Friday, August 24, 2012

#373 - HOW-TO | Removing eye spider demons from your skin

Following are guidelines for removing an eye spider demon from the surface of your skin (not underneath your skin, nor from your eyes or any orifice of your body). Before reading this post, you should first read PHOTO | Sucker demons pass through fabric and anchor to face and HOW-TO | Vanquishing sucker demons from the bedroom. These are essential to understanding much of what it described about eye spider demons.

Like a sucker demon, an eye spider demon can attach to the surface of your skin, but can also crawl underneath it by passing through it, as shown in VIDEO TIMELINE | Eye Spider Demon Traveling Underneath Skin.

When uncloaked and camouflaged, it may look like strands of hair similar to your own, all growing out of the same follicle; however, without its camouflage, it will assume its natural appearance, basically, a spider without a body.

Unfortunately, the properties of an eye spider demon when cloaked prevent it from being recorded on digital video clearly, as is evident in the photos and videos shown in VIDEO | Cloaked eye spider demon (?) blurs visionExtensive damage to eyes, glasses stolen and Demons put "eye spiders" in eye sockets, nose and ears—and worse, and as more recently shown by these still frames, which were taken from a video made early this morning:

That's not hair; it's a horde of cloaked eye spider demons, which congregate in swarms as thick as maggots on rotting meat (Download more photos like this from MediaFire [1.3 MB])
As you can see from the photos above, when fully cloaked and attached to the surface of your skin, a eye spider demon appears as a barely visible, smoky-colored (i.e., ghost-like) haze, which, at first glance, might look like an afterimage were it not for its shape and detail, and the fact that it doesn't disappear after a few seconds.

Sometimes, though, on video, a cloaked eye spider demon looks oversaturated black in color or, sometimes, a glossy steel-blue (see the black squiggles in the photos above). The only exception I have ever captured on video is shown in VIDEO TIMELINE | Eye Spider Demon, Dismembered, which shows the flailing leg of an eye spider demon that I had just removed from the back of my hand (which is a highly preferred spot for eye spider demons due to its low traffic, as you can see from the photos above). To see it, you have to enlarge the video, and then watch very closely between the tips of my two fingers.

To locate an eye spider demon, rub a flattened palm over the surface of your skin. At hair clusters, feel for a small "ball" of pressure that gets tighter when you press on it. Then, to make sure, pinch that area until you hear the characteristic "pop" (see below).

As stated, eye spider demons affect a true camouflage, much in the way some animals in nature do (there is a type of fish in the sea that lays flat on any surface and mirrors it exactly and instantly). When on your arm, back, leg, or other part of your body, they will look almost identical to any number of hairs around them; the key difference between a clump of hair on your arm and a camouflaged eye spider demon is that the demon's simulated hair will usually be darker and longer, and the hairs in a simulated cluster will look more entangled and intertwined than the surrounding hairs, as well as denser.
NOTE | Like when they travel underneath the skin, there will be yellow bumps that glow slightly over the area where the sucker demon is embedded when under your eyelids, as shown in VIDEO | Cloaked eye spider demon (?) blurs vision.
Like sucker demons, eye spider demons attach to places that you can't reach very well, and places you don't touch that often. That would be:
  • your back of your body, primarily, your actual back (all along the spine), in between the buttocks, the cracks between your lower buttocks and upper thighs, and behind your knees.
  • If you're hairy, they will hide on the back of your hands, on top of your toes, knees, and elbows; these are the locations that they extend from to manipulate objects or pull on your limbs, which they do without being detected, as they can position themselves between their target and whatever is in-between (for example, if you are trying to tap something into your touchscreen cellphone, they will snake underneath your fingertips, and then touch the screen from that point, so that your fingers are covering them from your view.
  • Your head and face will usually be full of them, particularly, if they are reshaping your skull or facial structure. They nest in the nose, ears, mouth, and eyes (usually just under the eyelid.
To remove an eye spider demon, "pinch until it pops" by placing the tips of your forefinger and thumb on the surface of your skin, on either side of the base of the hair or the head of the eye spider demon.  Then, trapping the base of the hair (or the head) between your two fingers, roll your fingertips together until your fingernails are touching, and pinch until you hear and feel a "snap" between your fingertips, and on and under the surface of your skin near the hair follicle.

The sensation of pulling out an eye spider demon is very different from the one you feel when accidentally pulling out a regular hair. First, it is never painful, unless you pull out a hair, too.
NOTE | The sucker demons of the sewing-thread variety that congregate in your mouth, ears, and nose protect eye spider demons planted on the hairy surfaces of your skin by slithering down your arm and between your two fingers to simulate the feel of contact with the targeted eye spider demon. When you pull on what you think is the eye spider demon, they simulate the sliding sensation of an eye spider demon being pulled off of a hair by thinning their bodies and then pulling free from your grip. Don't be fooled; check your fingertips to see the lingering remains of the eye spider demon to dissolve right before your very eyes (or, watch it crawl back up your hand and then who-knows-where).

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