Prelude: I've been busy writing responses for this Storyworth gift I was given, pretty much not posting here very often. However, the most recent question was pretty interesting, so I'm going to be a lazy blogger and recycle it into a posting.
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Question: Have you ever had a supernatural experience or an experience you can’t explain?
Answer: The simple answer to this question is NO.
Now, leaving it at that last sentence would make for a
pretty boring story (not worth my time…get it?
Story…time…), and in fact I can elaborate a bit on the underlying ideas
behind my answer.
I am, pretty much by my very nature, skeptical of claims
related to the supernatural. I think
part of this comes from the fact that I seem hardwired towards logic,
reasoning, science, and the like. The
idea of “supernatural” seems to imply that there are phenomena that can’t be
explained by things like logic, reasoning, science, etc. In fact, here’s a definition…
…which I list because it makes the point that I do believe that scientific understanding can explain things. The fact that an explanation isn’t currently available doesn’t invalidate science…or validate the concept of the supernatural…it simply means that we don’t know enough to explain the situation.
To that last sentence, well there is something of a backdoor
to this whole concept of the supernatural when it comes to how I process
things. Specifically, it is an
inherently logical concept to acknowledge that there is a great deal that we
(the collective we, that is) do not understand.
Therefore, maybe there is a kind of logic behind the idea of the
supernatural. My greater point though is
that I do not acknowledge that there are mysterious, god-like, and maybe
malevolent “hands” behind things.
Maybe then, rolling all of this up into a kind of package, I
can say that I have not experienced the supernatural and I don’t ascribe it as
being the source of things I can’t explain.
Or, just because I can’t explain it doesn’t mean that I think it’s
supernatural.
Does all of the above mean that I am deeply skeptical of
those who claim some kind of connection to the supernatural? That’s a two-part answer:
First, if someone is using a claimed connection (to the
supernatural) to make money, then I do view them as being likely frauds and
hucksters. It’s simply too easy for a
talented individual to create the appearance of the supernatural to an audience
that truly wants to believe in such things right from the beginning. History and current events show plenty of times
when someone who is charismatic can get others to believe in something
extraordinary; immigrants eating cats and dogs is a good (and horrible)
example. Heck, Germany, almost all of an
entire nation, was sold on the outlandish fiction that somehow the Jews were
responsible for every terrible thing that happened to them going back decades,
if not more. Lastly, the smart and the
charismatic are talented at understanding what people want to hear (as in
wanting to hear from a deceased relative), so it’s not much of a stretch that
they can use that power to liberate cash from the masses.
Second, if someone truly believes that they have had these experiences
and makes the choice to not monetize* that sort of thing, well, I am much more
sympathetic. I truly believe that this
can be part of someone’s reality…being connected to what they view as
supernatural…and it would be short-sighted and almost hypocritical for me to
somehow judge that individual. Again, I
do acknowledge there are things that I (and the collective we) don’t understand,
so arguing that it’s not “supernatural” but it is “as of yet unknown
explanation” sounds a lot like semantics (for the very sake of semantics) to
me.
I have been told that the reason why I have not had these
experiences is that I’m not open to them.
I’m not sure what to make of that explanation. If I were to see a daytime apparition of my
late brother Chris, for example, well, then I would likely be less
skeptical. The logic of it all almost
seems circular to me: You have to be open to these things to see them, but
doesn’t that mean there is at least some chance that your mind will manufacture
something just to fulfill the expectation?
Finally, I will note that I can have very intense dreams
from time to time. Some of these involve
people who are in and no longer in my life, such as my brother Chris. Is this an example of the supernatural? For example, one night this week I had a
dream where Chris was standing on a street curb (other details taken out for the blog posting). Can I
logically explain this dream (in totality, the other parts of it were more like
a nightmare…)? No. So why did it happen? I don’t know.
Does this mean that it was a supernatural experience? I’m going to end this by saying “that’s above
my paygrade”.
A post-script of sorts:
None of the above is to imply anything about my belief in God, etc. That’s a different story for a different
time.
(*) In other words, find a way to get money from others for
this “gift”.
3 comments:
Generally I agree with you. I did witness something I cannot logically explain. It could be coincidence, but it’s so specific, it would be so unlikely.
A family member was visiting us when I was a teen. She said she felt like her mom (who’d passed years before) was there. We laughed it off; “she’s making sure you’re not causing trouble with the Gowdens.” She returned home a couple days later to find her father had passed, at his home. They figured it happened the same night she “felt”’her mom.
Coincidence? Maybe. How many times to smells, sounds, voices, stories make you feel someone or something is “there”? Watch a horror movie and go upstairs without turning on the lights. You know Freddy isn’t there, but you “feel” something .
It’s just odd enough to say “don’t explain it away so easily.” There are plenty of similar stories out there that aren’t coming for loons and charlatans. Maybe there’s something to it.
Generally I agree with you. I did witness something I cannot logically explain. It could be coincidence, but it’s so specific, it would be so unlikely.
A family member was visiting us when I was a teen. She said she felt like her mom (who’d passed years before) was there. We laughed it off; “she’s making sure you’re not causing trouble with the Gowdens.” She returned home a couple days later to find her father had passed, at his home. They figured it happened the same night she “felt”’her mom.
Coincidence? Maybe. How many times to smells, sounds, voices, stories make you feel someone or something is “there”? Watch a horror movie and go upstairs without turning on the lights. You know Freddy isn’t there, but you “feel” something .
It’s just odd enough to say “don’t explain it away so easily.” There are plenty of similar stories out there that aren’t coming for loons and charlatans. Maybe there’s something to it.
Well, you know where I stand on this topic. I have struggled with seeing and hearing and experiencing things I can’t explain my whole life.
But I can add that having a rational mind with a strong preference for logic and repeatability makes intuition and psychic experiences very difficult to manage. Being within a western culture that has very limited cultural norms in this space is also constraining to the growth of these kinds of gifts.
Lastly, and I don’t disagree with you often, I find monitization of psychic gifts does not devalue or diminish them. There are frauds and shucksters in all kinds of money making ventures.
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