NINEL
KULAGINA MAKING EM MOVE!
By
J.M. Sinclair
Psychokinesis,
or the ability to manipulate objects with the mind, is a notoriously difficult
to prove ability. Most famously Uri Geller achieved fame in the 1970s with
his seemingly amazing ability to bend spoons with nothing other than the power
of his mind. Early on in his career, a number of scientists concluded that Geller
does indeed posses psychic and psychokinetic abilities, however controversy over
Gellers power developed after a number of stage magicians, most recently
Criss Angel, claimed that Gellers abilities are simple stage magic tricks.
Whichever is the case, Geller remains the most public individual claiming to have
these powers.
More
obscurely, and more defiant against attempts to debunk, is the case of Ninel Kulagina.
A female soldier in the Soviet Red Army, Kulagina found that whenever she became
angry poltergeist activity would manifest in the room around her. After some time,
she began to sense that the force that was responsible for the moving objects
came from within her, rather than from a spirit. With practice, she learned how
to focus her power and move objects at will. Soviet Scientist Edward Naumov was
among the first to test her claims by spreading a box of matches on a table. Straining
to the point of shivering, Ninel spread her hands over the matches and within
seconds the matches moved to the corner of the table in a cluster, and fell to
the floor one by one.
Ninel
was then tested by Dr. Genady Sergeyev, who made more than 60 films of Ninel exhibiting
her psychokinetic abilities. These films range from Ninel manipulating a broken
egg in a tank of water, seperating the yolk and the white and moving each to opposite
sides of the tank. Ninel was standing several feet from the tank at the time.
In another experiment, a beating frogs heart suspended in a solution was
sped up and then stopped by Ninel, demonstrating that her abilities extended beyond
moving inanimate objects to the manipulation of living cells.
Sergeyev
measured an apparently quite strong electrostatic field surrounding Kulagina,
and during the egg experiment, that field was found to have a four cycle per second
pulse when the yolk and white were in movement. Further, Kulagina was found to
be under severe physical and emotional stress during the movement. Sergeyev concluded
that she had the ability to magnetize objects, even objects that were non-magnetic,
and draw them toward herself, or alternately repel them away.
Using
her powers took a serious toll on Kulagina. She reported that she knew when the
power would come by a sharp pain in her spine and blurred vision. In the late
1970s Kulagina suffered a near-fatal heart attack that may have been linked
to her psychokinetic abilities. Medical examinations showed that she suffered
from an irregular hearbeat, problems with her endocrine system and some symptoms
of diabetes. She suffered pains in her extremities and had coordination problems
and dizzyness, all linked by soviet researchers to the use of her psychokinetic
abilities. She curtailed her psychic activies after the late 70s and died
in 1990.
Criticism
from skeptics of Kulagina seems to rest on shaky ground. They claim that the soviet
scientists experiments were far from being done in a controlled environment,
and that sleight of hand could account for her abilities. How sleight of hand
could be responsible for the seperation of egg yolks and whites in a tank of water
several feet away from the manipulator doesnt seem to have been adequately
addressed. Further, skeptics have claimed that the Soviets had a motive
to fake the whole thing to compete with US Government studies on psychic phenomena.
Strangely, this is a conspiracy theory spun by the skeptics, which is obviously
problematic in itself.
Whether
or not the Soviet Union faked Kulagina, or if she really did have profound psychokinetic
abilities remains a mystery.