead' while in others it is believed that the victim must ingest the Vampires |

| |own blood before becoming one of the undead themselves. Count Dracula is undoubtedly the|

| |most famous vampire, created by writer Bram Stoker in 1897. The novel was based on a |

| |real fifteenth century Transylvanian Count, Vlad the Impaler, who was known for his |

| |hobby of watching his prisoners die a slow and torturous death impaled on high poles. |

| |Deaths caused by suicides in some Eastern European countries were treated with great |

| |suspicion up until the beginning of this century. |

| |A supernatural creature (undead) that can only come out at night and lives by drinking |

| |the blood of the living. There are psychic vampires as well. |

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|Vortex |Whirl: the shape of something rotating rapidly |

| |A rotary, swirling, circular motion of a fluid, like wind or water. The vortex forms a |

| |vacuum at its centre that draws objects toward it. |

| |Another name for a Gate. Alternatively, can be used specifically to refer to an |

| |energetic micro-climate that produces the effects of a time slip. |

| |An opening or doorway between our world and the spirit world. |

| |A small tornado-shape image that shows up on pictures when there is a spirit present. |

| |You can see the orbs rotating inside the shaft. Sometimes the vortex is so dense that it|

| |will cast a shadow. It is believed that the vortex is a means of travel for the spirits |

| |in the orb form. |

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|W |

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|White Lighting | |

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|White noise |An audio signal that contains noise at the same level at all frequencies. A combination |

| |of random noises in the transmission media caused by various electrical & magnetic |

| |sources. A certain amount of White noise is inevitable in any transmission media. |

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|Wicca |The religious cult of modern witchcraft |

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|Witch |A sorceress, esp. a woman |

| |A follower or practitioner of the religious cult of modern witchcraft |

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|Witchcraft |The art of sorcery |

| |A family of Pagan magic-religious traditions deriving from pre-Christian Europe. |

| |European-diasporic folk Magick. |

| |Sometimes used by Wiccans as a synonym for Wicca. |

| |The practice of Magick. |

| |The craft used by Witches, which is Magick. Especially, that utilising personal power |

| |with the energies of natural objects. |

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|Wizard |Ace: someone who is dazzlingly skilled in any field |

| |Sorcerer: one who practices magic or sorcery |

| |Charming: possessing or using or characteristic of or appropriate to supernatural powers|

| |A wizard (from 'wise') is a practitioner of magic, especially in folklore, fantasy |

| |fiction, and fantasy role-playing games. In popular use in 16th century England it was |

| |used to denote a helpful male folk magician, a cunning man as they were usually called, |

| |and the male equivalent of a witch. |

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|X |

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|Y |

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|Yeti |The Abominable Snowman. It is said to live in the remote areas of the Himalayas. The |

| |Sherpas tell many legends about the yeti, and often point to large footprints and gnawed|

| |yak bones to show the yeti has passed nearby. The Yeti is the Western name given to a |

| |large primate-like creature reported to live in the Himalayas. The name derives from the|

| |Tibetan yeh-teh, "little man-like animal". |

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|Yowie |The Australian version of the Yeti, a mythical, large, ape-like man. |

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|Z |

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