[net.misc] firewalking

steiny@scc.UUCP (Don Steiny) (07/07/84)

Our newsfeed machine was down for a week after I posted	this last.  I do
not belive it made it to netland.

     A recent Bloom County had Milo saying that	the latest craze in
California was firewalking.  This article confirms that	report.

     Here in Santa Cruz, firewalking is	getting	to be a	popular	activity.
To firewalk you	need a bed of coals 10-30 feet long.  You walk through the
coals in your bare feet.  Only a few people get	blisters.  Of course,
careful	psychological preperation is necessary to do it.

     I am a little timid to try	it myself, but just last walk the president
of Santa Cruz Computer trampled	through	15 feet	of glowing brickets!  The
president of Personetics completed his first 15	foot walk.  He had already
done a 10 foot one previously.

     Perhaps we	should start "net.rec.firewalking".

	  When the going gets weird, we	must be	in California

				Don Steiny
				Personetics
				109 Torrey Pine Terr.
				Santa Cruz, Calif. 95060
				(408) 425-0382
				ucbvax!hplabs!pesnta!scc!steiny
				harpo!fortune!idsvax!scc!steiny

lauren@vortex.UUCP (Lauren Weinstein) (07/09/84)

In all demonstrations of firewalking that I've seen, there is a bed
of wet grass or moss around the coals.  At least one researcher has
claimed that the film of moisture on the feet that is obtained when
standing on the grass (before the walk) is the real reason that
no burning occurs for most people.  To demonstrate, he did the
firewalk himself, without any "psychological preparation" of the
sort promoted by the firewalking fans.

--Lauren [A little bondage is OK, but I'm not into pain]--

crane@fortune.UUCP (John Crane) (07/09/84)

Why put on a show? "Whee look at me! I can walk on fire! See how good I
am. See how I have developed my mind! etc. etc."

Horseshit!

On both the Californians and the Indians.

When you're good, you're good. You don't need to put on shows to
prove it to yourself or anybody else. If you need to continually
reinforce your abilities for yourself and others, it shows that
you probably doubt them.

In the words of Rush: "Nothing in my pockets and nothing up my sleeve.
I keep my magic in my heart."

John "trying to bring a little sanity to the network" Crane

barry@ames-lm.UUCP (Kenn Barry) (07/10/84)

[]
> In all demonstrations of firewalking that I've seen, there is a bed
> of wet grass or moss around the coals.  At least one researcher has
> claimed that the film of moisture on the feet that is obtained when
> standing on the grass (before the walk) is the real reason that
> no burning occurs for most people.  To demonstrate, he did the
> firewalk himself, without any "psychological preparation" of the
> sort promoted by the firewalking fans.

	We may have seen the same guy. The one I saw was a physics teacher
who liked to put a little showmanship into his act. In addition to firewalking,
he took a gulp of liquid nitrogen (without swallowing) and exhaled the
vapors, and also put his (wet) hand in a beaker of molten lead!
	All these dramatic acts demonstrate the same physical principle,
though I don't recall the name; 'twas named after the guy who first discovered
it, though (help, please, physicists?). The basic idea is that the water
or liquid nitrogen, when put next to something *far* hotter than it is,
flash-vaporizes so quickly that a protecting layer of vapor stands between
the skin or tongue and the offending substance. There is an easy kitchen
demonstration of the effect that involves no risk to life and limb. Put
an empty skillet on the stove and heat it good and hot; then sprinkle
a few drops of water in it. The drops will skate around the pan on their
vapor cushion, and will boil away much more slowly than if the skillet
were only moderately hot.
	I would *not* recommend any of the more dramatic demonstrations
mentioned above.

 - From the Crow's Nest -                       Kenn Barry
                                                NASA-Ames Research Center
                                                Moffett Field, CA
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Electric Avenue:              {dual,hao,menlo70,hplabs}!ames-lm!barry

opus@drutx.UUCP (ShanklandJA) (07/10/84)

It will be a cold day in hell when you catch ME walking on
a hot bed of coals.

Jim Shankland
..!ihnp4!druxy!opus

trb@masscomp.UUCP (07/11/84)

Oh come on.  Firewalking is old news.  The high tech he-man cuts off
his penis with a laser, nukes it in a microwave oven, takes it to the
hospital in a styrofoam beer cooler, and has it reattached with
microsurgery.  After I did it last month, I looked in my dictionary,
and the word "fear" had actually disappeared.  God's honest truth.

Maybe you Silicon Valley Guys can't handle it, but that's what we're
into out here on route 128, America's Technology Highway.

	Andy Tannenbaum   Masscomp Inc  Westford MA   (617) 692-6200 x274

steiny@scc.UUCP (Don Steiny) (07/11/84)

****

	According to my mail, there are several netlanders that
firewalk.  Apparently the methods vary.  In my earlier posting
I mentioned that psychological preparation was necessary, and
that view was challanged.   I have never done it, but my friends
that have all did it under the direction of John Grinder, who
is a well known hypnotist.  He teaches hypnosis to therapists
and worked closely with Milton Erickson.   At firewalks he
leads he prepares people.   He believes it is necessary.
Because of this, the people I knew that walked were prepared.

    Suppose a person's state of physiology did not have any influence
over the physical ramafications of walking on hot coals.  How would
we find out?    If a person says "I don't need to do anything
special, I can just walk across hot coals," and then the person
walks across hot coals, it is not obvious to me that that is not
an special state of mind.   I wonder if we drug the same person out
of bed with a hangover and sent them across the same coals, would the
person would be as sucessful?    The only test I can think of is
if in the same situation some people get 3d degree burns and others
get no burns at all. This has happened. I think it is an example of how 
much the human body can take (the people I have talked to that walked 
said that it was HOT), and control over the autonomic nervous system.  

     Maybe preparing for the event psychologically is not necessary, 
but from what I gather, it is the best part.   What else could the
point be?  They psyche themselves into a state that they believe they
can do anything and then they walk across hot coals!  
As long as a walker does not
take the attitude that he or she can do something others can't and
instead takes that attitude that it is an example of human potential,
the potential of all humans, firewalking does not have to be 
a "look at me" kind of a thing.  It becomes a metaphor and personal resource.   


Don Steiny
Personetics
109 Torrey Pine Terr.
Santa Cruz, Calif. 95060
(408) 425-0382
{ihnp4,harpo}!pesnta \ 
      fortune!idsvax -- scc!steiny
          ucbvax!twg /

mauney@ncsu.UUCP (Jon Mauney) (07/11/84)

> 	We may have seen the same guy. The one I saw was a physics teacher
> who liked to put a little showmanship into his act. In addition to firewalking
> he took a gulp of liquid nitrogen (without swallowing) and exhaled the
> vapors, and also put his (wet) hand in a beaker of molten lead!

This same person wrote an article in Scientific American a while back
in which he explained the principle.  He also proposed a new final exam
for physicists: line up the degree candidates along a bed of coals with the
diplomas on the other side -- those who believe in the laws of physics will
be willing to cross and pick up their diplomas.
-- 

_Doctor_                           Jon Mauney,    mcnc!ncsu!mauney
\__Mu__/                           North Carolina State University

dgary@ecsvax.UUCP (07/11/84)

<>
The author of The Flying Circus of Physics was here a year or two ago and
described his own firewalking experiences.  He contends walking on coals
is possible due to the effect (name escapes me) that allows ice to float on
a water vapor cushion on a frying pan.  He claimed not to have had even a
sensation of heat.  He did not consciously wet his feet first - he used
the sweat that was there.  His "psychological preparation" consisted of
being scared out of his wits.  In fact, when he became overconfident during
a later demonstration, he got burned.  (No worry, no sweat!!)

Adam Smith (the current one) wrote an article (in Harper's??) making fun
of the "Scientific American" article attributing firewalking to this
vapor film, evidently considering it a case of scientific skepticism in
the face of the genuinely mystical.  Smith claimed that the author had not
done the firewalking himself, which is not so!  People really want to be
believers in the mystical and get all bent out of shape when someone tries
a debunking.  As Schiller observed, "Against stupidity the very gods
themselves contend in vain!"

D Gary Grady
Duke University Computation Center, Durham, NC  27706
(919) 684-4146
USENET:  {decvax,ihnp4,akgua,etc.}!mcnc!ecsvax!dgary

wetcw@pyuxa.UUCP (T C Wheeler) (07/11/84)

Is this the latest California craze?  Learning to walk on fire
is not the same as walking on water which you will need when
Ca. slides off into the sea someday.  Now, for $100.00 each, I
will prepare you and your head for walking on water.  

bill@utastro.UUCP (07/11/84)

> All these dramatic acts demonstrate the same physical principle,
> though I don't recall the name; 'twas named after the guy who first discovered
> it, though (help, please, physicists?). The basic idea is that the water
> or liquid nitrogen, when put next to something *far* hotter than it is,
> flash-vaporizes so quickly that a protecting layer of vapor stands between
> the skin or tongue and the offending substance.

It's the Leidenfrost Effect.  I saw the person who stuck his finger in
molten lead -- quite impressive!
-- 

	Bill Jefferys  8-%
	Astronomy Dept, University of Texas, Austin TX 78712   (USnail)
	{allegra,ihnp4}!{ut-sally,noao}!utastro!bill	(uucp)
	utastro!bill@ut-ngp			   (ARPANET)

gamma@ih1ap.UUCP (n) (07/11/84)

	So when is this man/concept coming to Chi?

		David l. Pope,  Tenderfoot.

crm@rti-sel.UUCP (07/12/84)

In the Zen (and other mediatative) traditions, these little magic tricks
are usually considered to be cute, but nothing to get too involved in,
since they can become traps for the unwary -- i.e. it is too easy to get
into these slippery little tricks and stop working towards Enlightenment.
Firewalking is certainly on of these sorts of tricks.

BTW, someone has suggested that dampness on the feet has some effect to
make the firewalk possible.  Consider:

	1)  the feet are being pressed into the coals with considerable
	    force (as a guess, my feet would have about 12 lbs/ in^2).
	    This seems to suggest that a thin film of dampness could not
	    easily protect the feet.

	    In any case, one is cautioned (in Japan at least, with Shingon
	    Buddhist firewalking ritual) NOT to do it if you are not
	    confident, and/or your feet are sweaty or damp.

	2)  Steam scalds very quickly, and steam burns are *very* painful.
	    The only mechanism I can come up with for the dampness helping
	    seems to include some quantity of steam with considerable
	    direct heating right next to the skin.

Also, a question -- John Crane: who is this ``Rush'' you are quoting?
Sounds interesting, but I've no idea who the reference is to.

Charlie Martin
(..!mcnc!rti-sel!crm)

spaf@gatech.UUCP (07/13/84)

Firewalking -- pah!  That's been around for centuries.  Can't those
folks in California get out of their hottubs with something new? For
instance, how about breakdancing on hot coals?  Now that would be a
feat of mental preparation!


Me, well I'm much more daring than that.  For instance, I've thought
about going into meditation for a few days and then writing a Cobol
program.  How about feeding a mango to a wombat?  How about agreeing
with Charles about square waves in net.audio or joining the bigotry
discussion in net.singles?  Now that's bizarre!  Some of us defy death
and insanity every day just by reading and posting to netnews.

No firewalking at 55mph!  Nuke the baby mangos til they glow!  A wombat
in every pot (and the legal right to smoke that pot in your own
jello-wrestling pit)!  Faggots, dykes and liberals built Stonehenge as
a monument to mind and memory!  Rewrite VMS in BLKTRAN!

Awk!  Time to go back into the cage.

Save the arithmetic IF!
-- 
Off the Wall of Gene Spafford
The Clouds Project, School of ICS, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332
Phone:	(404) 894-6169, (404) 894-6170 [messages]
CSNet:	Spaf @ GATech		ARPA:	Spaf%GATech.CSNet @ CSNet-Relay.ARPA
uucp:	...!{akgua,allegra,hplabs,ihnp4,masscomp,ut-ngp}!gatech!spaf
	...!{rlgvax,sb1,uf-cgrl,unmvax,ut-sally}!gatech!spaf

lmc@denelcor.UUCP (Lyle McElhaney) (07/15/84)

I find it somewhat hard to believe that the firewalking is real, but some
time ago I saw a documentary in which the magician and parapsychological-
debunker James Randi traveled to India to witness it.  Before it started
he threw a piece of paper on the bed, which instantly burned.  After the
performance he examined the feet, and found no blisters, and furthermore
found that the feet were soft, not calloused.  When it was done, he
admitted that he could not explain how it might have been faked.
Considering his reputation as a tough person to fool, I consider that
weighty evidence that there is a lot about the body we don't understand
(which is not making much of a statement; any reputable researcher would
say the same thing).
-- 
		Lyle McElhaney
		(hao,brl-bmd,nbires,csu-cs,scgvaxd)!denelcor!lmc

moriarty@fluke.UUCP (07/17/84)

Is it any wonder why this man is considered a natural resource of the net?

				Yours in silliness,

					Moriarty, aka Jeff Meyer
					John Fluke Mfg. Co., Inc.
UUCP:
 {cornell,decvax,ihnp4,sdcsvax,tektronix,utcsrgv}!uw-beaver \
    {allegra,gatech!sb1,hplabs!lbl-csam,decwrl!sun,ssc-vax} -- !fluke!moriarty
ARPA:
	fluke!moriarty@uw-beaver.ARPA

chris@umcp-cs.UUCP (07/19/84)

I heard this from a physics professor (memory is fuzzy so words likely
wrong, but meaning is same):

      ``I decided to try firewalking.  The first time, I was really
	nervous---so I sweated a lot, and the sweat evaporating from
	my feet kept me from even feeling much heat.  The second time
	I was confident.  After all, I had done it before!  And since
	I didn't sweat, I burned the **** out of my feet.''

Sounds like Whatzisname's Effect to me.
-- 
In-Real-Life: Chris Torek, Univ of MD Comp Sci (301) 454-7690
UUCP:	{seismo,allegra,brl-bmd}!umcp-cs!chris
CSNet:	chris@umcp-cs		ARPA:	chris@maryland

wws@siemens.UUCP (William W Smith) (07/25/84)

I have something that hasn't been mentioned about the fire walking.  Scientific
American had an article 5 or 10 years ago about fire walking. It was in the
column "The Amateur Scientist."  It had a discussion about the phenomena of
water boiling slowly on very hot metal plates also.

The author was brave enough to try it himself and gave an explanation for the
phenomena.  He was clutching in his arms a physics book to protect himself as
he walked across the hot bed of coals.  

(I think it the author was Jearl Walker, the present columnist, but 
don't quote me on that.)  To find the article, look in the index in the 
December issues  under the heading of The Amateur Scientist.

Bill Smith
ihnp4!astrovax!princeton!siemens!wws