

It’s a new fad in México to supposedly record the auras of small children, in accordance to the criteria of a gifted seer, and those that show a bluish hue in their auras are to be considered what they call “indigo children”: mentally superior child prodigies, with psychic powers. She calls this “energetic medicine,” but she has never offered scientific evidence that would prove her alleged powers.


Yet, no psychic can guess right, above the expected chance levels, whether the experimentation subject is present there or not.Ī self professed “medical intuitive,” Caroline Myss (1997), claims that she can describe the nature of all diseases, of any person, just by reading his or her field of energy, and she makes treatment recommendations, both in the physical as well as in the spiritual domain.
#INDIGO CHILDREN FREE#
There are no tests that may demonstrate its existence and on the contrary, several experiments reveal that those who claim to be able to observe people’s auras, are incapable, for example, of determining with exactitude if there is a person standing behind a table or barrier that only prevents the vision of the contour of the body, but that leaves the zone in which supposedly the aura could be seen free and unobstructed. The aura cannot be perceived by ordinary vision, only by means of clairvoyance. According to this idea, the aura is a radiating emission, produced by the energy that supposedly emanates from all living beings and surrounds them. Now resurfaced, with a sort of science-like disguise, is one of the most absurd beliefs, yet, one of the easiest to refute: it’s that idea, that first began to gain acceptance in the early 20th century, that we all project an aura of bright colors around our bodies. Beliefs in diverse paranormal phenomena tend to show a cyclical character, just like the width of neckties in vogue.
