
In the second segment of Conversation #19, Phil and I discuss recent questions and answers from A Very Serious Question. Topics include:
- Belief in Ghosts
- The World's Best Cities
- Meditation and Relaxation
- Physical vs. Emotional Pain
During the segment, the "feelings-off" started in the previous one (below) rages on. No quarter is asked, and none given; horns lock as Phil and I each vie to outshine each other in compassion and empathy and the contest reaches a fever pitch towards the shocking climax.
In accordance with our new shorter-and-quicker radblast format, this bit is only about 30 minutes long. Stay tuned for the final segment, in which Jason joins us as we talk about our trip to Mexico.
3 comments:
Correction re: meditation. I don't teach it nor do I ever plan to. You guys have heard my voice, right?
(*I practice with a real-life guru lady, and I really suck at it.)
Um,in response to your comments on the crime lab ghosts, you can't keep Indian bones. It's against the rules. You have to call an historically society and they will pick them up and do some ritual and then bury them. I know this because one washed up on the coast somewhere and we sent it to Chico and they said it was a really old Indian so we called the society. Additionally, I am working on a cold case of this woman who was murdered and that is when the freaky shit started to happen. It is not that I can't speak of such things but I feel like a dork. There are tons of dead bodies, body parts, and unsolved murders. I would never have thought there were so many unsolved murders in Mendocino County. If there is such a thing as haunted places, I am sure this is one of them.
The jine bones fall under NAGPRA, Native American Graves Repatriation Act. Remains and associated artifacts are theoretically returned to the relevant band or tribe for culturally appropriate storage or disposition.
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