I was talking to a friend the other night after learning the deeply sad news that one of his brothers had just died in an accident. Louie had lost his mother a few years before, and had been extremely close to her, as had his sister. He was not only now grieving the sudden death of his beloved brother, he was also quite concerned about how the shock and loss were affecting his sister, who was still very much mourning their mom. As we talked on one of those video apps—we were a continent apart—I could see the worry etched on his face as he spoke about his brother, and then his sister, wondering how he could help her.
While I generally hesitate, Reader, to bring up my beliefs about the continuation of consciousness after death with anyone going through a recent loss, as Louie expressed his profound sadness about his brother, pointing out that he would never see a new exhibition of Louie’s paintings, some in a style his brother had especially loved, it just popped out. “Well, you know me, Louie. You know I believe he can see the paintings, and that he’s around you right now. And that you can talk to him, and he’ll hear you.”
As I said it, I felt a twinge of apprehension. Had I overstepped? But Louie simply took in what I said. I told him, then, that during the course of the explorations that had resulted in my book Adventures of a Soul, and in the years since, in which I’d continued to explore, I’d become convinced that death was not the end of consciousness, but simply a transition, and a marvelous one at that. “Well, maybe it’s hard for me to believe it, because I haven’t had any experiences like you’ve had,” he said. “Of course,” I answered. “It really is the personal experiences that create the belief. That’s why I wrote the book: to encourage people to explore these things themselves. To perhaps help set them on their own exploratory path.”
After we hung up, though, I realized that what I’d said wasn’t entirely true. Personal experiences are the most persuasive. However, more and more each year, there is research being carried out that, to my mind, proves, or in some cases, all but proves, many of the phenomena I write about in my book, including the existence of an “afterlife.” I’ve written many posts about such work in this blog. But specifically, this time, I thought about the Windbridge Research Center. As their Web site explains, “The mission of the Windbridge Research Center is to ease suffering around dying, death, and what comes next by performing rigorous scientific research and sharing the results and other customized content with the general public, clinicians (like medical and mental health professionals), scientists (like researchers and philosophers), and practitioners (like mediums).” Windbridge has been studying, among other things, the ability of mediums for more than fifteen years. And I do mean scientifically studying. Serious, scientific, “fully blinded” (more than five levels of blinding!), peer-reviewed, replicated studies with optimized environments, and maximized controls. Their conclusion? Put simply, that “some mediums are able to acquire information about deceased persons through some unknown or anomalous means.”
I’d never heard of Windbridge until I happened upon the book Investigating Mediums by Julie Beischel, PhD, while trolling the waters on Amazon. Reader, with that title, of course I bought it, pronto. And I couldn’t put it down. Reading about the extraordinary work of the Windbridge Institute—which still exists, but which has since shifted its work on mediumship research to the not-for-profit Windbridge Research Center—I kept thinking, How have I not heard of this place before? Dr. Beischel, whose graduate training includes pharmacology, toxicology, microbiology, immunology, physiology, biochemistry, protocol design, and statistics, founded the Center with her husband, Mark Boccuzzi, a psi researcher, in 2017. As she explains in that book (which is now out of print, but is actually a collection of three previously published e-books, including the very much available Among Mediums: A Scientist’s Quest for Answers), her interest in mediums began after the death of her mother, and her first mediumship reading soon thereafter, which she approached as an experiment (definitely a woman after my own heart!). It’s a story that she recounts in the section of Among Mediums called “How Did I Get Here?”, and one with a great twist at its ending. (Reader, you know I’m not going to give it away! And by the way, I see she’s recently published another book—Love and the Afterlife: How to Stay Connected to Your Human and Animal Loved Ones. I’m definitely adding it to my “gotta get it” list!) After finishing graduate school, Dr. Beischel began performing medium research as a post-doctoral fellow, became totally hooked . . . and, as they say, the rest is history.
The section of Windbridge’s site that first caught my eye asks, “Why Is Mediumship Research Important?” That question is answered in three parts, each of which is expanded upon, but I’ll give you the main points here: “1. No research question affects more people than ‘What happens when we we die?’ 2. People are getting mediumship readings every day and it is important to understand the resulting effects of those experiences. Extensive research exists demonstrating that spontaneous after-death communication experiences (ADCs) have a positive impact on grief. 3. Sensory experiences related to accurate information about the deceased and similar psychic abilities point to more extensive human capabilities than can be explained by the currently dominant scientific paradigm.”
Amen to all that! I had experienced the “positive impact on grief” mentioned in point number 2 myself, after connecting with my recently deceased father through a personal friend with newfound mediumship abilities, as I wrote about in my book (quite a story, if I do say so myself!). And on a larger level, my explorations into these sorts of phenomena have completely taken away my own fear of death . . . a result that I didn’t expect when I began them. But it’s sure been a nice side benefit, Reader.
Getting back to Louie though. . . the day after our video chat, he texted me to thank me for our talk. “I wish I had your faith in the spiritual afterlife,” he wrote. I could almost hear the hopelessness and desolation in his voice as I read it. Well, Reader, that was all the invitation I needed. “You know, Louie, there are a lot of studies going on, scientific studies, on mediumship and the afterlife, that you might find interesting . . . ” I didn’t intend to take away Louie’s grief; I knew that I couldn’t, nor should I. I still grieve my loved ones when they pass—though more and more, I find myself focusing on celebrating their life, and on the memories and love we shared. But I did want to offer him some hope, and perhaps, through him, offer some to his sister, too. With the continuing work of places like the Windbridge Research Center, that hope is no longer unfounded, and I am so grateful to pioneers like Beischel and Boccuzzi for that.