Some, all or none of you may or may not know that I suffer with depression which, via a circuitous route, carried me into something of a breakdown, featuring a rather complex paranoid delusion (of the apparently classic "Trueman Show" type) along with audible and visible hallucinations, a whole lot of running and some very bizarre behaviour. With some help, I've managed to analyse most of that episode out of existence - working out where each significant part of the whole "scene" originated in my mind and experience, essentially proving to myself that it WAS just a hallucination and it wasn't at all real. Only bit I couldn't shake off was the "mysterious overlords" of the imagined experience. I was convinced all the strangeness was being run by two characters in my loft called "Walrus and the Weird Girl". I've been able to pinpoint sources and reasons for everything, except for those names. There were no faces or voices to go with them, just the names. They felt familiar, but I'd never heard those names before. Have a look at this analysis of the Star Wars "Cantina" scene ... http://index.echostation.com/trilogy/cantina2.htm Leesub Sirln's production name is "Weird Girl" and Mosep's is "Walrus" So, the second image on that page shows the Walrus and the Weird GIrl together. Could this be evidence of some psychic connection? I've never seen that particular web page before. Could all I believe be wrong? Could it be that psychic phenomena, prediction, telekenesis and ESP actually have basis in fact? Could it be that Uri Geller does, in fact have an existence of merit? Naah, shouldn't think so. More likely that I've seen a bootlegged torrent of some Star Wars script or production notes at some point in my online life, not paid it much attention but flicked through to the cantina scene because it's the first scene that springs to the mind of a casual Star Wars semifan. Something about those two production names appealed to the deep-down "dreaming" brain, which hung on to them until it could really make could use of them. Calling them up when Dancing Spock couldn't get my attention any more. |