By Tim Binnall
The Great Pyramid as a generator, a visitation from blue beings of light, and end-of-life phenomena were among the fascinating topics explored this past week on Coast to Coast AM. Meanwhile, at the C2C website, we told you about a possible ghost photographed at an Argentine fire, a scuba-clad man who robbed a riverboat restaurant, and a Russian woman who sold her soul for Labubu dolls. Check out our round-up of highlights from the past week ... In Coast You Missed It.
End-of-life phenomena were in the spotlight on Monday night's program as author Sandra Champlain discussed strange incidents and oddities that suggest our consciousness survives death. She specifically pointed to events known as Shared Death Experiences, wherein a person reports being aware of their loved one's passing by seeing a mist or already departed individuals appearing in the moment of transition. Champlain stressed that communication from 'the other side' can be incredibly subtle and, as such, one must be attentive and receptive to such messages if they are to receive them. During her appearance, she also talked about the longstanding suppression of afterlife studies by the 'powers that be,' including the Catholic Church.
In a sign that spooky season is well underway, this past week featured a pair of stories centered around possible ghost sightings. The first case came from Argentina, where a photo from the scene of a fire showed what appeared to be a mysterious white-clad figure standing in the background amid the ashes. While some speculated that the anomaly was a spirit, others suggested it was the Virgin Mary, and skeptics asserted that it was likely a trick of light and shadow. Meanwhile, in Mexico, a factory security camera captured footage of an eerie figure on a stairwell. After briefly lingering on the landing, the spooky stranger disappeared from the scene in a manner suggesting it walked through a solid wall.
It has long been speculated that, rather than mere tombs, the Great Pyramid was actually some kind of energy generator. Researcher Captain Leo Walton made the case for this tantalizing scenario on Saturday night's show, arguing that the famed Egyptian site was more machine than monument. While he initially suspected that the Great Pyramid's purpose was to produce hydrogen gas via water from Lake Moeris, he later came to believe that the site was designed to also create plasma. Walton pointed to the hydraulic and architectural features of the site that convinced him that it could function as a dual power generator that was mysteriously deactivated at some time in the distant past.
One of the weirder crimes we've seen in a while unfolded this past week at Disney World, of all places, where a committed crook in scuba gear robbed a riverboat restaurant and then swam away from the scene of the crime. The wild heist occurred at the Paddlefish eatery, a sizeable faux boat moored at the amusement park's Lake Buena Vista. Managing to avoid detection by boarding the restaurant from the water, the ne'er-do-well tied up a pair of workers and quickly seized $10,000 to $20,000 cash from the manager's office. In a manner akin to an aquatic D.B. Cooper, the robber made off with the money by diving back into the lake and swimming away to the astonishment of authorities still investigating the curious case.
A remarkable encounter with blue beings of light took center stage on Sunday night's program as medium Nancy Rebecca recounted her experience meeting these mysterious figures. The life-altering event, she said, occurred in 2017 when a dozen of the luminescent visitors appeared before her and communicated telepathically in a manner akin to dolphins or whales. The beings told her to travel to China to retrieve a prophecy. Dutifully following their instructions, when she went to the country, she was struck by a blue lightning bolt that imparted a vision of the world's population experiencing a transformation wherein it evolved to a higher level of consciousness.
By far the most bizarre story of the week came by way of Russia, where a woman literally sold her soul and used the money to buy Labubu dolls. The strange exchange began as a social experiment from a marketing expert named Dmitri. In an ad posted on Russian social media, he offered around $1,100 to anyone willing to sell their soul to him. To Dmitri's surprise, he quickly heard from a woman named Karina who was keen to take him up on the offer. After signing a contract with her own blood, per the ad's requirement, the soul seller pocketed the rather paltry sum and expressed no reservations about the odd deal that, she later revealed, allowed her to buy a fairly large collection of Labubu dolls.
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