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Post by Grigori on Jul 2, 2014 18:22:56 GMT -7
As in the ability to accelerate the vibrations of atoms producing heat and then fire. I've fashioned a simple test thats probably got a lot of variables but nonetheless I figured I'd take it and post my results and then maybe someone else will to. With room temperature at a fair 70 degrees take an ice cube and see how much faster you can make of melt with your mind.
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Post by Michelle on Jul 4, 2014 20:29:04 GMT -7
Well what about an ice cube in each hand but only focus on one hand. This makes it so one is melting normally to compare to. also, would it be pyrokinesis if u make water evaporate off u in a cold shower to make the room steamy~? (I do that a lot) so flame control is if u can make a candle flame move to your will right? What about putting out flame with your mind? creating sparks from your body? Is heat control pyrokenisis like making a part of your body heat up? What about making others have burning sensations?
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Post by Grigori on Jul 5, 2014 13:17:15 GMT -7
Yeah holding two would be better.Lol steam is usually pretty natural after a shower. Yeah controlling flame and putting it out can be signs of pyrokinesis. Sparks nah. It would be warm then stinging if you used it on a person.
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Post by Michelle on Jul 5, 2014 15:23:56 GMT -7
18m ice melted. 81 degree area. Ice was 2 inch across and one inch tall. Hurt like a bitch for the first 30 seconds. My goal is to do it in 5m. I will try everyday. Control was 22m. closed palm got me 15m XD hehe another tests18m. At night. I noticed i am so hungry after each one.. >.>
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Post by Grigori on Jul 5, 2014 19:31:01 GMT -7
At 79 degrees I got 16 min for the test and 18 min for the control. Both cubes center of open palm without draining the water in my palm or moving the cube. At 85 degrees I left an open air control on a piece of wood for a 1hour melt time. Also used my finger tips stationary for 12 min.
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Post by Michelle on Jul 6, 2014 18:38:12 GMT -7
As fun as it is to play with ice and decrease my times slowly. ^.^ do u have any ideas for air/wind control? water control?
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Post by Matt on Jul 22, 2014 13:24:44 GMT -7
Another method: Focus on the sensation of heat in the palm of your hand. But to do that, compare it to an experience you've had in the past with heat that you remember the feeling vividly. If you need to, create a new experience, simply light a candle and place your hand over it. Feel the varying degrees of temperature by putting your hand closer and further away from the flame. And by feel, I mean remember these feelings closely, like they're ingrained within your mind. Afterwards, try to replicate that sensation in the palm of your hand off of feel alone, gradually pick up the temperature and the sensation of heat. The difficult part for most is differentiating between heat and cold though. Naturally the mind will want to tell you your hand is getting colder because of the ice against your skin. But the point is while it is melting, don't let it take away that sensation of heat. In other words, don't let the cold energy from the ice cube permeate the heat energy of your hand. Balance them and don't lose focus, then overcome the cold with the heat and engulf it, maintain this focus until you no longer feel the cold and keep going until the ice is melted.
Edit: How this works - This works off the principle of like energies attracting. If your focus is simply on the heat, and you maintain constant focus, it will generate more heat. But at the same time, opposites also attract, so the heat and cold will come into contact and it will be a sort of struggle. Ultimately the heat wins out though because the body is a larger mass that generates much more heat than the cold that the ice cube tries to preserve. You are just using your mind to strengthen your body's natural reserve of energy and focus it into a more condensed central point, and changing its properties to channel more heat.
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Post by Michelle on Jul 28, 2014 7:28:37 GMT -7
Tyvm matt*hugs* going to practice your method then post back~
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Post by Grigori on Aug 7, 2014 14:13:23 GMT -7
I concur matt. That's what I intuited. Thanks for elaborating. Very well written. Im really looking forward to seeing someone do better than ten min!
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Post by David on Aug 7, 2014 18:07:35 GMT -7
I think this test needs to include a proper measurement of the starting temperature of the ice cube.
If I submerge a full ice cube tray into liquid nitrogen, it will be significantly colder than if I pull one out of my freezer. I make this point because not all freezers are built the same nor run at the same temperatures.
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Post by Michelle on Aug 7, 2014 18:18:47 GMT -7
I think this test needs to include a proper measurement of the starting temperature of the ice cube. If I submerge a full ice cube tray into liquid nitrogen, it will be significantly colder than if I pull one out of my freezer. I make this point because not all freezers are built the same nor run at the same temperatures. agreed that is a good point..
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Post by Grigori on Aug 15, 2014 0:18:06 GMT -7
So what would be the easiest way of testing that? Just measuring the temp of the freezer. Or would there be a cost effective way of directly measuring the cube?
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Post by Matt on Aug 16, 2014 21:41:06 GMT -7
Control groups. Yeah, just measure the temperature of the freezer, and then the room you're placing it, and temp of the surface you place it on and see how long it takes. Then repeat again with a similar icecube from the same tray, with the only difference that you're measuring the temp of your hand and not another surface.
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