Thursday, December 8, 2011

The Human Behavior of Solar Flares - Is There a Correlation?

By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Lance_Winslow]Lance Winslow
Not long ago, I was having a rather interesting conversation with a top-notched social services employee who noted an increase in bizarre behavior in the office during times of increased solar activity. That is rather fascinating isn't it? Okay so, let's discuss this shall we?
Well, interestingly enough, these solar storms do affect me personally. I can feel them, just as I feel frequency shifts near power poles, those who get on their cell phones at Starbucks near me, microwave ovens, police radars, CBs in trucks next to me I pass on the highway, aviation radios. I suppose some folks are more sensitive than others is my suspicion. I suspect it has something to do with ones brain, that is to say; how it is formatted, skull size, metal in the body (I have a steel rod in my leg albeit "high-grade stainless" from a motorcycle accident).
Now then, this is where I've started my inquiry on this topic, asking myself why I can feel all these things, and if others can too. It appears not everyone is as sensitive, perhaps their minds work less efficiently or more efficiently or something of this nature? Could it be a brain-wave signature issue, such as the processing configuration of the individual brain, or perhaps a DNA thing, gene expression?
Maybe those with a certain type of blood are more susceptible, maybe those with American Indian genes might have an advantage, or in this case a disadvantage due to frequency pollution (cell towers, ultrasound from wind turbines, aviation radars, electromagnetic leakage from power lines, WiFi, etc, etc.) and thus, also affected by Space Weather, whether it be Solar X-Flares or space radiation gamma bursts hitting the earth.
Further, we know that solar flares "compress" our atmosphere in unique ways depending on if they hit us directly, or we fly through them, they also affect the Lagrange Point equilibrium areas, thus, throw our planet slightly into a perturbations, like rolling a beach ball over a bumpy road. If you boil water and compress the space you get anomalistic patterns of fluidity of the gases inside, thus, we will get weather anomalies. Indeed, such things could affect seismic activity, weather, pollution flow percentages (less space, more temporary pollution due to compacting), jet stream altitude and speed. With regards to humans you'd have more air-pressure, perhaps more ambient temperature, and more annoyance for those who are sensitive.
By the way, for my reader, let me say that I am no expert on this subject, and it appears no one is from the research I've read, however, I can say that I have put considerable amount of time towards these thoughts and developed my own questions (theories) about it all, still to be proven, disproven, or have me labeled a pseudo-science nut job? Ha ha ha.
Like the social working employee, I too have tracked "human behavior" and world events, and even road rage observations in Phoenix, LA, Las Vegas, Coachella Valley and across the US, as I'd traveled for 7-years to every city in the US by motor home. I think there is a definite correlation, to such things and heat, just as there is a correlation to depression in climates with less light or less sun. Still, I have not documented my data into empirical realm to prove it one way or the other. I would assume there is also a correlation to solar flares and the human mind, but I cannot prove it, although I have done enough to convince myself.
In fact, I do agree with "Everything" my acquaintance was saying in observance of the clients in the office during solar flares. I'd go so far as to say that we ought to have our State Department, Military, and Police advised prior to, and during solar storms. Since we can know from NASA satellites around the Sun the exact time of solar flares, even predict now 36 hours ahead of time, we can know the risks, not only to our communication infrastructures, but also for issues of public safety, human behavior. Kind of like the "full-moon" syndrome theory, but in this case perhaps empirically backed-up with hard evidence. Sure it affects humans, question is "how much" right? I mean how can it not, it affects me.
Okay so, obviously this is a worthy conversation to continue, and it perhaps is worthy of funding for the research. Maybe we might use the data from locations around the country and listen to your examples in your social service offices, then I'd like to see if we can call some of them coincidence, and look back at the dates of the solar flares. I suspect my acquaintance may be correct, and I'd certainly like to know how much these things affect humans, or a subset of humans who are susceptible to such things. Perhaps it is a force multiplier of human behavior. But, either way, I am convinced it is not a "net zero" affect, I just would like to know "how much" such things really matter. Please consider all this.
Lance Winslow has launched a new provocative series of eBooks on [http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=Lance+Winslow#/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=Future+Concepts&rh=n%3A133140011%2Ck%3AFuture+Concepts]Future Concepts. Lance Winslow is a retired Founder of a Nationwide Franchise Chain, and now runs the Online Think Tank; http://www.worldthinktank.net
Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?The-Human-Behavior-of-Solar-Flares---Is-There-a-Correlation?&id=6612955] The Human Behavior of Solar Flares - Is There a Correlation?

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