A recent survey by the Pew Research
Center found that 41 percent of Americans believe in psychics. Being a psychic,
“is one of the planet’s oldest professions,” according to The New York Times. In some ancient cultures shamans were
considered a link to the spirit world: Haitian Voodoo, Puerto Rican Brujeria
and Wiccan traditions all focus on communing with spirits. ...In Christianity
angels are central characters in biblical stories and can serve as spiritual
guides.
Today more than
ever, mediums are blurring the boundaries between psychic phenomena and the
field of wellness by playing down “party tricks” and focusing on teaching
people how to “trust their guts and lean into their intuition.”
To me, the zone
has always been a bit nebulous. A good-enough psychotherapist is intuitive and
helps a person transform by making connections between past and present events
in their lives.
(An aside:
psychologists do not predict the future, don’t guarantee future results, don’t
promise to remove evil curses, ply a person for information, or require vast
sums of money for quick results. As it turns out neither do genuine psychic
healers.)
In a Psychology Today article, Steve Taylor
Ph.D. acknowledges that he has experienced the paranormal phenomena of telepathy
and pre-cognition. Dr.Taylor cites
the idea of consciousness as related to the “radio model” in which
consciousness exists outside us as a property of the universe that is
potentially everywhere and in everything. The brain’s function is to “pick up”
the signals and “canalize” them into our own individual being. Consistent with
telepathy, this model suggests a
fundamental connection between living beings—a shared network of consciousness
through which information could be exchanged from unit to unit. The radio model
also fits with the argument that consciousness is produced by the brain: damage
to the brain affects or impairs consciousness, just as damage to a radio would
impair its broadcast of programs.
Many years ago,
my supervisor was Dr. Jan Ehrenwald, a Viennese psychoanalyst, and the author
of The Deeper Dimensions of
Psychoanalysis. My year of supervision with him dovetailed with my first
year of psychoanalysis with Dr. P and I dreamed that he was playing tennis. When I related the dream to him,
Dr. P. told me that indeed he had just received a tennis racket for his
birthday. Dr. Ehrenwald confirmed
that my dream was indeed telepathic.
I didn’t have any more telepathic dreams in my psychoanalysis, which ultimately
failed because the doctor couldn’t empathize with my predicament. In other
words, the early connection I had felt with Dr. P. didn’t flourish.
Psychic medium
Laura Lynn Jackson, whose book The Light
Between Us reached the best seller list, relates her journey of the
development of her psychic ability from childhood. She was a skeptic, who lived
with the fear that something was wrong with her. She consulted a series of
psychics and finally consulted a psychologist, board certified in
neuro-feedback who used the tool of the quantitative electroencephalogram (QEEG).
The QEEG measures brainwaves, recording the electrical activity in different
parts of the brain. Ms. Jackson’s brainwave pattern turned out to be consistent
with someone who had a traumatic brain injury. In other words, her brain was
indeed different. During psychic activity, the QEEG showed that there was
abnormal activity, a series of bigger, intermittent waves in the right rear
portion of her brain where the parietal and temporal lobes meet. These waves
resemble those of a person in deep sleep or a coma. Furthermore, this part of
the brain is associated with qualities like empathy and spirituality, found in
meditation when a person gives up the “I” or ego and achieves a higher sense of
self.
Ms Jackson
suggests that this capacity is inherent in all of us to access if we choose to
develop our brains in this way. She concludes, “I believe that when we question
and explore how we fit into the universe, we can overcome the fears and doubts
that keep us from discovering our highest path.”
Not everyone has
to follow this route. Many people naturally intuit their path, while others
search and benefit from psychotherapy. In a sense, Freud’s goal of
psychoanalysis wasn’t antithetical to meditation. Psychoanalysis intends to
free an individual from the prison of personal neurosis (over-focus or
over-involvement in the ego) to become aware of the suffering inherent in the
human condition.
Certainly, there
is much we cannot see or understand. As we evolve and our technology becomes
more and more sophisticated, the universe becomes larger and more connected.
Conclusion: Let’s
keep an open mind and consider the words of William James, the great late-nineteenth-century
philosopher and the father of psychology: We can’t “close our accounts with
reality.”
Dear Reader, I
value your comments. jsimon145@gmail.com
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