Old man:
What about fiddler crabs, then, or flounder? Would you see them as ‘abnormal’? You’ve made repeated claims that you almost invariably detect only ‘abnormalities’.
Good question. A few years ago, a boy told us that he was born with his internal organs inverted, left and right side. I looked closely but I couldn't detect it, and I also couldn't detect otherwise - that he'd actually have the organs in the normal way. Health problems are what usually catch my attention, and natural asymmetry that is not associated with a health problem is assumably not as easily detected as a health problem is. I have not contradicted myself, I just explained that
many health problems are in fact asymmetry. But I did not state that
all asymmetry are detectable or that
all assymmetry are health problems. And unless my skills of perception have become stronger since then with regard to inverted organs I would still not be able to detect asymmetry for the sake of asymmetry alone.
Anita, we’re just a bunch of nerds/geeks who don’t have real lives, and can’t understand people who do!
Well I take pride in being a nerd/geek too and I do spend a lot of time here too. I just thought I'd take a few days off for Christmas. I'm sorry... it won't happen again.
Could it be that the stress of impending failure is causing those symptoms [of headache and nausea on chemical identification tests]?
No, because I do very well. Headache and nausea happen first,
then the accuracy begins to decrease, not that I'm necessarily blaming it on these symptoms, just noticing a correlation, that's all.
But, have you done ANY checking ON YOUR OWN?
I did a survey yesterday but did not happen to come across any perceptions of vasectomy or breast implants. The details of the survey will be posted eventually.
“I detect plenty of medical information in all persons…”
“I do not detect plenty of those (medical information) in all persons…”
If your second statement is true, then does it not follow that the first is, at best, an exaggeration?
I don't understand the question. In what context did I say the second statement?
Saying that you were “absolutely correct” about the small intestine ‘diagnosis’ was an exaggeration.
True. Still I can not rule out that the small intestine was not associated with the cramp below the sternum. Not making excuses, just being open.
Anita, if I walked up to any middle-aged, slightly paunchy man, and said “Sometimes you have pain/discomfort just behind/below the sternum” I’d be right more times than I’d be wrong, and my ‘location’ would be ‘amazingly’ accurate. You did that ONE time.
Even if so, the point is that I have failed to falsify the paranormal claim, and all we conclude based on the anecdotes is to proceed toward a real test where none of this vagueness can take place. The fact that vagueness and cold reading
can occur in everyday experience, does not mean that they
did take place, and only a real test can reveal what the actual accuracy is when vagueness and cold reading can not happen.
RE: vasectomy. It’s the excuse you used that time.
I'm afraid I can't respond, because I don't understand the statement again.
Maybe. Are you willing to spend a few days in the lovely Finger Lakes region of New York?
Are you asking me out on a date?

Of course I would. Set up a date... I mean test, and I'll be there.
Do you realize that deliberately ‘misunderstanding’ a legitimate, on-topic question in order to avoid answering it is also insulting? Or am I not a “real person”?
I never deliberately misunderstand questions.

I really didn't. Even in this very post I've already
un-deliberately misunderstood two more of your posts again, and you're gonna get upset with me about that.
But you DO say it here, in this thread, ALL the time. Why is it so difficult for you to accept that we find it hard to believe that you don’t say the same thing in other situations?
It's one thing to suspect or to expect things of me, but to throw it at me as if you were totally convinced, and when it comes to negative accusations about me, then of course I try to clear away misunderstandings.
So, you do say “I'VE NEVER BEEN WRONG” to your ‘patients’, don’t you? Why can’t you see the above as contradictory?
I do say that "I've never been confirmed wrong in the past", but I don't say that "I'll never be wrong in the future and that I could thus be assumed to be correct at all times." That is how I
can say "I'm never wrong" (in the past) and I
can't say "I'm never wrong" (about the future). Sorry, my fault. Phew, I hope that explains it! Otherwise, I'll try again!
Personally, I think it’s irresponsible to NOT test “this super ability”. If we take DG’s position to the extreme, we’d never investigate any new diagnostic techniques, for fear of causing “anxiety and worry”.
Yes, but it is best to explore methods of testing it where no harm will come to participants, rather than to embark on a test that may cause harm without considering other options around that.
Old man in earlier post said:
People have been begging you for a list of what you think you can detect! That’s what you’re postponing!
And that's what the observations page is all about.
Locknar said:
You would think wrong; "vasectomy" and "heart bypass", especially in the context of what you have indicated above, are amigious.
Old man said:
Is that like, Spangolish for ‘friendly’?
I was thinking the same.

I'm glad you said it first, not me!
skeen said:
…almost every time Anita writes a wall of text, I just throw my hands up and think, "that's it! I'm out of here." It just gets more and more ridiculous. But I relate far too much to this comic:
Old man said:
Alright guys, no offense, but Old man just posted a wall o'text too, post #980, and his was a reply to only one person: me. My wall o'texts are replies to many people all at once!