EVIDENCE LOCKER


WTF kind of other world did Seargent Cai Bartholomew step into? How does one escape what really does not exist?




The 1st Law of Paradox

“If it doesn’t ‘feel’ right, do not do it.” Don’t Think; 'Feel' with your 'Inner Voice' (Instinct); it will always guide you correctly. "(most) Humans are the Only Species who don’t use Instinct for its own Survival.” Meaning, ‘Connect to your ‘Feelings’ rather than Rationalize their Existence.
Wikipedia

The Lucifer Effect

In this book, I summarize more than 30 years of research on factors that can create a "perfect storm" which leads good people to engage in evil actions. This transformation of human character is what I call the " Lucifer Effect ," named after God's favorite angel, Lucifer, who fell from grace and ultimately became Satan.

Suicide Forest

Statistics on Aokigahara’s suicide rates vary, in part because the forest is so lush that some bodies can go undiscovered for years or might be lost forever. Some estimates claim between 30 to 100 people a year take their lives there. However, other sources report that statistics for recent years are unavailable, in part because the Japanese government has stopped releasing numbers in order to prevent future deaths by suicide.
Mental Floss

Chimerism
In Greek mythology, a chimera was a fire-breathing creature with physical traits of a lion, goat, and dragon. In human beings, a chimera is a person who has two totally different sets of DNA inside their body. It's a bit less dramatic than a fire-breathing monster, sure, but it's still pretty wild.

Even wilder: Human chimeras aren't the result of futuristic genetic tinkering. They can occur naturally, and some people don't even know that they've doubled up on DNA.
Chimerism

Fonz Pond

While there is never a mention to the location of where my tale is being told, it is always based on real places inspired by songs on my soundtrack.

Of Blood and Swine Soundtrack

Boondox - Inbred Evil

Azazel — Jewish legend

Azazel, in Jewish legends, a demon or evil spirit to whom, in the ancient rite of Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement), a scapegoat was sent bearing the sins of the Jewish people. Two male goats were chosen for the ritual, one designated by lots “for the Lord,” the other “for Azazel” (Leviticus 16:8). The ritual was carried out by the high priest in the Second Temple and is described in the Mishna. After the high priest symbolically transferred all the sins of the Jewish people to the scapegoat, the goat destined “for Azazel” was driven into the wilderness and cast over a precipice to its death. Azazel was the personification of uncleanness and in later rabbinic writings was sometimes described as a fallen angel.