There's No Hiding from Those Who Love You*
Given the storm over Wikileaks, and the discovery
of just how much we rely upon our secrets, here is an interesting tale that
shows that there really are no secrets. However, losing secrets proves to be
a strong motivation for denying the reality of ESP, as this article
demonstrates.
Don encountered at a business convention his old
flame, Peggy. They found their attraction for each other to be as intense as
it had been in college. One thing led to another and they were well on their
way to enjoy an intimate reunion. Then, at a crucial moment, Don awoke from
this delectable dream. He had little time to nurse his disappointment,
however, because his wife woke up and muttered, "Don, honey, do we know
anyone named Peggy?" Don sleepily said he didn't think so and rolled over.
When Don told me this story, a new idea about a
powerful motivator of ESP came to me. Telepathy seems to love to sniff out
secrets!
Surveys show that spontaneous telepathy involve
people who are close. It would seem as if the emotional connection between
people, the bond of intimacy, provides the channel for telepathic
communication. Laboratory studies support this impression. Friends and
intimates perform better in ESP experiments than do strangers.
Nothing seems to pull on the emotional strings that
tie people together like trouble that threatens the bond between them. A
mother senses her child is in trouble and rushes to the scene just in time.
A husband feels there's something wrong at home and calls. The ringing of
the phone awakens his wife who was drifting asleep from leaking gas.
Louisa Rhine, wife of the founder of America's first
ESP laboratory, at Duke University, received thousands of letters detailing
stories such as these. Accidents, deaths, illnesses, these and other threats
to loved ones were precipitators of ESP. "Crisis ESP" is the name given to
what is perhaps the most common context for spontaneous telepathy.
Although crises such as accidents and deaths may be
the largest known source of ESP, secrets may actually be an even more
common, although unknown, unrecognized or unacknowledged culprit. As Don's
story suggests, secrets might stimulate ESP. In the case of secrets,
however, the very same reason that motivates the original secrecy, may also
suppress the acknowledgement of the ESP!
Looking for some corroboration of this idea, I
searched through Louisa Rhine's collection of case studies of spontaneous
ESP as found in her books, ESP in Life and Lab, Hidden Dimensions of the
Mind, and The Invisible Picture. I did find a few stories similar to Don's,
showing that a wife can be quite sensitive to her husband's wandering
feelings.
A wife who had never really known jealousy of her
husband, for example, had a dream where she saw him leaning against a wall
with a woman in front of him. He had both of his arms around her and they
were talking and laughing. The next day she asked her husband in a joking
sort of way, "If you were against a wall last night standing with a woman
holding her in your arms, who might that woman be?" He laughed and said, "I
didn't do anything wrong honey, that was just the waitress at the
restaurant. She came over to me and said "how's my sweetie?" How did you
happen to know?" The wife started to tell him the dream but then for some
reason decided that she didn't want him to know about it. So she said she
just happened to have gone down for a cup of coffee and happened to see him
there.
In relationships, secrets can be a form of lying.
Keeping certain facts hidden can be a form of deception. It also is a
barrier to intimacy. As a relationship is forming, and curiosity is high,
such secrets may be especially vulnerable to detection.
Louisa Rhine tells the story of a woman working as a
waitress in a cafeteria who met a young man who flirted with her. They went
out on a date and fell in love. One day he said he had to make a business
trip to Boston but would return in a week. That night, she had a dream in
which she saw a "sad, frail woman with dark brown hair and in the last
stages of pregnancy" who told her that she was the man's wife. The next day,
the waitress happened to hear from somebody that the man had not gone on a
business trip, but was going to see his wife who, he had learned, was about
to have a baby. When the man did return she confronted him with this
information, and learned that it was the truth.
In another case, it was the man who wrote to Louisa.
He was away from home on a business trip with friends. They ran into some
girls and he became somewhat smitten with one of them. After that trip he
phoned her a couple of times from his home town. The next time he traveled
to New York, he called her, they had a date and they ended up spending the
night together. When they woke up the next morning, she had what she thought
was a funny dream, which she told him. In her dream, she saw the man was
married to a slim woman with dark hair and a black tooth in front of her
mouth. She described their house on the waterfront with its array of boats.
In the dream, the couple's daughter came up to the dreamer and said, "Oh,
you go out with my father." Hearing this dream shocked the man because
everything, with the exception of children, was accurate. He didn't let on
that the dream was accurate, but began to distance himself from the woman
and gradually broke off the relationship. She never knew her dream was
psychic.
The child's innocent reaction in the woman's dream
rings a bell in our sleuthing for secrets exposed through ESP. Children have
a way of voicing what is intended to remain silent, as in the infamous
exclamation, "The emperor has no clothes!" Most any parent will testify that
their children seem to be past masters at picking up or reacting to the
parent's thoughts and feelings.
Just how closely children are tuned into their
parents has been amply documented by Berthold Schwarz. In his book,
Parent-Child Telepathy
this psychiatrist presented the diary he and his wife kept of the ESP that
occurred between themselves and their own children.
ESP made it hard for Dr. and Mrs. Schwarz to keep
presents a secret from their children. Little Lisa, whose birthday near
Thanksgiving was but a month away from Christmas, seemed especially
telepathic about presents. When Lisa was about to have her second birthday,
mom was looking at Dad's appointment book, and was thinking about writing in
Lisa's birthday. At that very moment, Lisa announced, "Draw a birthday
cake!" When the parents discussed wrapping Christmas presents for the
children next door, Lisa started talking to herself about a truck with
little cars in a garage and then went on to talk about putting her cereal in
an oven. They were astounded to hear this as one of the presents they had
bought for the boy next door was a toy car transport truck and a toy oven
for Lisa. They were locked away in separate boxes in a closet in dad's
office. Upon hearing Lisa's fantasy, they went and checked on the boxes,
which were securely unopened. One fall morning, just before she turned five,
Lisa announced, "Last night I dreamed of a spinning wheel! Lisa wants a
spinning wheel for Christmas!" The day before, mother had been out shopping
and saw a spinning wheel and bought it for Lisa. She didn't bring it into
the house until the children were in bed.
Another common type of secret-baring telepathy was
the the Schwarz children's knack for suddenly making a comment aloud that
seemed as if in direct response to something one of the parents was silently
thinking. In one instance, when Lisa was three, she and mom were resting
together in bed. Lisa was holding a Santa Claus doll and talking to it about
what she wanted for Christmas. Mother was trying to fall off asleep and was
thinking about how her children had grown so much. As she thought to
herself, "I have no baby anymore," Lisa asked her, "Do you want Santa to
bring you a baby sister?" Mother was surprised because the daughter had
never, to her knowledge, mentioned a baby sister before.
As any parent can attest, sometimes children's
questions can probe into embarrassing areas. Imagine what it must have been
like, then, at the Schwarz house, when the children's questions probed
thoughts the parents were keeping to themselves.
The family was sitting around the dinner table. Dad's
quietly thinking to himself. Nine year old Lisa asked mom how come Dad's not
talking. Mom says he has a sore throat and is saving his voice. In fact,
however, he was thinking over a letter he received from a friend asking for
his intervention in a touchy situation. He was imagining just how he could
diplomatically navigate through the mess without hurting any feelings. Just
then, Lisa asked, "Mother, is there such a word as 'diplomatics'?" That word
brought father out of his reverie. He asked her, "Why would you say that?"
She said, "I don't know I just made it up." Lisa didn't know what the word
meant and had to go look it up in the dictionary.
Among family members, a secret can be its own kind of
crisis. A family is bound by intimacy. Several individuals become one
functioning unit. Secrets, whatever their nature, create boundaries between
the individual family members. ESP serves to bridge these boundaries and
keep the bond intact.
Not only are parents sensitive to dangers confronting
their children, but children can have a telepathic capacity to be alert to
threats to the well-being of their parents. Parents often try to shield
their children from their problems or worries, but the secrecy almost seems
like a magnet to attract the child's attention.
Dr. Schwarz writes of a time when he and his wife
were in the kitchen discussing their budget because of pressing financial
concerns. Suddenly their daughter's voice comes over the intercom
announcing, "Mommy, see my art show! I will sell pictures, $2 a piece!
Invite friends you don't know and Eric will invite children from school."
Lisa was five years old at the time and Dr. Schwarz noted that several
months ago she had seen on television the story of Hans Brinker. She was
impressed by the way little children could earn money to help their
impoverished family. Lisa, however, had no idea of her parents' financial
worries because they had always made a point of keeping those matters away
from their children.
Sometimes secrets consist of momentary feelings, such
as anger, that the person doesn't feel comfortable about expressing. At a
subconscious level, however, other family members may perceive the existence
of such secret feelings as a threat to togetherness. That threat may
motivate the use of ESP to breach the secret and restore intimacy.
Dr. Schwarz recorded an instance where he was upset
with his wife. He was feeling secretly angry and thought he'd better leave
their summer retreat and get back to his city office before there was some
big fight. Just as he was making this secret decision to leave earlier than
would normally be the plan, six year old daughter Lisa walked up to him and
said "Daddy, are you leaving today?" Gottcha!--Caught in the act of his
secret thoughts, he had no choice but to reconsider.
I was excited to find that Dr. Schwarz noted in his
book that on many occasions, the nature of the coincidental remark made by
the child was of such a surprising personal nature that he had a hard time
recording it for his study. As the children grew older, this sort of thing
happened more and more often.
Certainly the Schwarz family record supports the idea
that secrets can be a prime motivator of telepathy. Furthermore, if ESP
serves to maintain subconscious, intimate contact among family members when
the people involved might not otherwise choose to openly discuss certain
matters, then it is likely that there is a large pool of ESP cases that
never come to light. Don didn't reveal to his wife Peggy, for example, that
her comment had been psychic. The ESP remained a secret known only to him.
His wife's veiled message nevertheless hit the mark.
Some parapsychologists have speculated that one
reason it has been so hard to establish credibility for ESP is the factor of
fear. Among other things, ESP represents a threat to secrecy and becomes a
potential for invasion of privacy. It would be ironic, therefore, if one of
the main motivators of everyday ESP events also serves as a powerful
motivator to suppress the evidence for ESP.
Amused and animated by this potential irony, I
decided to go out on my own search for examples of ESP exposing secrets, to
see how hard it might be to find them. For my first attempt, I approached
someone who I thought would have a number of ESP type coincidences to share.
I asked her, "Have you ever had an experience where your children or spouse
made an off the wall comment, or perhaps told you a bit of a dream, that
made you realize that they, perhaps without knowing it themselves, had
tapped into a secret of yours--that they seemed to be picking up on
something that you wished they hadn't?" The woman looked at me, paused, then
a stern look came upon her face. She said, "Yes, that happened to me once,
with one of my daughters." She blushed, she said, "But it is too personal to
tell you about!"
Although this person gave me no story for my
research, her reaction was more than enough confirmation for my idea. In
fact, it seemed like a synchronistic blessing, convincing me that there is a
large pool of personal experiences out there related to the unwanted
exposure of secrets through ESP. I therefore placed a notice in my "Psi
Research" column in Venture Inward magazine about my ideas concerning the
role of ESP in uncovering family secrets. I encouraged people to come
forward with their stories, even anonymously.
I quickly received over twenty letters in reply. Most
concerned marital infidelities. The second most frequent category were
adults having dreams about secrets their parents kept from them as
children--I guess children never really grow beyond the ability to discover
their parent's secrets. There were a couple concerning realizing someone was
pregnant, or health concerns and a few miscellaneous topics, including two
claiming the revelation of undetected murders!
One of the first letters I received in response came
unsigned, but was clearly from a woman. She didn't mention the nature of the
secret that had been exposed. The tone of the letter showed that the she
still felt a great deal of hurt from the secret she had uncovered through a
dream. It was a recent event, and still hurt.
Extramarital contacts seem to be a potent source for
telepathic secret-smashing. One woman wrote me about how she uncovered her
husband's affair through dreams. She had a dream where he told her that he
loved another woman. She woke up crying from the dream and her husband
comforted her, assuring there was no basis to the dream. Later, however, he
confessed. When he did so, he said to her the exact words she had heard him
say in her dream.
Another woman wrote to me that twice she dreamed of
her husband's infidelities. In both cases, when she told him the dream, the
details were so surprisingly accurate, he involuntarily confessed on the
spot. A few years later, she had a similar experience, but without the aid
of a dream. In this case, he had been staying late at work, complaining that
they had been unable to hire extra help for the summer. One night when he
came home, she heard a voice in her shout out, and she repeated it aloud,
"who is the new person who's working with you?" She was surprised to hear
her say these words, for they were in direct contradiction to what her
husband had been telling her. He confessed that they did have extra help. It
was a woman and she and he were having an affair.
Human feelings being as they are, it is not that
uncommon for people to have a jealousy dream in which they see their spouse
or lover entangled with someone else. It would make good sense to treat such
dreams as pictures of our own worries. Consider this dream, for example,
sent to me by a woman from Massachusetts:
"My husband and I were in a gray stone castle. I was
standing on a balcony looking down over a huge ballroom. At least a hundred
people were dancing. It was a breathtakingly beautiful sight like a fabulous
theatrical production. I went to look for my husband. I walked into a room
and saw him there with a half-dressed woman. They were as startled to see me
as I was to see them. Then, with a smirk on her face, the woman told me she
was a lawyer who had come to consult with my husband on a legal matter. He
backed up her ridiculous story. My shock and anger now turned to fury and
the woman became afraid of me. She grabbed her dress, coat and handbag and
ran from the room."
The wife thought the dream was "only symbolic." Two
weeks later, however, when she and her husband were out shopping at a large
mall, a woman came running up to them. She created a very loud and
humiliating scene. From the woman's remarks it was clear that she was
involved with our dreamer's husband. The wife was amazed at this revelation
and gave the woman quite a stare--who was this woman? Suddenly the wife
recognized her: she was the woman of her dream!
Another woman wrote that one day a good friend phoned
her, quite upset, and relayed this story: After eight years of marriage, she
fell in love with her husband's brother. She kept these feelings to herself
for a long time, but one day, the brother came over to the house and they
had an intimate encounter. Within five minutes of their liaison, the phone
rang. It was the woman's husband. He cried out over the phone, "Did you just
make love to somebody?" The wife was overwhelmed with disbelief. All she
could do was reply, "What?" The husband said, "I know this sounds crazy, but
I just had this incredibly strong feeling that you were with another man."
The phone call left the wife stunned and she picked up the phone and
recounted the incident to her friend, confessing the whole story.
One woman wrote me about a dinner conversation with
her husband that proved surprising. She found herself blurting out of the
blue some derogatory comments about a woman her husband knew. She thought it
odd, as she hadn't seen or heard of this woman for over a year. Her husband
was surprised too, so surprised, in fact, that he confessed that he had a
sexual encounter with that woman just that afternoon.
In this case, the wife didn't know her remarks were
telepathically motivated until the husband's response. Her making
spontaneous comments with no apparent reason is quite reminiscent, when you
think about it, of the many examples told by Dr. Schwarz about his children.
As we saw, his children would make innocent remarks, unknowingly telepathic,
yet have no understanding of why they said the things they did. This woman's
story shows that this form of telepathic response is certainly not limited
to children.
Pregnancies are also a source of telepathic events. I
received a letter from a woman who told about her sister who once made an
unexpected visit. Her wedding had been mysteriously cancelled, but she
didn't want to talk about it. Only after the sister left did it dawn on the
woman that her sister was pregnant. She called her, exposed the secret and
offered to help. The revelation allowed her sister to open up and reveal all
that had been troubling her.
A woman from Virginia wrote me that during her
pregnancy, she and her husband were discussing the effects of child bearing
upon the body. Relative to the topic of the mother's genetic inheritance the
husband asked about how his sister-in-law had fared with her baby. The wife
was surprised at the question, as her sister had no children--at least as
far as the husband knew. The truth of the matter was that years before she
and her husband met, her sister had a child out of wedlock and gave it up
for adoption. It was a well kept family secret--at least that is what this
woman thought until her husband's "innocent" question.
Many parents wrote me confirming the impression that
children often seem psychic about presents heading their way. I received one
story of a gift for an adult identified through ESP. A grown woman is back
with her parents at Christmas. They are about finished with the present
exchanging, when Dad announces that he has one more gift, a special one for
his wife, "something you've always wanted." At that remark, the daughter
blurts out, "The brooch!" Indeed it was the brooch, a piece of jewelry that
mom had lost twelve years before. Dad had recently found it behind a book
and kept it for a Christmas surprise. Just like Schwarz's children, the
child in this woman could sense the present before it was opened, even
though it wasn't for her.
Lost or secret wills have played their role in human
history. It shouldn't be a surprise, then, that wills would appear in the
history of telepathic coincidences. One of the most well documented cases of
apparently psychic dreaming, by the way, involved the discovery of a secret
will.
In this case, when James Chaffin, a North Carolina
farmer, died in 1921, his last remaining will left his entire estate to his
third son, leaving his wife and other sons without any inheritance. One of
these other sons began to have bizarre dreams involving his dead father.
Finally, in one dream, the father said to him that he would find his true
will in the pocket of his overcoat. The son went to his mother with this
dream and learned that she had given her husband's overcoat to the boy's
brother. He went to his brother's home, examined the overcoat and found that
the lining of one pocket had been stitched together. Cutting it open, he
found a note that said to look at the 27th chapter of Genesis in
grandfather's bible. He went back home and enlisted his mother's help to
find that bible. When they located it, the pages containing the 27th chapter
of Genesis had been folded to create a pocket. In the pocket was a sheet of
paper, another will, dated 14 years after the earlier one. It divided his
estate equally among his sons and asked that they provide for their mother.
Witnesses and a court decided that this will was truly in the father's
distinctive handwriting and that this was his final will.
In a more recent example, a woman wrote me that she
had a dream where she saw her grandparents handling a long scroll, a box and
a set of keys. She wrote to her grandmother about this dream. Her
grandmother replied that she must have dreamed of their secret will. They
kept it in a safety deposit box at the local bank.
As we've seen with the Schwarz family, children also
seem able to uncover secret problems between the parents. It also happens,
for some unknown reason, after the children are grown. Perhaps after a safe
distance of several years, a remaining, subliminal curiosity or wound
prompts the discovery of an old secret. Consider these two examples:
One woman wrote me from Tulsa, Oklahoma, about a
dream concerning her father and her brother. The dream occurred after the
brother had died of kidney failure related to diabetes. She had always been
concerned about the hostility that her father had for this brother. The
brother once confided to her that he thought that perhaps he had been
adopted--that was the only way he could explain his father's apparent
dislike for him. Apparently feelings surrounding the mourning of her
brother's death lead to her having the dream. In the dream she was at the
kitchen table of her childhood home. The strange thing about the dream,
however, was that she was experiencing the dream from the perspective of her
father, actually seeing through his eyes. Looking about the family, the
father saw his wife and his daughter as they actually were, but he looked
upon the boy as small, dark and unattractive. Then the dreamer suddenly
became aware of the father's thoughts: "This is not my son." The father felt
anger and disappointment. When the daughter went to her father and told him
this dream, he didn't believe that she had actually dreamed this, but
suspected instead that her mother had betrayed their secret, that the boy's
father was another man!
Another woman, from Springfield, Illinois, wrote me a
letter telling a very interesting story, also involving a dream. It happened
during the occasion of the fifth anniversary of her father's death. He and
her mother had been married for 45 years. She had known only peace and
harmony between her parents when she was growing up at home, and could not
believe that her dream was true:
She, her brother and her parents are living in
Springfield in either a motel or rented house. Although she and her brother
were adults in the dream, and their father appeared as he did when he died
at age 69, the mother looked 45 years younger, like in her high school
graduation picture. She was young and pretty, but she had on a formal maid
uniform, long-sleeved, black dress with white collar and cuffs. The parents
were arguing about mother's returning to live in Keokuk, Iowa. He had
promised her that they would "go home" shortly after moving to Springfield;
and she was calling in the promise. She had made arrangements to return to
Keokuk after visiting friends elsewhere, and expected, and extracted a
promise from her husband to join her there by Christmas. He finally agreed
to that date. The dreamer and her brother were amazed at the whole
conversation. Mom had a train ticket and was prepared to leave that day. The
dreamer was totally devastated at the fact that not only were the parents
not planning on taking the children with them; the mother had no plans and
did not invite the children to come along. The dreamer is "thinking" that
she will not ever see her mother and she can't stand the pain of the
thought. She begins to run from the "house," crying heartily. Her mother
follows her out, tries to comfort her, and they both return inside hugging
and crying. But mother has still not either changed her mind or asked the
daughter to go with her. The dreamer woke up crying."
A few days after this dream, the woman took her
children to visit her mother. During a moment alone with mom, she told her
the dream. Her mother was quite surprised by the dream, but confirmed its
details. The scene in question occurred while her mother was pregnant with
her and her older brother was about six months old. Unknown to this woman,
her mother had worked as a maid while she was a teenager, married to the
father, whose work required them to move to a town the mother disliked.
Where they were going to live, or when they would move back to Springfield,
was a source of intense arguments. On this particular occasion, it may have
been one of those moments when the mother considered ending the marriage or
having an abortion. The abortion, of course, would have meant that our
dreamer would not have been born to later have this dream.
A child's ESP, tuned to issues important for his or
her own survival, may tap into parental areas the adults would consider
quite private. It can go the other way, too. Most parents will attest to the
fact, for example, that they seem to have feelers for when their children
are getting into mischief. I received three letters involving parents using
something akin to ESP to alert them to their children's misbehavior. In each
case, I'm sure the youngster in question thought the parent was prying.
These stories do raise the question about the possibility of invading
privacy through ESP.
The first letter of this sort comes from a man who
recalled a troubling situation involving his mother's detecting his use of
drugs. He writes that on two separate occasions, he suddenly had the thought
flash through his mind, "Mom has discovered my stash!" In each case, he
dismissed the idea, sure that his secret cache of marijuana was safe from
detection and that he was just being paranoid. He was wrong to dismiss his
inner prompting. In both instances, his mother had indeed just then
uncovered his secret. Whether she used ESP herself to do so is unknown.
One woman wrote about how ESP tipped her off to her
son's secret. She had returned from an out of town trip, and went to go to
bed. There were the same clean sheets she had left on the bed, for some
reason she got instantly angry and had an image of her son bringing a girl
into that bed. She changed the sheets, and found a long hair. When she
confronted her son, he confessed to a secret liaison. Years later, she
offered him and his new wife who were visiting the use of her bed. He
refused. She didn't understand. He said it was because of "that incident"
years ago. She had forgotten all about it, but he hadn't. He said he didn't
want his mother there with them in bed.
Another mother wrote me about a time when she was
cleaning house that she found herself daydreaming about her son, who was
spending the day with friends. In her reverie, she saw her son and his
friends in a toy store. Her son was insisting that his friend not take
anything but the friend ignored the advice and pocketed some small item.
Just then, the phone rang. It was her son. The police had come and arrested
his friend at a toy store. He had been caught shoplifting. Her son was
surprised to learn that his mom already knew what had happened. Some time
later, she overheard him say to his friends, "My mom knows everything I do!"
Perhaps the parent's interest and knowledge about
their children never stops. Consider this story, concerning a grown woman, a
minister from Broomfield, Colorado. She was taking an adult education course
on the history of women and had written for a book entitled, Women of Ideas
(and What Men Have Done to Them). She enjoyed the book and exchanged one
round of letters with the author. During her course, the class considered
the theory that earlier generations of women had helped suppress their
daughter's education, rationalizing that reading might drive them mad! She
thought this theory a bit extreme, but then a puzzling event seemed to
confirm its validity. Without warning, her mother appeared from out of town
on her doorstep. The mother seemed almost panic stricken and marched into
the house and went directly into her living room, where she kept a large
bookcase. The mother immediately located the book, Women of Ideas, grabbed
it from the shelf and castigated her daughter, "When I catch you reading
stuff like that, I'm afraid you will lose your mind!"
The woman has no explanation for this most unusual
event. Mother had apparently tuned into her daughter's "secret" book. The
book was something that the mother apparently thought would do damage to the
intimate bond she had with her daughter concerning certain attitudes. Her
surprise raid unwittingly confirmed the book's theory of the generational
suppression of women's education. This story also shows that ESP doesn't
merely stumble onto secrets, but seems to ferret them out in a manner
consistent with the motivations of the people involved in the relationship.
Traditional parapsychology recognizes that the
personal bonds of intimacy favors the occurrence of spontaneous ESP, but has
rarely attempted to probe more deeply into the subject. Perhaps they believe
that the sentimentality involved clouds scientific thinking. That's why
sometimes stories like the ones we've presented here are referred to as
"coincidence."
Many people who have had encountered incidents like
those we've described here experience them as outcomes of the connections
they feel with their intimates. Sometimes their bodies react to the
incidents in dramatic ways, as if encountering a shock wave. One's hair
stands up on end. There's a jolting feeling in the stomach. These people
know in their hearts that these experiences are not just coincidences.
What does it mean to say that something is just a
coincidence? It's a way of saying there is no relationship, no intimate
connection between two events. It's a way of denying the closeness that
otherwise might be uncomfortable. It's similar to the way people sometimes
will refer to a lover as "we're just friends" to minimize the intimate
nature of the relationship. When ESP uncovers a secret, it's understandable
that someone might wish to discount the incident as "just coincidence," just
as a person caught in the grips of a spouse's suspicion might protest,
"you're just imagining things." It's an attempt to deny the connection, to
remain free of the implied claim of the bond of intimacy.
No wonder, then, that it's hard to get people to
divulge those times when secrets have been exposed through ESP. The letters
I received have convinced me there's a whole book of such stories. I'm
hoping that this article will prompt more people to write me about their
story of ESP revealing a well-guarded secret. These stories are important
more than simply for their human interest. They touch on important factors
that demonstrate the connection between the human and the spiritual
dimension of telepathy.
The human dimension has to do with the guilt and
shame that motivate secrets and tend to isolate us from each other. The
spiritual dimension has to do with God's love that created us and that
continues to unite us with one another.
Remember Eden. In that lovely paradise, after Adam
and Eve eat of the apple, they respond to their new consciousness by
erecting two barriers. In shame they separate themselves from each other by
a boundary of fig leaves. In fear and guilt they separate themselves from
God. Like children who cover their eyes and proclaim to their parents, "You
can't see me!" Adam and Eve believe that it's possible to separate
themselves from God by hiding in the bushes. Having granted them free will,
God also grants them their privacy and pretends not to see them until they
emerge on their own.
Hiding in the bushes and wearing fig leaves are
symbolic acts of separation and pulling away from a pre-existing oneness
with the Creator and all life. These acts also transform the nature of
telepathy, from a natural sense of connectedness to a magical act of mind
reading.
Stories of telepathy exposing secrets, from the
amusing to the awful, replay the Garden of Eden mythology. They show how we
hide from one another when we choose actions that are not consistent with
our ideals. They show that we are aware, at the level of the subconscious
mind where we are indeed connected, that our thoughts and deeds have
consequences for one another, especially for those who are bonded to us in
love. That love reaches out and breaches the separation the secret created
and offers a renewed opportunity for reunion.
These stories suggest that psychic development is not
a matter of developing some new power through mental exercises. It is more a
matter of opening up to love. In an atmosphere of love, with due respect to
our ideals, we can discern the difference between our right to privacy and
the false need for secrecy.
God grants us free will. Sometimes we need privacy in
order to pursue our God given freedom. Privacy is of a different nature than
secrecy. We need secrecy when we choose to use our free will in ways that
not in the interest of harmony. Those who love us will grant us privacy yet
abhor secrecy. There is no hiding from those who love us.