Paranormal - THE FORCE WITHIN
by Anupama Bhattacharya
Is paranormal a mere fantasy, a creation of irrational self-suggestion? Or is there a deeper truth that can take mankind to the threshold of a higher existence?
HOW TO TAP YOUR ESP
Follow your hunches. With time, the hunches will become stronger.
Try to remember your dreams first thing in the morning and interpret them intuitively. They might offer strange
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IS THE WORLD A HOLOGRAM?
How can a person receive instant telepathic messages from somebody half a world away? Or will something to happen across thousands of miles?
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This world is a beginning
and a base
where life and mind erect their structured dreams;
An unborn
power must build reality.
A death bound littleness is not all we are:
Immortal our forgotten vastness…
Await discovery in our summit selves
—Sri Aurobindo
The first time I was asked to attend
a séance, I laughed it off. But curiosity got the better of me and I walked into
a dark and musty classroom of the Presidency College in Calcutta, India. I don't
know if any spirit really arrived—at least I could find no convincing proof.
However, what struck me as strange was the keen interest verging on veneration
shown by no fewer than 10 students present at the séance.
What were
they doing? What was the nature of their search? Was it an attempt to break free
of what Colin Wilson, author of Occult and Beyond the Occult calls a state
of sleepwalking? Is the cocoon of our limited perceptions seems to be breaking
down while a world throbbing with inexplicable wonders is slowly but surely revealing
itself?
BEYOND THE SENSES
Have you ever spared a thought
for that hunch you occasionally have about something or someone? Or questioned
those strange and seemingly illogical coincidences when you think of somebody
and the person pays you a visit? Mere chance? Think again!
Carl Gustav Jung, renowned psychoanalyst
who hypothesized the collective unconscious, explains these phenomena
by the theory of synchronicity. "Synchronistic events rest on the simultaneous
occurrence of two different psychic states," he writes. Arthur
Koestler, author of The Roots of Coincidence, feels that most
events take place in a synchronized manner which can be put into a fixed
pattern—a particular name cropping up repeatedly or a bad day when
every thing seems to go wrong.
While on
Jung, let's also look into morphogenetic resonance or the hundredth monkey phenomenon.
It has been noticed that when some skill is learnt by a certain number of a particular
species, the others pick it up faster. It agrees with the theory of the collective
unconscious except that there seem to be exclusive memory banks for each species—dogs
never seem to tap cat memories!
Anil
Bakshi, director of Personnel Search Associates in Delhi, India, feels that most
paranormal capabilities can be developed through practice. "I got involved with
the paranormal after a friend of mine told me about his experiences. He guided
me in developing my potentials and I worked hard on it. Now I can tell people's
past, present and future. I'm not very accurate as yet, but I believe one an achieve
this power through practice."
For Shamshir Luthra, radio jockey and
compere, the paranormal manifests itself in rather strange ways: "Whenever people
come in contact with me, their lives invariably change—usually with drastic
results." But he ads that it is not as bad as it seems. "The bad luck affects
only the first time. My continued presence in people's lives seems to bring a
lot of good results."
Many people believe that those who experience
the paranormal or dabble in it are slightly soft in the head (psychic for them
is synonymous with insane). And not without reason! Mentally imbalanced people
generally have strong extrasensory powers. This is because paranormal is a function
of the right brain and it is only when the analytical left brain is put aside
that psychic experiences break through. That is why most people experience the
paranormal during states of sleep and rest when the mind is fully receptive. This
is also the reason that animals seem to have strong extrasensory perception (ESP)—the
analytical faculty does not exist in them.
Many parapsychologists even believe that in the far reaches of prehistory,
our predecessors were not only equipped with strong ESP but also with
a third eye in the middle of the forehead, which could look into other
planes. But over millions of years, the disuse of the organ made it atrophy.
And it gradually sank into the folds of the brain. Scientific evidence
indicates that there might be some truth in this. The pineal gland, located
at the site of the traditional third eye, has been found to have a certain
amount of light sensitivity, indicating that it might be the remnant of
an organ of sight.
Psychic surgery, popular in Brazil and the Philippines, is another phenomenon that defies all explanation.
In his book The Flying Cow, Guy Playfair describes his mind-boggling
observation of a psychic surgeon, Edivaldo Silva, who performed operations by
plunging his hands inside people's bodies—right through the skin—and
leaving the flesh intact after operation. Pranic healing and reiki practitioners
also claim to channel cosmic energy for healing purposes.
Paranormal manifests itself in varied forms—dreams, foresight, psychokinesis,
déjà vu, and telepathy—each ultimately opening the mind to a reality
beyond our limited perceptions. However, even though paranormal abilities
can be directed for personal growth, like the mythical Pandora's box,
you may release a nightmarish horde of uncontrollable forces if you dabble
in the unknown without comprehending it.
DREAM VOYAGES
As a child, I had recurring dreams of
an inexplicably beautiful place somewhere in the mountains. Though I never came
across it in real life, it made me wonder if there are other worlds, perhaps as
real as ours, which we occasionally visit in our dreams.
Dreams have fascinated
and awed thinkers from time immemorial. The old epics from Iliad
to Ramayana are replete with dream interpretations. Sigmund Freud
perceived in dreams a revelation of the repressed animal instincts of
human nature. For Jung, dreams were not only a door to the psyche but
also a glimpse into the hidden wonders of the universe. The real answer
seems closer to Jung than Freud. The precognitive power of certain dreams,
along with telepathic visions, implies that dreams comprise something
more than ordinary fears and desires of the psyche.
Dreaming takes place during REM (rapid eye movement) sleep. In REM,
if any external stimulus is provided, the sensation is somehow incorporated into
the dream. For example, if a person is sprayed with water during REM sleep, he
might dream of a shower.
But what happens when dreams invade reality?
In 1959,
a New York disc jockey, Peter Tripp, attempted a publicity stunt by staying awake
for 201 hours. After three days, he began to hallucinate and turned paranoid.
It was almost as though his sleep-deprivation was allowing dream images to break
into his waking consciousness.
However, as Bharati Ramachandran, a journalist
based in Bangalore, India, discovered, dreams can also opens avenues of experience
unlike anything in the everyday world. "My dreams unfolded before me a world of
ecstasy and beauty. It was not just the images but the feelings—of oneness,
of peace—that somehow strengthened my belief in the God within me," says
Bharati.
One aspect of my dreams that has always fascinated me is seeing
people who, as far as I'm concerned, might not even exist. Bharati recalls a similar
experience: "I had recurring dreams of a group of people none of whom I consciously
recognized, yet they seemed familiar, somewhat like friends I've known for ages.
It was almost as though some people with whom I have a strong mental rapport could
reach me across time and space when my waking consciousness was laid to rest.
It made me wonder if there isn't some truth in the theory of soul groups who continue
to meet in different lifetimes."
For Shamshir, dreams have another connotation:"
Once, while sleeping in the afternoon, I dreamt that a friend fell down from his
terrace when the railing broke. In the evening my friend came and told me that
he was actually leaning on the railing when for some reason he pulled back and
the railing broke. Did I send a telepathic warning?" wonders Shamshir.
And if dreams can be telepathic, what stops them from opening channels to other
worlds?
After Dante's death, 13 cantos of his epic poem, The Divine Comedy went
missing. They were later located by his son who dreamt of his father guiding him
to the cantos. Did Dante himself give the directions through the dream or did
his son somehow tap his father's memory? The answer is difficult. But dreams certainly
act as means of communication between altered modes of consciousness. Artists,
poets, scientists often seem to get their inspiration from dreams. Robert Louis
Stevenson gave his dreams the credit for many of his stories including Dr Jekyll
and Mr Hyde. A dream also inspired Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a romantic poet,
to write Kubla Khan.
Sanjay Bhasin, a businessman based in Delhi,
recalls: "I never had any premonitions or psychic experiences. But what seems
strange to me is that I often dream of myself as a different person." I can understand
that, more so when I recently dreamt of myself as a professional killer. The strangest
part was that I not only seemed to look different and had a different identity,
but that I also seemed to think in a different way. Glimpses of past births? Dormant
multiple personalities?—the answer seems to lie in the mind itself.
MANY FACES
How can one body have different identities? Or for
that matter, one brain have different thinking patterns? Ghosts? Mental disorders?
Doppelgangers? Or something deeper than the human mind can fathom at this point
of evolution?
In her sensational book Sibyl, Flora Rheta Schreiber
recounts the true story of a sexually abused child who later split into 14 different
personalities. Some of these personalities were also aware of each other. All
of them had different names and they behaved like different individuals. Strangely,
each personality also had different brain patterns, which are supposed to be as
individual as fingerprints.
Interestingly, all people with multiple
personalities seem to have at least one personality that is sensible, strong and
benevolent—almost like guardian angel. Colin Wilson explains this phenomenon
through his "ladder of selves" theory. According to him, there are three basic
aspects of the human mind: the unconscious, the conscious and the superconscious.
In a mentally disturbed person, these aspects split apart, and multiple personalities
are formed. These aspects can further divide and form any number of personalities.
This, according to Wilson, means that "our personal evolution is a matter of effort
and optimism" where, with a positive attitude, we can maintain the integrity of
our psyche and reach out to the superconscious. Multiple personalities have also
been explained in terms of spirit possession. This brings us to the next query:
Does anything survive death? Can we, with our limited perceptions, shake the fear
and pain of separation and accept death as a necessary part of the celebration
of life?
UNEARTHLY VISITATIONS
Death, as some scientists
are beginning to accept, is not the final annihilation. Something of a person
does survive. However, whether it is just the memory in the collective unconscious,
is a debatable issue.
"I am inclined to believe that there is some kind
of an existence after death," says Bharati who has extensively experimented with
various forms of séances and planchettes during her college years. "My initial
attempts at automatic writing resulted in answers that were often gibberish, or
else, silly. But then, with the passage of time, something strange began to happen.
I would be writing words I didn't know existed but later found in a dictionary;
some statements about the spirits' personal life that later proved to be true.
I also began to feel their presence."
Priya Agarwal, a reiki master,
also began to view life in a different way after her experience with the spirit
world. "One day, a man claiming to be my ex-neighbor's brother came and asked
for his brother's new address. I went to fetch my telephone book but when I came
back, he was nowhere around. It was impossible for a normal human being to disappear
so fast." Was it coincidence, wonders Priya, that her maid, who had also seen
the man, ran away and later, each place she worked in was robbed. "When I learnt
that our neighbor's brother had met with an accidental death much before I saw
him, I wondered if he hadn't come to save me from a possible robbery brought about
by the maid's presence."
This experience made Priya feel that spirits are not harmful entities: "I believe
that they come when they want to help somebody or give some kind of warning."
Bharati is not so sure about all spirits being benign, but she feels that her
experiences have certainly changed her life. "Death itself doesn't seem so very
final anymore. It is more like an intermediary state between the islands that we call life," she concludes.
BORN AGAIN
The dead always come back, some religions believe. If
that is the case then very few seem to bring along the memory of their past lives.
And those who do, don't remember enough to provide proof.
Dr Kulin Kothari,
a psychiatrist who has worked extensively with cased of alleged reincarnation
and who figures in many film documentaries and articles on the occult, feels that
most such cases have their basis in subconscious suggestion. "One of my young
patients suddenly claimed to remember her previous life as a queen while she was
passing through Rajasthan (India). But her apparent memories subsided after medication.
If they are really memories and not hallucinations, shouldn't they persist?"
However, this in itself cannot disprove reincarnation. The famous case of
a Sri Lankan clerk Francis Kodituwakku's rebirth was dismissed by the Rationalist
Association of Ceylon because the boy who was supposed to be the reborn Francis
failed to answer most of the questions about Francis's life. But, following the
same logic, can our failing to recognize events and names from our childhood disclaim
our identity?
BACK FROM DEATH'S DOOR
Those who have been close to death generally cease to fear the last plunge.
In fact, near-death experiences (NDEs) almost always make people look
inward and view life from a different perspective. Such experiences have
much in common—including out-of-body experiences, rushing through
a tunnel that ends in a white light, and a feeling of free fall as they
are pulled back into the bodies.
"They are generally hallucinations
brought about by subjective beliefs. Else, why should people see different images?"
asks Dr Kothari. But that fails to explains how a patient can describe the minute
details of an operation after having an NDE on the operating table. It also doesn't
explain the strange peace that surrounds people with such experiences. Priya Agarwal
recounts her NDE: "I stood beside my own body watching the doctors declare me
dead. However, Dr Alok Chopra of Aashlok Hospital, New Delhi, administered a series
of intravenous drugs and managed to revive my body. Suddenly, I seemed to become
a ray of light and whoosh—I went back into my lifeless form." When Priya
woke up, she felt immersed in a great sense of joy.
MIND LINKS
Telepathy is the most common form of the paranormal. People
often seem to be saying "exactly" what we are thinking. Or friends drop in just
when we think of them. The Koestler Institute at Edinburgh University has been
trying to prove this phenomenon for years and the statistics seem encouraging.
The success rate of the Ganzfield experiment, in which a subject is made sit in
a room while another person sends telepathic images from a different room, has
proven beyond doubt that something not explainable by the present laws of science
does exist.
The Ganzfield experiment also rules out the notion that
people pick up feeble electrical or magnetic activity generated in the brains
since the room where these experiments are held is electromagnetically screened.
Yet, people continue to pick up information, not only across all man-made barriers,
but also across time and space.
GLIMPSES INTO THE FUTURE
Nothing poses as many uncomfortable questions as premonitions or the capability
of foresight. The most important of them is the concept of time. Is time a dimension?
Is everything predetermined? Then what are we doing here, acting as puppets in
God's already decided game?
But premonitions also come as warnings.
Does that mean that not one, but a number of futures exist (as in Richard Bach's
One), and it is up to us to choose our own future?
In 1966, an
avalanche of coal waste buried parts of the Welsh mining village of Aberfan including
the village school. More than 140 children were killed. Later it was found that
many people across the world had dream premonitions of the tragedy for about two
weeks before it actually took place. Dr J.C. Baker, who conducted the post-tragedy
survey, felt that if premonitions could be recorded on a computer to detect peaks
and patterns of a particular kind, then some major tragedies could be averted.
As a result of Dr Baker's initiative, the British Premonitions Bureau was set
up in London in 1967 and the Central Premonitions Registry in New York the following
year.
Talking of precognition, the biggest mystery is the Bhrigu Samhita
(ancient Indian texts purported to have one page each giving details of
the life of every human being on earth), and its counterparts in different
parts of India.
Basudeb Bhattacharya, principal, Hariyana Vidya Mandir,
Calcutta, who has been practicing tantra for the last 14 years and meditates all
night at cremation grounds four times a year, also makes predictions, though he
doesn't know how. "I meditate every Saturday before the image of goddess Kali.
During that time I can answer any question people ask me. I can also solve people's
problems. The answers just come to my mind. I never try to question it," he says.
Or take Edgar Cayce, the famous American 'sleeping prophet', who would go into
a trance and make prophecies. Cayce apparently prophesied world events such as
the two world wars, India's independence and the fall of communism in the Soviet Union.
MIND OVER MATTER
But wait! What if it's not precognition at all? What
if, instead of sensing what's going to happen, some people manifest what they
sense? In other words, isn't there a possibility that what we normally pass off
as precognition, is actually its more dangerous counterpart: psychokinesis (willing
something to happen).
In the early 1980's, a man dreamt of a plane crash
in the USA. The next day he saw the report of the plane crash in the morning papers.
To all appearances, it seemed like an innocent case of premonition. Except that
the previous night, while looking up at the sky, the man had wondered how people
would react if a major plane crash were to take place. It could have been a case
of foresight, but—and this is where the eerie bit comes—what if it was
wish fulfillment?
Harold Sherman, author of How to Make ESP Work
For You, says that if we tap our "ability to synchronies our movements in
time", we can save a tremendous amount of time and energy. This we can do by desiring
a thing and then willing it to happen. Sherman gives instances where he was saved
from accidents and theft because he had instructed his extrasensory faculty to
warn him in time.
THINGS THAT GO BUMP IN THE NIGHT
The power
of psychokinesis often expresses itself in the form of poltergeists. Parapsychologists
believe that the psychic energy created by the repressed anger or frustration
in a child or an adolescent sometimes gets externalized and manifests itself as
a poltergeist. Some occultists also believe that poltergeists are forces that
channel themselves through a child. Interestingly, poltergeists are never overtly
destructive or violent. The activities relate more to things that an angry child
might do—such as banging doors, moving furniture, breaking household things
or throwing stones. However, the child concerned seems to have no conscious control
over the events. It is more like a force let loose that expresses its frustration
through random actions.
It is interesting to note that poltergeist bangs
differ from ordinary bangs on sound graphs in that the latter rises and falls
in curves whereas the former creates sharp lines. The Hungarian psychoanalyst
Nandor Fodor argued that the poltergeist phenomena is yet another manifestation
of repressed sexual energies. Guy Playfair, an authority on the paranormal, calls
it "a football of energy. When people get into conditions of tension, they exude
a kind of energy. Along come a couple of spirits, and begin to kick it around,
creating havoc".
BURNING INWARD
While on the subject of
mysteries, there is a mystery within the body itself that has eluded explanation
so far. This time, it's the all-consuming fire within—or spontaneous human
combustion (SHC), as it is scientifically known.
Apparently, SHC causes
people to suddenly burst into flames though the combustion is localized to the
body. Other objects in the vicinity face no damage. Often the clothes of the victims
are also untouched by fire. Considering the fact that the temperature required
to burn down a human body is so high that nothing in the vicinity can escape unscathed,
this aspect of SHC poses some difficult questions.
What is this energy?
Where does the energy come from? Though many people have tried to explain away
SHC (in terms of alcohol or fat content in the body), there haven't been any conclusive
answers. I remember reading in a book that sages often perform their own cremation
so that their bodies won't be desecrated after death. They supposedly ignite their
own body through spiritual fire. Could it be possible that there is some truth
in it? Are we sitting on a virtual minefield of energy, unaware, unheeding of the force within us?
DAWN OF A NEW AGE
Perhaps there is a point somewhere. Today, almost 90 per
cent of the population experiences the paranormal—be it telepathy, precognition
or psychokinensis—at one time or the other. A number of researches are also
being conducted into the unknown parameters of the mind. It would seem that somewhere
along the evolutionary ladder we paid the price of technological advancement with
a loss or dulling of faculties that were innate to our nature. Thus, the mechanical
took precedence over the psychic and most of our energies were spent on survival
in an ever-changing world.
But now that the mechanical is reaching out
to the as yet untapped recesses of the mind, scientists are beginning to delve
into hitherto taboo subjects like the paranormal. Humanity itself is slowly but
surely awakening to its hidden powers, the spirit-force that can perhaps take
mankind to the next rung of evolution where the yin and the yang meet in the cosmic
balance of polarities.
HOW TO TAP YOUR ESP
Follow your hunches. With time, the hunches will become stronger.
Try to remember your dreams first thing in the morning and interpret them intuitively. They might offer strange
More >>
IS THE WORLD A HOLOGRAM?
How can a person receive instant telepathic messages from somebody half a world away? Or will something to happen across thousands of miles?
Theories of electromagnetic fields and brain
More >>