Demonic Possession

Started by Shakyamunison16 pages

Originally posted by JesusIsAlive
*Looks at you with a side-ways glance*

You know...uh...Shakyamunison, I think [B]you are the one who is delusional. You are the one who needs the professional help.

Allow me: "So...Shakyamunison, how long have you been obssessing over green dragons, you know seeing them and so forth?"

😄 [/B]

If I went to a physiatrist, and told him that a friend told me to see you because I do not believe in demons; what do you think he would tell me?

Originally posted by Shakyamunison
If I went to a physiatrist, and told him that a friend told me to see you because I do not believe in demons; what do you think he would tell me?

Well, first off I didn't tell you to see a psychiatrist, I simply stated that you needed professional help (this can come in a variety ways). Second, if you were to see a psychiatrist (who happens to be a believer i.e. a Christian) and you told him/her that you do not believe in demons then perhaps you would be looked upon with great inquisitiveness or like you are strange, crazy, or delusional.

So, he/she would probably tell you to get saved and then study the Bible.

😄

Originally posted by JesusIsAlive
Well, first off I didn't tell you to see a psychiatrist, I simply stated that you needed professional help (this can come in a variety ways). Second, if you were to see a psychiatrist (who happens to be a believer i.e. a Christian) and you told him/her that you do not believe in demons then perhaps you would be looked upon with great inquisitiveness or like you are strange, crazy, or delusional. So, he/she would probably tell you to get saved and then study the Bible.

😄

That was a rhetorical question, because he/she would tell me to go home.

Originally posted by JesusIsAlive
Well, first off I didn't tell you to see a psychiatrist, I simply stated that you needed professional help (this can come in a variety ways). Second, if you were to see a psychiatrist (who happens to be a believer i.e. a Christian) and you told him/her that you do not believe in demons then perhaps you would be looked upon with great inquisitiveness or like you are strange, crazy, or delusional. So, he/she would probably tell you to get saved and then study the Bible.

😄

If he were to see a GOOD psychiatrist, the psychiatrist would be smart and would keep his beliefs to himself like a proper doctor.

Just imagine:

Patient: I can't seem to get over it doctor, can you help me?

Psychiatrist: 2 hail marys and blood of christ, next.

Originally posted by Boris
It could have been one of many different sleep disorders, why would you assume it was a "demon" LOL

Because I was there, I experienced it and I know what im talking about.
Especially now after doing years of research. You cannot explain these things unless you experience them yourself.

How do you know you are alive, prove IT! You might be logged into some virtual reality game thing and you don´t realise it?

Originally posted by Bicnarok
Because I was there, I experienced it and I know what im talking about.
Especially now after doing years of research. You cannot explain these things unless you experience them yourself.

How do you know you are alive, prove IT! You might be logged into some virtual reality game thing and you don´t realise it?

How do you know it wasn't a space alien? People who see space aliens believe it will the same conviction as you do with demons.

Yeah, I had a friend who tripped on shrooms a year back, and it hit him while he was walking home in the dark. He ended up getting nervous and he fell into a ditch full of mud and water. He was hallucinating so much that he thought skeletons and zombies were coming up out of the muck and were grabbing at him.

Moral of the story: only trip on shrooms in happy settings, and don't take someone's unexplainable experience to be true regardless of how vivid and descriptive it is.

Originally posted by AngryManatee
Yeah, I had a friend who tripped on shrooms a year back, and it hit him while he was walking home in the dark. He ended up getting nervous and he fell into a ditch full of mud and water. He was hallucinating so much that he thought skeletons and zombies were coming up out of the muck and were grabbing at him.

Moral of the story: only trip on shrooms in happy settings, and don't take someone's unexplainable experience to be true regardless of how vivid and descriptive it is.

Good advice. Also, we don't need shrooms to hallucinate. Our brains have the ability to take what we experience and fill in the gaps to match what we expect. We do it every day. Everyone has a blind spot in the middle of the eye. It is where the optic nerve connects to the cornea. However, we don't see it. The brain fills in the image so we have a consistent view.

Originally posted by Shakyamunison
Good advice. Also, we don't need shrooms to hallucinate. Our brains have the ability to take what we experience and fill in the gaps to match what we expect. We do it every day. Everyone has a blind spot in the middle of the eye. It is where the optic nerve connects to the cornea. However, we don't see it. The brain fills in the image so we have a consistent view.

Hey, don't try and foist off your hallucinations on the rest of us.

😄

Originally posted by Shakyamunison
Good advice. Also, we don't need shrooms to hallucinate. Our brains have the ability to take what we experience and fill in the gaps to match what we expect. We do it every day. Everyone has a blind spot in the middle of the eye. It is where the optic nerve connects to the cornea. However, we don't see it. The brain fills in the image so we have a consistent view.
And then you become Buddhist.

Originally posted by Nellinator
And then you become Buddhist.

Or wacko christian omg3dz whistling

Originally posted by AngryManatee
Or wacko christian omg3dz whistling
For real?

No not just "for real." For R34lz.

Okay then.