A Psychoanalyst Risks Opening Her Mind

Not too long ago, Reader, I rode the Southern Crescent train down the coast to Virginia to visit my friend Griffin. Some of you may recall him from my book Adventures of a Soul, the rational-thinking skeptic whose first “highly specific and astoundingly accurate” reading with my marvelous psychic Patricia Masters resonated with him so powerfully that he did an about-face and launched into a deep dive into the metaphysical, becoming a mentor of sorts to me. Griffin lives in a smallish but lively college town, and whenever I visit him, I thoroughly enjoy wandering its brick-paved streets, popping into coffee shops and antiques stores, and driving through the rolling green hills (I’ve always had a thing for cows) and scenic mountain passes at its outskirts.

Anne in Farmland

Cows Grazing

But the best part is inevitably at the end of the day, when, after a simple homecooked meal, Griffin and I settle into a pair of old oak rocking chairs in his living room, his highly vocal cat, Roswell, on my lap, and watch documentaries and interview shows about things metaphysical together. It’s difficult to find friends like Griffin who have taken the time—many decades, in his case—to seriously study the topics and ideas that most pique my “wonder-lust,” topics and ideas that most of the world tends to ignore, or even mock. Topics and ideas that I often refrain from discussing for fear of being considered naive or crazy, or accused of summoning demons or doing the devil’s work . . . by those who have never bothered to take even a cursory look into these subjects themselves. As I continue my explorations into things nonphysical and as yet unexplained, I value Griffin’s companionship and camaraderie, his boundless curiosity that matches my own, and the opportunity that he provides to seriously discuss even the most way-out-there-seeming subjects, more and more.

I hadn’t brought a book to read with me on this trip. And reading an actual, nondigital book before bed has been a habit I’ve cultivated since childhood, to the point that it’s often hard for me to fall asleep without one. So on the first day of my stay, we swung by the nicely kept local library to see what their small (make that “very small”) section of offerings on the topic of spirituality and/or the paranormal might contain. “Hey,” Griffin said, as he pulled a book off a shelf and handed it to me. “Here’s one I read a while back. I think I told you about it. You really should read it. It’s kinda right in your wheelhouse, and it’s a very good book.”

I looked at the cover: Extraordinary Knowing: Science, Skepticism, and the Inexplicable Power of the Human Mind by Elizabeth Lloyd Mayer, PhD. Then I turned to the back cover blurb.

“Elizabeth Mayer’s familiar world of science and rational thinking was turned upside down the day a stranger pinpointed the exact location of her daughter’s stolen harp in California—without ever leaving his Arkansas home. Deeply shaken, yet driven to understand what had happened, she began the fourteen-year journey of discovery that she recounts in the mind-blowing, brilliantly readable book.”

Ah, Griffin knew me well, and he’d never yet steered me wrong. I checked out the book—literally—and stowed it in my backpack for later perusal.

Anne with Extraordinary Knowng

Once I began Extraordinary Knowing that night, in my makeshift quarters at Griffin’s, where Roswell often lounged on my tummy as I lay on my air mattress reading, I could not put it down. Mayer, a clinical psychologist and professor at the University of California, Berkeley, among other places, and a skeptic about things paranormal, was astonished when an Arkansas “dowser” recommended by a friend located the stolen harp . . .  to the precise house in Oakland, the city in which Mayer and her daughter lived. For those new to the term, “dowsing” basically means using a divining rod, or forked stick, to locate something—though there are different ways to do it, including “map dowsing,” which the dowser in question did. Mayer used the dowser’s information to recover the harp within days. Arriving home and turning into her driveway with the recovered harp in the back of her station wagon, she writes, she had the thought, “This changes everything!”

What follows in the book is Mayer’s journey of how that incident, which, she confesses, shook her to the core as it flew in the face of everything she believed in—and didn’t believe in—started her on a quest to explore, to quote the book’s subtitle, “the inexplicable powers of the human mind.” She began to look for scientific evidence of dowsing, which opened up the door onto research into “all manner of other, possibly related anomalous phenomena” by very credible and highly credited scientists. “Of course,” she writes, “I also discovered that the world of anomalous mind-matter research is filled with shoddy research, flaky research, and research based on questions that are neither particularly interesting nor rooted in a solid grasp of science, scientific method, or scientific thinking. Yet as I delved more deeply, what most impressed me was the significant bank of well-conducted, scientifically impeccable research that imposes enormous questions on anyone interested in making sense of the world from a Western scientific point of view. I began to wonder, why had so much of this excellent research been overlooked, its conclusions dismissed?”

How Mayer discovers and comes to terms—given her training and background in psychology—with the idea that reality is not as she has been taught to believe makes for a fantastically absorbing tale. “[The experience with the harp] changed how I work as a clinician and psychoanalyst. It changed the nature of the research I pursued. It changed my sense of what’s ordinary and what’s extraordinary. Most of all, it changed my relatively established, relatively secure sense of how the world adds up.”

I read more of the book each night I stayed with Griffin, and we discussed what I was reading over our morning coffee. Mayer’s explorations included Sigmund Freud’s writings on telepathy (who knew?); experiments by the CIA on remote viewing (if you’re not aware of these, Reader, prepare your eyebrows to be raised); the founding of a parapsychology lab at Duke University that later became, independent of Duke, the Rhine Research Center; studies on the power of prayer; and more. “How is this book not more well known?” I asked. Griffin informed me that he’d looked up Mayer online and found that she’d passed away shortly after its publication. Huh, I thought. A real pity. Though I was sure Mayer was continuing her explorations now, perhaps into higher dimensions from other realms.

Elizabeth Lloyd Mayer, PhD
Elizabeth Lloyd Mayer, PhD

One of my favorite aspects of the book was that, early on in her explorations, as Mayer began to share her experience with her peers in the psychology and medical world and others, colleagues and even strangers who approached her at meetings began confiding in her their own anomalous experiences and those of their patients: miraculous healings from fatal cancers; sensing the exact moment of a patient’s death and later finding it to be true; the presence of a white light, seen by a surgeon, that signaled to him that he could  operate and the patient would survive . . . These individuals, she recounts, were extremely eager to share their stories, yet in many cases confessed they had never revealed them to anyone. Given their professional careers and reputations, they had never felt safe in divulging them.

I was not a professional in the world of psychology or medicine, but I understood how they felt.

Soon Mayer established, along with renowned psychologist and author Carol Gilligan, PhD, a professional discussion group at a meeting of the American Psychoanalytic Association to talk about, to quote the group’s title, “Intuition, Unconscious Communication, and ‘Thought Transference.’” They asked applicants interested in participating in the group to write a letter sharing an account of an anomalous experience, clinical or personal. They were flooded with them. One therapist shared the story of her very young patient who, on the anniversary of the therapist’s brother’s death by drowning, turned to her out of the blue while playing to say, “Your brother is dying! You have to save him!” Another reported that numerous times, his patients had told him dreams that replicated uncannily recent specific events in his own life. And on and on. Nearly all of the practitioners reported how relieved they were to have their experiences considered with thoughtfulness and respect by fellow professionals after keeping them so long “sequestered out of shame and anxiety.”

In the years since the book was published, in 2007, a lot has changed: There are so many venues and platforms through which things “anomalous” are being seriously and thoughtfully considered, and often with great eagerness and enthusiasm. One need only do a search on YouTube, Reader, to find a nearly endless array of podcasts and video interview shows delving into such things as telepathy, channeling, near death experiences, remote viewing, and medical intuition. For many of us who are tuned in to such topics, it’s a time of unparalleled excitement. After all, as Mayer puts it at the book’s end, “To pursue the questions behind extraordinary knowing is to pursue a complete and free articulation of what it is to be human.”

My Own New Normal

A Look Back Since Publishing Adventures of a Soul

I can’t believe that it’s been more than a year and a half now—a year this past August, to be precise—since I published Adventures of a Soul: Psychics, Mediums, the Mystical, and Me. I’ve learned so much about the world of self-publishing and book promotion, and yet there is so much still to learn! A heartfelt thank-you to EVERYONE who has purchased and read my book, and doubly so to those who have posted a review on Amazon or elsewhere. It’s GREATLY appreciated. The Reader reviews I’ve received have been touching and heart-warming. Honestly, I’ve been surprised many times at precisely WHO has enjoyed my book the most and/or expressed to me that they’d been profoundly changed by reading it. Friends who admitted they had barely even thought about metaphysics or the invisible realms, but had a mind open enough to read Adventures of a Soul when they heard about it, have asked me for recommendations for their first psychic or medium reading; for classes and workshops; and for more books in this genre to read. Now, that, Dear Reader, REALLY warms my heart! After all, that was the reason I wrote this book in the first place: to encourage others to expand their horizons—both inward and outward—by embarking on a personal metaphysical exploration of their own.   

Even more surprising to me, Reader, has been another phenomenon that’s occurred since my book’s launch. Friends who read Adventures of a Soul with whom I’d not had contact for a long time—sometimes several decades—confessed to me that they’d had “paranormal” experiences, and even discovered “paranormal” gifts and abilities of their own. Some have come into them in recent years; others had them back when we were classmates or neighbors or work colleagues, but had never shared this aspect of their lives with me, as they had no idea I was interested in such things. (And, honestly, who can blame them? Up until fairly recently, most people haven’t generally talked about these topics in “mixed company,” for fear of being branded deluded dreamers, wackos, or mentally ill.

Reader, the stories they’ve shared with me have been fascinating! One told me of seeing an apparition, dressed in clothing from another era, that vanished before his eyes; another, of hearing a “little voice” throughout her life that told her things, including a long-buried family secret that proved to be true. One described having an ability to intuitively sense serious medical issues in the patients she was treating as a physician’s assistant, at times second-guessing her superiors, and being right! A former coworker told me she has become able to contact the dead, along with a number of spirit guides; and a former schoolmate of experiencing an “awakening” that left her able to communicate with guides, angels, and other higher-dimensional beings. One friend told me of seeing, as a teenager, up close and unmistakably, a UFO craft (or, in current parlance, a UAP); the husband of another shared his experience of seeing two actual ETs—the ones with little bodies, big heads, and huge eyes, in this case—in his bedroom! (Yes, he was freaked out; no, he’d not ingested any controlled substance; and no, they did not harm him.)

And this is not to mention any of the new friends I’ve made, while pursuing my explorations, who are gifted intuitives, mediums, past-life readers, and energy healers . . . I’ve even gotten to know several who can talk to the animals (move over, Dr. Dolittle) and see fairies (yes, Reader, I now believe in fairies, though they’re not, as I understand it, quite the way our pop culture has portrayed them: think less Tinkerbell, more energetic-beings-existing-in-a-higher-dimension-who-often-appear-as-light! (Then again, “Tink” did often appear as a bit of light, so perhaps author J. M. Barrie was on to something . . . )

Actually, Reader, all of this should hardly have surprised me. It’s part and parcel of what I’ve been learning about for a good number of years now in my studies and explorations regarding the idea of a “Shift” on planet Earth—a global shift in consciousness—that’s been long awaited, and is now taking place. (Come on, you knew something weird was happening, didn’t you?) This Shift, apparently predicted by many of the planet’s indigenous cultures and ancient civilizations as something that would occur if we got to this point in history without wiping ourselves out, involves, among other things, vast numbers of people “waking up” to the fact that we are far more than just our bodies, and stepping into a far stronger connection with their Higher Self . . . including claiming such innate human abilities as intuition, mediumship, telepathy, remote viewing, channeling, energetic healing, knowledge of their past lives, and more.

But it’s one thing to read about it and hear about it for decades from so many metaphysical teachers and sources as something “coming”—it’s another thing to hear that it’s here, now, and to actually witness these things occurring among your otherwise “normal” acquaintances and friends. If it sounds a little X-Men-ish to you . . . well, you’re not alone. And from what I’ve come to believe, Reader, we ain’t seen nuthin’ yet. I’ll be writing more about the Shift and in particular the information that’s been “brought in” about it via channelers—individuals who serve as “vessels” for higher-dimensional beings or collectives who are able to communicate through them—for many years now. (There are a few channelers out there who’ve been doing it for thirty or forty years. One has even been invited to speak numerous times at the UN! Who knew?)

So, yes, Virginia . . . and anybody else who’s seriously asking . . . paranormal HAS become the new normal, as I hope I’ve begun to show in my previous blog posts, and looks to be becoming more so every day! Stay tuned . . .

The Science Behind the Woo-Woo: Mark Gober

Are you ready for a paradigm shift? Are you even open to one? Why is a shift in paradigms so threatening to so many? And what does it mean to have a paradigm shift, anyway? Calling all those who are interested in REALLY “following the science,” regarding the metaphysical—phenomena such as the continuation of consciousness after death, intuition, mediumship, remote viewing, telepathy, and much more. Have I got a book for you!

As those of you who have surfed the waters of YouTube know, it has its own algorithmic elves who pop up recommended content that relates to other videos you’ve recently viewed. That’s how I came upon Mark Gober, and this “Buddha at the Gas Pump” interview conducted by Rick Archer. Mark Gober is the author of several books with “Upside Down” in their titles, the first being An End to Upside Down Thinking: Dispelling the Myth That the Brain Produces Consciousness, and the Implications for Everyday Life. After watching this interview, and several of Gober’s others on YouTube too, this book jumped to the number-one spot on my personal to-buy list.

Why? Reader, I loved Gober’s story. Like me, he’d launched into his own exploratory expedition, and written a book that I would have loved to have written myself, if only I could have. Gober reminded me of the smart, nerdy (in a good way) “kids” who went to Stuyvesant, my math-and-science specialized New York City high school, with me, many of whom, I’m sure, think I’m crazy for believing in the phenomena I wrote about in Adventures of a Soul. But here’s the thing I’ve always said to them, and to others who roll their eyes indulgently when I tell them what my book is about: There has been SO MUCH RESEARCH on SO MANY OF THESE PHENOMENA that many of them have actually already been proven—using the standards by which all NON-“suspect” types of scientific phenomena are typically judged—and yet, hardly anyone in the world of mainstream media, nor the scientific community, talks about or even acknowledges this. I know this. And others like me who have sought out this information know this. (It’s not hard to find it!) But Gober didn’t know it: Until he did! And it rocked his world.

But, Reader, I’m getting ahead of myself.

Gober had me hooked with his tale of how, as a Princeton graduate working at a “technology-focused investment bank and strategy firm” in Silicon Valley and commuting long hours each day in his car, he’d tuned into a health-related podcast, only to find that the featured guest, Laura Powers, was talking very matter-of-factly about psychic intuition and her ability to communicate with nonphysical entities—things which Gober had no absolutely awareness of. Gober was a self-described “materialist” at the time, who believed that consciousness was a product of the brain, and that when the body—and thus the brain—died, well . . . that was it (although, as he states in this interview, he’d had an interest in “big existential questions for a long time”). When Powers mentioned her own podcast, “Healing Powers,” where she interviewed other people who had abilities and experiences similar to hers, Gober was left with a dilemma: What he was hearing, from these people who sounded intelligent and credible to him, didn’t fit in with his own long-held beliefs about reality. Unlike many who would simply dismiss such information as rubbish, and move on with their day, Gober grew extremely curious.

Gober ended up, on his daily commute over the next few weeks, listening to every single episode of Powers’ podcast—at that time, five years’ worth of shows. Hearing so many independent individuals’ convincing accounts of their own experiences, experiences that so fully contradicted his own materialistic worldview, he grew more curious yet, and plunged deep into his own “obsessive” research on these and other such topics. (Sound familiar, dear Reader?) Gober looked at the science—experiments and research that had been conducted about which he’d never read or heard—and also eventually worked firsthand with people who had these types of abilities themselves, finding that what he witnessed in doing so backed up what the science claimed. The results: His vigorous investigations brought him to the point of a total “paradigm shift” in terms of his beliefs about reality, which, he says, “rocked” and, for a time, disoriented him. After sharing what he was learning about topics like psychic abilities and life after death with some friends, many of whom had been as skeptical of such things as Gober had, they encouraged him to write about it. And thus, Gober’s amazing first book!

In An End to Upside Down Thinking, Gober tackles not just the scientific and academic studies that are proving that so much of what a good part of the world considers “woo-woo” is real—with many notable physicists and other scientists, including Nobel prize-winners, chiming in—he discusses the implications of that conclusion for our world and our future. He also discusses why it is that so much of this work and information is ignored, dismissed out of hand, or ridiculed sight unseen by so many in the scientific community—including the fact that most scientific journals refuse to publish studies, no matter how professionally and rigorously done, to do with topics such as psychic ability, even when the studies have proven that these things are real; that university faculty won’t generally pursue such studies until they are tenured, for fear of losing their jobs; and the tendency of many in the scientific community to even consider ideas that they don’t personally feel—without any study or investigation of them—could possibly be real.

Why is this the case? Gober discusses that, too. Basically, he points out, if these phenomena were widely accepted as real, it would call into question the world’s currently established scientific views on . . . well, pretty much everything!

Now that’s a paradigm shift.

After devouring Gober’s book, I signed up for his mailing list at MarkGober.com, and received back a lovely letter from him and his “team,” thanking me for my interest and asking about me—who I was, what I was doing, and what had made me interested in his work! Reader, I loved that too. So I wrote and told him about myself and my book, and how much I loved how open-minded he’d been to have done what he did; how excited I was about it; and how this was the book I was going to give to all my “skeptical” friends! He not only wrote me back personally, but told me he thought my book sounded fascinating, and that he’d just bought a copy. (I knew I liked the guy!)

Whether self-proclaimed skeptic or committed, seasoned metaphysical explorer, I hope with all my heart that you’ll check out Mark Gober’s uber-important first book. (I’ve already bought one of his other three—about ETs and UFOs—which I can’t wait to crack.) You, too, may want to gift it to your skeptical friends and family for the holidays. Not only may they stop rolling their eyes and calling you crazy (well, a gal can dream), but, not too far down the road, when the mainstream media and the scientific community finally begin to admit that all of this stuff is real, you’ll be able to say, with a knowing grin, “I could’ve told you that!”