Thread Rating:
  • 1 Vote(s) - 5 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Probing Answers To Why Aliens Anally Probe Us: They Are Going After Our Brains!
#1
Information 
Explanation: Firstly some toilet humor ...




[Image: ur5c02c52d.jpg]

Now to seriousness ... The aliens are anally probing us to get to our brains ... WTFH??? OL? Why are they going through the wrong end? Our brains are at the far other end! It doesn't make any sense so you had best be explaining!!!

OK ... We have THREE Brains and they are the brains in our head for 1 and most obvious ... but that brain can be mind controlled!

[Image: brain-synapses-stock.jpg]

Study establishes extent of human brain excited by specific dose of electricity


Quote:Devices delivering defined therapeutic doses of electricity to structures within the brain are now in widespread commercial use for countering the tremors of Parkinson’s disease and controlling seizures in epilepsy patients, and are approved for some patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder. Similar devices are undergoing clinical testing for other conditions, including depression and Tourette’s syndrome.

“We often try to correct a problem occurring in some tiny part of the brain’s complicated circuitry by administering a drug,” said Parvizi. “However, instead of reaching the cells you want to target, much or most of the drug may wind up in the skin, bone, muscle, liver and elsewhere, not to mention brain cells you don’t want to target.” That can cause all kinds of side effects.


But 2 the Heart is also a Brain ...

[Image: brain-heart.jpg?w=640]

The Heart Has Neurons Too

Quote:Most people don’t know this, but the heart can feel, think, and decide for itself. It has around 40,000 neurons and a whole network of neurotransmitters with very specific functions, which makes it a perfect extension of the brain.

And they both talk to each other ...




[Image: heart-brain-balance-rev.jpg]

So OL ... the aliens are going to rip our hearts /brains out through our asses!???

Nope ... there is one more Brain 3 and that is our GUTS! ...

Your Heart and Stomach May Be Smarter Than You Think


Quote:We tend to think of our internal organs as specialists, highly refined machines that work 24/7 at specific tasks. The one exception is the brain: the ultimate supercomputer that can make a multitude of decisions and manage our behavior with incredible speed and efficiency.

Now research shows that the brain doesn’t have a monopoly on intelligence. The heart and stomach, for example, are fully equipped to do some thinking of their own. And sometimes they’re giving the brain orders instead of taking them.

Quote:When the Stomach Talks, the Brain Listens
[Image: heart-stomach-hands.jpg]
The stomach does a lot more than dump acid on your latest meal. It also fires off signals to the brain via its own extensive network of neurons.

According to Michael Gershon, chairman of the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology at New York–Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, there are 100 million neurons in this “second brain.”

This arsenal far outnumbers the neuron supply in the spinal cord or the rest of the nervous system outside of the brain.

Although not involved in conscious thought or decision making, the stomach brain enables the gut to make its own decisions regarding the behavior of the digestive system.

And the stomach has plenty to tell the brain as well. Research shows that about 90% of the fibers in the vagus nerve—the main nerve for the gut—carry information from the gut to the brain.

It turns out that “butterflies” and that “sinking feeling” in the stomach have a neurological basis. Neurons lining the stomach are filled with neurotransmitters, chemicals that help nerve cells communicate with one another.

One key neurotransmitter is serotonin, which plays a major role in mood regulation. While serotonin is also found in the brain, 95% of the body’s supply is in the stomach.

This abundance explains why drugs like Prozac, known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), help elevate mood by increasing serotonin levels but may also cause stomach disturbances.

Growing interest in the stomach brain has spawned a field of study known as neurogastroenterology, which will likely reveal even more exciting findings about the stomach’s IQ in the future.

The Three Brains: Why Your head, Heart and Gut Sometimes Conflict

Quote:Enter the science of the three brains, something that Oka believes could hold the key to accessing this higher order of decision-making. But before we arrive at that point, we need to look at something else.

How can we possibly claim to have three brains?

Quote:“Why are we calling these brains?” says Oka. “We are not calling these brains. Science is calling these brains.

There has to be a technical definition to what makes a brain a brain. Your elbow is not a brain. Your kidney is not a brain (as far as we know). But there are lots of good reasons why science can actually show that the head, the heart, and the gut are brains.

They have their own intrinsic nervous systems. They’ve got neurons. They’ve got the whole range of [capabilities] in order to do complex adaptive processes

They can take on information, process it, store it, change and adapt. Basically, if it can learn, it’s a brain.”

“Through behavioural modeling, we can discover how this applies to life. Low and behold, these different brains do different things.”

What are the three brains and their functions?


The first of the three brains is the obvious one.
It is the head brain, and the master of processes such as thinking, perception, and cognition. It recognises things, makes meaning of them, creates narratives and masters language. Head based language sounds like this: “I think”, “I reckon”, or “I understand”.

The second is the heart.
Ask a person where they feel an emotion, and their hand will land directly above their heart. Nobody gestures to their elbow. We know intrinsically that this is the place that processes deep emotion. What else is the domain of the heart brain? Here lie our values, along with the process of emoting, the process of valuing and the way we feel about relationships. Heart based language centres on “I feel” or on the expression of the deep emotions and values that lie in the heart brain.

The third is the gut.
Here we find our core identity. What is me, what is not me? This is the domain of the gut brain. It is also responsible for safety and protection. Our gut is extremely important in upholding our immune system, but it also takes care of self-preservation, fear, anxiety, mobility and action. Gut based language says things like, “it takes guts” or, “let’s do it.”

And I showed in this thread ...

Its The Smell! I Love The Smell Of BioWarfare In The Morning! Deoderizing The Left!

... how gut bacteria is mind/brain controlling!


So the aliens are after a stool sample and lotsa stuff can be found out via getting a simple stool sample ...

The amazing things poo can tell you about an animal’s health 


Quote:What poo tells us

So what can a poo sample reveal?
Let’s start with some of the more obvious aspects of poo-ology: just the presence of fresh faecal material in an animal’s enclosure assures us that the animal’s gastrointestinal tract is moving.
Constipation has serious health consequences for any animal, including potential toxicities, so we need to ensure that an animal is passing faeces as often as it should be.

But this isn’t always as simple as it sounds.

Some snakes only pass faeces once every three months, while the world’s smallest bat, the bumblebee bat has poo that is apparently as small as a pin head, making it very hard to see.

So we need to establish our “species norms” before we start using poo as an indicator in any type of health check.

Another common use of faeces in zoos is for disease monitoring.

Samples can be analysed for internal parasites, such as worms and pathogens (for example bacteria or fungi) that may indicate gastrointestinal problems or even zoonotic diseases – those that can be spread from animals to humans.

Many zoos will implement a routine faecal screening programme for their animals and this allows zoo vets to respond quickly if symptoms of disease or parasites are found, often before clinical symptoms of ill health are shown by the animal.

It is also a valuable tool for monitoring the effect of any treatments, such as de-wormers.

Some of the research projects that I’ve been involved in recently have investigated aspects of the use of de-wormers in cheetahs and support a diagnosis-based approach.

This means that, instead of routinely de-worming the animals, we should first check to see if they have any parasites present.

And ...

Quote:Windows into the mind

Likewise, poo is important for monitoring zoo animals’ welfare as we can measure hormones called glucocorticoids and their metabolites which provide an indicator of excitement and/or stress.

By performing long-term studies of the concentrations and patterns of these hormones in animal poo, and combining them with behavioural data, we can learn a great deal about how a zoo animal is experiencing its captive environment.

By monitoring the excretion of sex steroids, we can also start to understand whether females are displaying normal reproductive cycles, such as in captive rhinos, or even finding out if they are pregnant, such as in captive felids.
[Image: image-20160525-25209-1uhsceh.jpg?ixlib=r...7&fit=clip] Rabbit: unusual appetites. Shutterstock

Rather less savoury is coprophagia.

This is the term given to the behaviour of eating faeces, either the animal’s own, or that of others.

Some species have digestive adaptations that require coprophagia to be part of their normal feeding behaviour.

A well-known example is the domestic rabbit.

In a zoo setting, coprophagia is also an important element of the nutritional physiology of a range of herbivores including capybaras, some lemurs, mara, and beavers.

However, in some species, coprophagia is considered an abnormal behaviour which may have nutritional origins or be indicative of compromised welfare.

Regardless of how it is used, though, those caring for animals should never underestimate the importance of a poo.


Personal Disclosure: So I am of the firm belief that the aliens are after our gut bacteria in order to better mind control the No#1 Brains in our heads!

That is why they anally probe us! tinyok 

Any questions???

minusculebeercheers
OL at beez - "Here, if you have a milkshake, and I have a milkshake, and I have a straw. There it is, it's a straw, you see? Watch it. Now my straw reaches across the room and starts to drink your milkshake. I... drink... your... milkshake. I drink it up!"

Do not engage in useless activity ... and ... from one thing, know many things!

Think Globally, Act Locally, Feel Internally ... Wash, Rinse, Dry and Repeat!

It's Just A Ride!
#2
@"OmegaLogos" 
No, I have No Questions.
Besides, every woman knows, most Male Human either thinks with his Little Head or his Brain are in his Ass!
[Image: anal-probe.jpg]
Once A Rogue, Always A Rogue!
[Image: attachment.php?aid=936]
#3
(12-05-2018, 02:39 PM)guohua Wrote: @"OmegaLogos" 
No, I have No Questions.
Besides, every woman knows, most Male Human either thinks with his Little Head or his Brain are in his Ass!

smallrofl 


OL,
I've read about this in the past. I find it very interesting, and I think they are right about the three brains.  However, I'm not on board with believing the anal probing of the ETs.  


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)