I’m posting a small set of personal incidents that might fall under psi/PK, to get methodological feedback and ideas for future experiments. My background is Christian with a side interest in occultism, but I approach my own experiences with a “non‑supernatural first” heuristic.
Briefly about me as a subject:
Possible models:
Question: Has anyone here tested animal‑bonding in any PK/RV/psi protocols (e.g., double‑blind behavior changes with or without the bonded human present)?
Context:
On one ascent:
Briefly about me as a subject:
- No psychosis, no mind‑altering drugs, no dementia/stroke, no sensory deprivation.
- Good memory, no history of attention‑seeking behavior around anomalous topics.
- I’ve studied some criminal law and have a habit of treating my own life as a case file: looking for timing, confounds, and alternative hypotheses.
Case 1 – “Innate” aversion to mind‑altering drugs
Since early childhood (before drug education in school), I’ve had a very strong, almost axiomatic aversion to taking anything that changes my mind state. This doesn’t feel like internalized anti‑drug messaging; it’s more like a built‑in “no” that predates any explicit teaching.Possible models:
- Temperament + later rationalization (mundane).
- Some kind of intuitive/psi‑based aversion (e.g., sensing vulnerability or “opening” to external influences).
Case 2 – Rapid animal bonding (possible empathic psi?)
Across species, I seem to get unusually fast and strong bonds:- Dog: unfixed male family dog, obeyed almost no one, scratched others out of excitement, but responded to my encouragement and didn’t scratch me.
- Pet rat (female, unfixed): bonded to me within about three days after I did basic husbandry research.
- Pet rabbit (male, intact Mini Rex): bonded in about three days; tolerated handling and nail clipping, showed strong affiliative behavior, and lacked many typical intact‑male behaviors (no spraying, humping, etc.). Loud/irregular sounds barely disturbed him.
Question: Has anyone here tested animal‑bonding in any PK/RV/psi protocols (e.g., double‑blind behavior changes with or without the bonded human present)?
Case 3 – Brief perspective shift (“seeing through another’s eyes”)
Age ~13. At school, I greeted a tired, irritated classmate. As we made eye contact, I experienced a brief but vivid shift: for a few seconds it felt like I was looking from her viewpoint, at myself.Context:
- I had done empathy‑sensing exercises beforehand, but nothing involving mental role‑swap simulations.
- The event was too short to test motor control or anything more sophisticated.
- Nearly two decades later, she doesn’t recall anything odd from that day.
Case 4 – Michael Jackson death “guess” (precognition?)
Age 14, cheap motel during a business trip, early morning of June 25, 2009. I woke with a sense that “something big happened.” Without being a fan or following his life, I said aloud: “Is Michael Jackson dead?” A neighboring TV announced his death moments later.- I don’t habitually make death predictions; this is the only one I remember ever verbalizing.
- My mother was awake but does not remember this now.
- A coincidence + memory bias (hit remembered, misses forgotten).
- A small example of spontaneous precognition.
Case 5 – Staircase “time anomaly” with stopwatch data
Age 16, during a blood‑red lunar eclipse. I was sneaking around at night, watching the eclipse outside and using a very squeaky 14‑step staircase to go between floors, trying not to wake parents.On one ascent:
- I was around the 8th step, moving slowly to minimize creaks, using a stopwatch in my hand as an alertness aid (start/pause beeps).
- I experienced a sudden “jump”: I found myself standing on the 12th step, with continuous consciousness but no recollection of the intervening steps and—crucially—no creak sounds from those steps, which are normally among the loudest.
- My stopwatch showed 17 ms elapsed with a single lap. I am confident I did not reset it that night; resetting requires a separate button sequence I would have felt.
- Typical start‑and‑pause reaction time when fully awake and prepared is ~13 ms or more; 5 ms is a hard minimum.
- Each creak on those steps lasts hundreds of ms, and multiple creaks occur for even modest movement across them.
- It takes on the order of seconds to traverse those steps, even when moving quickly.
What I’m looking for from this thread
I’m not pushing any particular interpretation. I’d really appreciate:- Critiques of my methodology and memory handling: what obvious failures or biases do you see?
- Suggestions for future designs: if you had a subject with experiences like these and wanted to test for PK or precog, what low‑tech experiments would you start with?
- Opinions on whether any of the above are “worth” chasing in a lab‑style way, or whether I should treat them as background noise and focus on building a clean, current practice with logs and targets.