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Mysterious death of gaurav tiwari, paranormal expert


Beardman

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Early life and career[edit]

Gaurav was born in a Hindu family. His father Uday Shankar Tiwari is a director with Cooperative Resources International. Gaurav was a commercial pilot and an actor. Gaurav also played character roles in television serials and movies like Tango Charlie, 16 December, Sach Honge Sapney. He started his career as an actor at the age of 16 but eventually took up his career as a pilot. Gaurav has graduated from MVP Aero Academy, Texas. In his early days of aviation, When he shifted into his new apartment in Florida with his friends, there were certain unexplained instances that lead him to believe that the house was haunted. These experiences changed him to a believer from a non-believer in paranormal. He endeavoured to know the truth of humanity and afterlife. He was certified as a Lead Anomalous Investigator by Paranexus Association of USA.

He came back to India in 2009 and established Indian Paranormal Society which set himself up to people in India who suffer with paranormal and life problems. Gaurav pursued his Doctoral studies in Metaphysical Humanistic Science. He held certifications as a Spiritual Counselor, Hypnotist, and Life and Relationship Coach from Institute of Metaphysical Science (IMHS), Florida, USA. IMHS is a Secular organization believing in Humanism and scientific research. He was also an ordained minister for Metaphysical Church of Humanistic Science (MCHS). Gaurav was also a cartoonist, singer, and writer.

MTV Girls Night Out[edit]

Gaurav's second television breakthrough was MTV Girls Night Out directed by Sajeed A.. This show was India's first horror/paranormal reality show and it also won the Best Reality Show in Asian Television Awards, Singapore, 2011. A similar show/repeat was Haunted weekends with Sunny Leone.

Bhoot Aaya[edit]

Appeared as a paranormal expert and lead investigator in Bhoot Aaya and describes a paranormal activity or the reason behind it. In couple of episodes he was also enacted by actors for his contribution towards past life regression and paranormal investigation.

Haunting: Australia[edit]

Gaurav appeared as a Spirit Photographer, Investigator, and Metaphysicist in Haunting: Australia. He was among one of the top six international ghost hunters for this television series which was appreciated all over the world including USA, UK, Canada, and Australia. In the most part of series he is seen showing some great courage, like going into the morgue chiller (Season 1-Episode 3-"Aradale Lunatic Asylum"), in order to find the truth about the hauntings going on in those particular areas and the "not-so-satisfied" spirits. He was well appreciated for his humanistic and metaphysical approach for paranormal investigations. He has captured many humanoid apparition or "ghosts" on his spectrum camera numerous times for which he was truly appreciated by the team. Despite being injured for a part of the show (due to a segway accident in the first episode), he never lost his cool and maintained his calm and courage all throughout the show.

MTV He Ticket[edit]

Appeared as a mentor in one of the episodes of MTV He Ticket where he guided the contestants at Bhangarh Fort.

International work[edit]

Through his research, blogs, international TV and radio shows, and articles, Gaurav has put his effort to educate people about paranormal awareness to bring down the irrational fear about ghosts and spirits. Gaurav Tiwari seems to be very famous among paranormal researchers and enthusiasts circles in countries like India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Singapore, USA, UK, Canada, Australia, Brazil, and many other parts of world. He was one of the best in his field.

Death[edit]

Gaurav Tiwari was found dead[1] at his Dwarka home on 7 July. According to Delhi Police, it was a case of asphyxiation, but several arguments against this theory were raised on social media and news networks.[2] His body was found lying on his bathroom floor with a thin black line across his neck. According to his family, they heard a loud thud from his bathroom at around, 11 AM on Thursday. They forced their way through the locked door to find Tiwari lying unresponsive on the floor. He was rushed to a hospital but could not be resuscitated.

 

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10 minutes ago, Beardman said:

May be had virtual sex with spirits 

I don't know man. I have heard stories of people having mind chex with ghosts. Again, it was all hear say. The famous hear say: Indian rope trick. Some guy even wrote a book looking for any evidence; and he could not find any.  Everything was a hear say: he-said, she-said, his-granny-said; his-great-granny-said.

The story I heard was that before electricity came to villages in AP, there were korivi dayyalu (కొరివి దయ్యాలు). These 'ghosts' used to carry 'korivi'. An old guy in my village claimed to have virtual sex with one such ghost when he used to sleep at bajra fields, high on మంచె (some scaffolding on top of wooden poles). He claimed to have v chex with this dayyam for a month. Did I believe his story, then? Yes. Do I believe it, now? Nah. 

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5 minutes ago, ekunadam_enkanna said:

I don't know man. I have heard stories of people having mind chex with ghosts. Again, it was all hear say. The famous hear say: Indian rope trick. Some guy even wrote a book looking for any evidence; and he could not find any.  Everything was a hear say: he-said, she-said, his-granny-said; his-great-granny-said.

The story I heard was that before electricity came to villages in AP, there were korivi dayyalu (కొరివి దయ్యాలు). These 'ghosts' used to carry 'korivi'. An old guy in my village claimed to have virtual sex with one such ghost when he used to sleep at bajra fields, high on మంచె (some scaffolding on top of wooden poles). He claimed to have v chex with this dayyam for a month. Did I believe his story, then? Yes. Do I believe it, now? Nah. 

I read somewhere about incubus and succubus.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6198602/

 

Unusual cases of succubus: A cultural phenomenon manifesting as part of psychopathology

 

Abstract

Succubus is also known as demon female lover who approaches males in their dreams to have sex. This is the phenomenon which is rarely described in psychiatric literature. It is more identified as a cultural belief in different religions. We report the two cases diagnosed with schizophrenia, who reported this rare phenomenon of succubus as part of their psychopathology and discuss the phenomenon of succubus.

Keywords: Phenomenology, schizophrenia, succubus

Succubus is understood as a Lilin-demon in female form or supernatural entity that appears in dreams to seduce men, usually through sexual activity.[1] The descriptions of the same can be traced back to the folklore of medieval times.[1] The male equivalence of this is known as an incubus.[1] Many anthropologists and psychologists believe the explanation of succubus and incubus to be supernatural explanations for sleep paralysis and hypnagogic and hypnopompic hallucinations.[2] Although there are few case reports of incubus syndrome in patients with psychotic disorders in literature,[3] the description of succubus is lacking in psychiatric literature. In this report, we present two cases, diagnosed with schizophrenia, who had phenomenon suggestive of succubus.

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3 minutes ago, Beardman said:

I read somewhere about incubus and succubus.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6198602/

Human experience is structured: structured(shaped) by prior beliefs, prior actions, prior experiences, background knowledge, even one's language.  There is no such thing as neutral perception: the same sensory input can produce contradictory experiences; optical illusions are best examples in this category.

People who have lost sight see ghosts. This comes under Charles Bennett Syndrome.  Many such cases are discussed in Sack's "Hallucinations".

 

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1 minute ago, ekunadam_enkanna said:

Human experience is structured: structured(shaped) by prior beliefs, prior actions, prior experiences, background knowledge, even one's language.  There is no such thing as neutral perception: the same sensory input can produce contradictory experiences; optical illusions are best examples in this category.

People who have lost sight see ghosts. This comes under Charles Bennett Syndrome.  Many such cases are discussed in Sack's "Hallucinations".

 

No ghosts ??

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2 minutes ago, ekunadam_enkanna said:

Human experience is structured: structured(shaped) by prior beliefs, prior actions, prior experiences, background knowledge, even one's language.  There is no such thing as neutral perception: the same sensory input can produce contradictory experiences; optical illusions are best examples in this category.

People who have lost sight see ghosts. This comes under Charles Bennett Syndrome.  Many such cases are discussed in Sack's "Hallucinations".

 

Without any negative energy or chemical variations , do hallucinations happen naturally.

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Just now, kevinUsa said:

No ghosts ??

You see, these supposed 'ghosts' disappear when you camp right there with 10 other people.  Many in our area thought there was a set of ghosts near foothills in our area. One time, Geological Survey of India had set up camps there for 3 months. They never saw ghosts. However, ghosts appear to villagers when they are alone being there at night times. 

 

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20 minutes ago, Beardman said:

Without any negative energy or chemical variations , do hallucinations happen naturally.

In America at least, lots of psychics want to cleanse chakras (Shock-ruhs, as they pronounce it) to fix 'negative energies' in ones life. I am not into that.

Optical illusions are natural, natural because they can be explained by the structure of eye, physics of light and human evolution wrt brain.

mental traumas, physical loss of any sensory abilities and drugs can produce hallucinations. This is an interesting subject. What we find in the literature are phenomena (descriptions of what people experience). We don't have enough understanding of these phenomena, since we hardly understand brain beyond the gross level. Even today, the debate has not moved beyond locality vs distribution in cognitive neurosciences: it is easy to produce publications when one subscribes to localization. However localization has not produced much beyond claims like: damage to some area can impair this and that, and some spikes in readings when one thinks about this and this. The interesting stuff happens at distribution level; understanding this, given what we know, is very difficult.  

 

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2 minutes ago, ekunadam_enkanna said:

In America at least, lots of psychics want to cleanse chakras (Shock-ruhs, as they pronounce it) to fix 'negative energies' in ones life. I am not into that.

Optical illusions are natural, natural because they can be explained by the structure of eye, physics of light and human evolution wrt brain.

mental traumas, physical loss of any sensory abilities can produce hallucinations. This is an interesting subject. What we find in the literature are phenomena (descriptions of what people experience). We don't have enough understanding of these phenomena, since we hardly understand brain beyond the gross level. Even today, the debate has not moved beyond locality vs distribution in cognitive neurosciences: it is easy to produce publications when one subscribes to localization. However localization has not produced much beyond claims like: damage to some area can impair this and that. The interesting stuff at distribution level; understanding this, given what we know, is very difficult. 

 

Right, even i dont buy yoga , chakras, reiki 

But i personally experienced illusions at the onset of rahu period in astrology(right on the day it commenced). Also witnessed animals like snakes moving in the garden, hit by a deer etc. I know human experience is structured but astrology like statistical tool that can let us know what type of experience we are supposed to have.

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13 minutes ago, Beardman said:

 

But i personally experienced illusions at the onset of rahu period in astrology(right on the day it commenced). Also witnessed animals like snakes moving in the garden, hit by a deer etc. I know human experience is structured but astrology like statistical tool that can let us know what type of experience we are supposed to have.

As long as they don't disturb your normal life, you are fine.

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