Pink as an engram color indicates “betrayal in friendship or love,” “deprived love,” “problem with a loved one,” “deprived of the opportunity to participate,” or “broken promise.”

Adano Ley (Swami Nitty-Gritty) said …

“Craving bread in the morning is a trauma caused by a broken promise. ‘Give us this day our daily bread’ – you’re afraid you won’t get it.”

Pink is the color of change and transformation, even more than red.

Adano said …

“Aquarian pink is the color that throws rocks in your ruts.”

Most people refer to this variety of pink as bubblegum pink or Pepto Bismol pink, and it’s technically known as Baker-Miller pink.

A few police stations have actually painted their temporary holding cells this color to sedate prisoners.

Unfortunately, Baker-Miller pink’s sedation effect only lasts for about twenty minutes, then continued exposure to it tends to promote hyperactivity and even violence.

Leatrice Eiseman (Colors For Your Every Mood: Discover Your True Decorating Colors, 1998) wrote …

“Alexander Schauss, of the American Institute for Biosocial Research in Tacoma, Washington, developed he concept of using a bright Pepto Bismol pink environment to calm subjects after he noted that his own blood pressure, pulse, and heart beat lowered more rapidly after a period of hyperexcitement when he viewed that vivid shade of pink. He felt that it might have an effect on human aggression and tested the theory at the Naval Correctional Center in Seattle. An admission cell was painted the vivid Baker-Miller pink. Newly confined prisoners were admitted to the cell and observed for fifteen minutes during which no incidents of erratic behavior were recorded. The effects of the color lingered on for at least 30 minutes after their removal from the cell. Interestingly color-blind subjects at Bryce Hospital in Tuscaloosa exhibited the same physiological responses to Baker-Miller pink as those who were not color-blind.”

For a complete list of colors and their engram relationships, order my book, Color Recycling: A Prism-er of the Hues and Whos.

It’s available at wellness-wagon.com

 

 

 



'The Color Pink & Its Engram' have 3 comments

  1. February 18, 2012 @ 3:41 pm atomb

    Did you know …

    … pink is the color of the pinky finger in its relationship to the philosophical concept of Purgatory, otherwise known by Swami Nitty-Gritty as BEINGNESS ACTING ON MATTER?

  2. February 18, 2012 @ 7:50 pm suz

    Why are girls associated with the color pink and boys with the color blue?

    Re: “Interestingly color-blind subjects at Bryce Hospital in Tuscaloosa exhibited the same physiological responses to Baker-Miller pink as those who were not color-blind.” Maybe we can differentiate colors with other body parts, not only with our eyes. How do color blind people recognize the colors of traffic lights?

    • February 18, 2012 @ 11:50 pm atomb

      See my latest blog entry. :)


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