Hunting for the Soul—Cracks in the Old Paradigm of Science

Over the past decade, Psychology Today, the popular science magazine has slowly opened the door to the possible existence of psychic abilities, synchronicity, and even spiritual realms: the soul and life after death.  At least, that’s the case for the on-line version of the popular science magazine. But it wasn’t that long ago that the magazine’s articles were firmly behind  the old paradigm of science.

One notable shift might’ve started when a synchronicity pal of ours, psychiatrist Bernard Beitman, began writing a regular column on synchronicity for the on-line magazine. Prior to Beitman’s appearance, synchronicity was covered from a dismissive mainstream perspective that suggested it was the brain’s way of trying to create patterns where none really existed. So much for any mysterious paranormal connection. And the same could be said for the reality of the soul. What soul, where’s the evidence?

Now we’ve come upon a column in an on-line edition from 2011 that actually favors the existence of the soul, related to recent studies. In doing so, columnist Robert Lanza, MD, author of Biocentrism and other related books, takes some heavy swings at the prejudice of mainstream science, which he refers to as following outdated materialistic postures on puzzling subjects such as the spiritual dimension of life, the existence of the soul.

Lanza explains that the old paradigm of science has dismissed the soul as an object of human belief, or reduced it to a psychological concept that shapes our cognition of the observable natural world. From that perspective, everything knowable about the “soul” can be learned by studying the functioning of the brain. In their view, neuroscience is the only branch of scientific study relevant to understanding the soul.

In the column,  Lanza writes: “We’re told we’re just the activity of carbon and some proteins; we live awhile and die. And the universe? It too has no meaning. It has all been worked out in the equations – no need for a soul. But biocentrism – a new ‘theory of everything’ – challenges this traditional, materialistic model of reality. In all directions, this outdated paradigm leads to insoluble enigmas, to ideas that are ultimately irrational. But knowledge is the prelude to wisdom, and soon our worldview will catch up with the facts.”

One notable study he cites shows that the “quantum weirdness” found in experiments with sub-atomic particles also extends to the macro world in which we live. In other words, the Alice-in-Wonderland oddities of a world in which particles are also waves and can leap from one place to another without traversing the intervening space can occur in the world in which we exist. It also implies that the logical foundations of classical science are being violated, that psychic abilities—and even our souls—are within the realms of science.

While mainstream science is still clinging to the old paradigm, Lanza notes that there are cracks in the materialistic view of reality. It’s only a matter of time for a new paradigm to take hold. As the old guard is dying off, they are  being replaced by younger more open-minded scientists who will move science in a new direction that past generations couldn’t foresee.

 

PS And oh…there’s a lunar eclipse in Sagittarius today. Check December’s forecast in the masthead to see how it may impact you!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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2020: A Space Odyssey?

You’ve probably heard about the mysterious monolith discovered November 23 in the remote red rock country of Utah in fly over by the Bureau of Land Management. Five days later, it disappeared, and the BLM says they didn’t remove it.

The smooth metallic monolith is a reminder of Stanley Kubrick’s Space Odyssey 2001, and the comparisons of  course sparked speculation that it was left by aliens. The BLM called it an illegal monument, no matter who put it there, and they say they didn’t remove it. All that remained was a metal triangle and some rocks. The monolith had been placed about ten feet from a rock wall.

Because of its remote location, a BLM spokesperson suggested it could have been there for “forty or fifty years…or maybe more.” A Google search though found it in place for at least five years.

One hint of a possible origin is the fact that the TV series “Westworld” was filmed in the area. The first season came out in 2016.

The most mysterious aspect of the monolith story for us at this writing is its mysterious removal. With all the attention the monolith has received, its surprising that no one has come forward to claim the monolith or take credit for removing it. Considering the location, there’s also the question of how it was removed…and why no one has reported observing  the departure of the monolith.

We would have thought that the BLM by the end of the week would’ve placed a camera nearby to observe activity in the area.  Shrug it off as a bureaucracy slow to react? Or, perhaps they did install a camera, and they’re not talking about what appears on the video.

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DECEMBER ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST

 

 

DECEMBER FORECAST

There’s a lot going on this month. But here are some dates to watch:

December 1 – Mercury, now moving direct, enters Sagittarius. It will be there until December 21, when it enters Capricorn.

December 5 – Venus trines Neptune for the last time this year, so it’s a good day for any type of creative endeavor.

December 10 – the sun in Sagittarius trines Mars in Aries, making this a high energy day to start – or finish?- holiday shopping or any projects you’ve put on the back burner.

December 14 – a solar eclipse at 23 Sagittarius, with Mercury conjunct by 3 degrees and trine to Mars. New beginnings that fuel your motivation

December 16-17 – Saturn enters Aquarius and gets ready for its two and a half year journey through the sign of the rebel, the visionary, the outlier.

December 19 – Jupiter joins Saturn in Aquarius and will be there until December 2021.

December 21 – conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn. This one happens every 20 years, so it’s a big deal. Jupiter rules economical, political, and spiritual issues; Saturn rules business, law and order, structures, authority. Because the conjunction is in Aquarius, it may presage a sweeping turn toward a different type of world order. The age of Aquarius?

December 29 – full moon at 8 Cancer, the sign of the nurturer, the intuitive. The years started with a full moon/lunar eclipse in Cancer. Perhaps these bookends speak to the feminine.

The forecasts for the signs can be found in the masthead under the December forecast.

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Synchronicity in Therapy

 

Our friend Bernard Beitman, a visiting professor of psychiatry at University of Virginia,  is a synchronicity expert who wrote Connecting with Coincidence.  He also has a fantastic podcast by the same name. The following article appeared in his column in Psychology Today.

 

Therapy

Research Suggests That Synchronicities Can Aid Psychotherapy

Therapist confidence about using synchronicity correlates with outcome.Carl Jung described the paradigmatic synchronicity during psychotherapy. Since then Jungians and others have recorded single cases. Recently investigators have carried out systematic research in the use of synchronicity during psychotherapy. Here’s hoping increasingly more researchers will study the ways in which synchronicity can become a useful psychotherapeutic technique as has Dr. Reefschläger in this report. (BDB)

Introduction

permission of Gunnar Immo Reefschläger
Gunnar Immo Reefschläger
Source: permission of Gunnar Immo Reefschläger

My name is Gunnar Immo Reefschläger, and I am a researcher from Frankfurt, Germany. I focus on modern concept research in the field of Analytical Psychology. Moreover, I am a clinical psychologist, a psychodynamic-oriented personal coach, and currently, a psychotherapeutically and psychoanalytical candidate at the Institute of Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis in Andernach, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. Having finished and released my dissertation in German in 2018, Dr. Bernard Beitman kindly encouraged me to publish my findings for an English speaking readership.

In the following, I would like to give you a short and concise introduction to some of my general findings. After giving you an example of a typical participant’s report of synchronicity that happened in the context of psychotherapy, I will explain how I came across Carl Jung’s concept of synchronicity, and how I conducted my study. Feel free to contact me through the links below if you have any thoughts.

A case of synchronicity in psychotherapy

First, I would like to give you a typical example of synchronicity that can happen in the context of psychotherapy. The following excerpt is from a case that can be found in my doctoral dissertation(1):

”A 16-year-old patient who is suffering from anxiety goes on a final school trip to Berlin. It is her first trip away from home; she feels fearful and excited at the same time. However, her feelings transform into being overwhelmed. She tries to contact me spontaneously by mobile phone. I almost never switch on my mobile phone, but exactly at this moment it is on and I can give comfort to my patient. As a consequence of this moment, our therapeutic relationship deepened as I saw her in our next session.”

We need more modern concept research: The way to my study

I became fascinated by stories like these when a friend gave me a copy of Hopcke’s book There Are No Accidents (2) where I read the term synchronicity for the first time. During my studies of psychology at school, I noticed to my surprise that there was very little research about the concept of synchronicity because it was labeled as “psychological non-sense“ by my behavioristic-focused psychology department. In general, Analytical Psychology and its Freudian cousin Psychoanalysis were discarded as non-scientific. However, I had the feeling that it was an important and crucial concept of psychotherapy that just needed to be investigated more since strange coincidences connect people in a way that can be useful for both patient and therapist and their relationship. Consequently, I looked for a psychology professor who would be interested in supporting my idea to give the concept of synchronicity an empirical foundation so it would be acknowledged as a valid therapeutic concept.

A first step to an empirical foundation of synchronicity: The study

For my study, I collected a number of cases where synchronistic moments happened in the context of psychotherapy. This first step took me a time period of nine months. My cases consisted of 1) personal interviews I had with therapists, 2) synchronistic moments that happened during therapy which were documented by articles, books, and literature, and 3) questionnaires that Jungian therapists could use as an alternative to personal interviews.

To get a high number of personal interviews, I reached out to all Jungian training institutes that were listed on the website of the International Association for Analytical Psychology (3) asking them if they would be willing to endorse my study and send a study invitation via e-mail to their members. Institutes in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland received a German version of my study invitation, all other institutes an English version. In addition to that, I sent out study invitation flyers to all Jungian institutes in Germany (Berlin, Stuttgart, Munich) via mail. Next, I also posted my study invitation online on several forums, groups on Facebook. For people who reacted to my invitation over Facebook, I asked them to give me some kind of proof that they had been working as a therapist (e. g. scan of therapy license).

For therapists who responded to my study invitations, I sent an informed consent form that needed to be filled out by both therapist and patient allowing me to use the provided material. I conducted the actual interviews face-to-face, via telephone, or via Skype. For therapists who could or would not telephone, meet me personally, nor Skype, I offered to send my interview questions via email, so that they could answer them in a written form. In the end, I conducted 12 interviews personally and I received 12 email responses, in which therapists answered my interview questions in a written form.

Next, for conducting interviews, I searched for already documented synchronicities that happened during psychotherapy. I used different keywords and keyword combinations (e. g. “synchronicity”, “synchronicity and psychotherapy”, “synchronistic”) on Google and Google Scholar to find cases that were documented. Books, dissertations, and articles that seemed to be possibly relevant for my interest, I read in-depth (5; 6). The length of an actual narrative was not important, however, I dismissed narratives that were too short (e. g. when it only consisted of one sentence). In the end, I found 22 narratives of synchronicities that happened in the context of psychotherapy.

Results

After nine months of collecting data, I had a total number of 46 cases/reports of synchronicities that happened in psychotherapy. Next, I looked at how these cases were presented and/or written. I analyzed the cases using several questions including: “Did the synchronicity include a dream, premonition, or a concrete statement/behavior?“ Or “Did the synchronicity happen over a physical distance or in a physical closeness?“ In this way, I had a total of 22 questions I asked the therapists I interviewed, or I answered them myself regarding the already documented cases. Most of my questions came from publications of my doctoral advisor Christian Roesler (7). Afterward, I tried to find out if there are any tendencies of all cases in response to my questions.

Here are some results I found: There were more synchronicities reported/documented 1) that included pre-monition than dreams 2) that happened in a physical distance, e. g. over several kilometers, rather than a physical closeness, e.g. over some meters 3) that happened not simultaneously, e.g. a person dreaming synchronistically of events occurring the next day, than simultaneously, e.g. a person knowing synchronistically what another person does at the same time. I also tried to look at several possible relations between my questions through statistical methods. My results show, for example, that there is a relation between a concrete, self-assured reaction of the therapist regarding an occurred synchronistic moment and a positive consequence for the therapeutic relationship. Moreover, the more secure, aware, and specific a therapist reacts to a synchronistic moment in the context of psychotherapy, the more likely it has a positive impact on the therapeutic relationship and the therapy process itself.

What needs to happen: More therapists need to know the concept of synchronicity

In conclusion, one can say that paying attention to synchronistic moments in therapies can be a beneficial factor for therapy if the therapist is trained and self-assured in the topic of synchronicity. Consequently, it would be advisable if the topic of synchronicity is being taught more in therapy training institutes, so that future therapists can recognize synchronicities better and see them as a potential source for additional therapeutic interventions, that can support the patient by experiencing even more meaning in his or her life.

 

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Queen’s Gambit

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Psoyeo3E2HE

HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO EVERYONE!

Now please go binge on Queen’s Gambit!

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Netflix’s Queen’s Gambit is based on the brilliant novel by Walter Tevis. I ran across his book years ago, sped through in a single night, and over the years, read it two more times. Tevis also wrote The Hustler and The Man Who Fell to Earth. Unfortunately for all of us who love good stories, he died in 1984.

My dad started playing chess when he was eight. He and his brother Joe played throughout their lives. He knew the Sicilian move. When he lived with us in the late 1990s, he and Rob played chess nearly every night. They taught our daughter, Megan, how to play One of my favorite photos is of Rob and Megan playing chess in Costa Rica.

This series – just seven episodes – is so good, so much fun, so enthralling – because the woman who plays Beth, the chess prodigy, zipped herself up inside the skin of the character. You’re with her, all the way through her horrid childhood as an orphan, her addiction, her brilliance.

There are moments in this series when I felt like leaping to my feet and waving my arms and shouting, Five minutes, a break of five minutes… so I can slap together a snack and a few thoughts about what I’m watching.

When we lived in Venezuela, my dad taught me the rudimentaries of chess. It intrigued me but I wasn’t very good at it.

One of the scenes I love in Queen’s Gambit happens in the last episode, when Beth imagines a chessboard on the ceiling- which she has done numerous times before – and sees how she can beat the current world champion, a Russian.

In essence, it’s presented as a function of the left brain, the moves made by other chess masters throughout the ages. Yet, I think it’s a kind of precognition, a dive into the future that yields invaluable information.

And yes, she’s now the world champion in chess.

What’s next? Will there be a Season 2?

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The Mystical Underground: Candice Sanderson: The Wounded Healer

A new episode of The Mystical Underground is live! “Candice Sanderson: The Wounded Healer”:

Join Trish and Rob for a conversation with…

Candice M. Sanderson lives in Naples, Florida across the state from us in WPB.
Her life changed in a ten-minute period of time in August 2013 when she began to receive information from messengers from other-worldly sources. When her training as a psychologist failed to explain these events, she reluctantly followed the breadcrumbs down a path which resulted in extraordinary adventures into the unknown.
The Reluctant Messenger and The Reluctant Messenger Returns chronicle her expedition across a vast expanse of universal consciousness that led to new truths about life that she thought she had known so well.

http://candicesanderson.com

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THE TOLL

According to Worldometer, November 20, today, featured the highest number of covid cases for a single day in the U.S.  201,803.

Think about that.

Think about when trump first found out about the virus and downplayed it because he didn’t want to “panic” people, according to Bob Woodward’s book- and the audio of trump saying this to Woodward.

Think about how many times in the spring when he said, “It’ll go away in April.”

It’ll just magically disappear one day.”

“We’re rounding the corner.”

According to the NY TImes tracker for this virus, 251,715 Americans have died. In the last 7 days, there have been 49.3 new cases per 100,000 people.

Total, since January 21, there have been 11,650,817 cases of covid in the U.S., the highest in the world.

No, trump can’t be blamed for the virus. But he certainly can be blamed for everything he hasn’t done to contain it. Now, with his hopes for a second term collapsing,  he never mentions the virus at all. He’s too busy trying to steal an election.

 

 

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Born Again…The Trump-Mussolini Synchronicity

The look and the outlook…

Donald Trump lost the election in a landslide—which is what he called 306 electoral votes four years ago. But at this writing, Nov. 18, he continues to say he won, attempting to bully his way into a second term and calling the election fraudulent. In fact, he started undermining the legitimacy of the election four months ago when he realized that he probably wouldn’t win. Most likely he will eventually give up, since election results are controlled by the states, not the federal government. But  he may not concede or attend the inauguration. All of this brings up the comparison to one-time fascist leader of Italy, Benito Mussolini.

For more than four years, there has been conjecture floating around the digital world that Trump might actually be the reincarnation of Mussolini. Some of it  comes from mainstream media sources that use the term in a symbolic way, while other writers take a serious look at Trump as the actual reincarnation of the infamous fascist.

But are they spawns of the same soul? Conveniently, Mussolini died in April 1945 and Trump was born in June 1946. Of course, there’s much more.

Much was written on the subject in 2016, but it has popped up again. Remember the image Trump projected after leaving the hospital and posing silently on the balcony of the White House? Or the way he stood in front of the church in D.C. holding the Bible upside down in the aftermath of dispersing peaceful demonstrators from Lafayette Square with a chemical irritant, shields, billy clubs and horses.

On way of comparing the two leaders is by looking at this direct quote from Mussolini, which was published by Moderndiplomacy.eu in 2016.

“It is better to live one day as a lion than 100 years as a sheep. My fellow-Italians we do not win any more. We must restore the Roman Empire: march on Rome, invade Ethiopia, revive law and order, make the trains run on time, stop the Bolshevists threat, close the borders to foreign influences on our Latin culture, restore Roman discipline and authority as symbolized by the bundle of wheat bound to an ax (the glorious fascist party), suppress strikes and social unrest, institute racial laws, take care of the people who have no voice, punish the crimes of the capitalistic class, restore discipline, in short make Italy great again, never mind constitutional guarantees and respect for human rights, never mind a free press or free speech, never mind political correctness!

“We will insure all this through our elite praetorian guards, the Blackshirts. We must become winners again. I am destined to be the man who will restore the lost honor and the glory of Italy. Together we will construct an Italy which is commensurate to its great artistic achievements.”

If you substitute America for Italy, much of it sounds like Trump. So much so that I had to double-check to make sure it was a real quote. It is. Strikingly, Trump himself in 2016 tweeted the reference to better be a lion than a sheep. Did he read that somewhere? He’s not known for studying history…or did he ‘remember it?’ Maybe a speech writer slipped him the line. Who knows. But there it is.

Modern Diplomacy also points out that in Trump’s 2016 convention acceptance speech, there were similarities in his body language as well as his comments to Mussolini. “That raising of the chin with a firmly clenched mouth and a raised finger, that pose of determination and intransigence affirming one’s superiority. All that was needed was a war helmet and the resemblance would have been perfect. Some have gone as far as suggesting that we were witnessing a veritable reincarnation or rebirth of the infamous dictator.”

Let’s spell out some of the comparisons the two leaders seem to share: xenophobia, ultra-nationalism (presented as patriotism), frequent anti-media comments, the restoration of glory and greatness, opposing social unrest (BLM), racist rhetoric, fear of foreigners, protecting the border from non-white immigrants.  Mussolini began his career as a socialist but changed to fascism with the shift in political winds and Trump was a pro-choice Democrat who changed to pro-life Republican. Mussolini was militaristic, Trump not so much, but he favors using the military within the U.S. to deter protestors. That’s pretty militaristic…and forbidden by the Constitution.

Considering all of those similarities, should we be surprised that so many Americans voted for Trump after four years of his Mussolini-esque performance? Not really. It has pointed out that the majority of Americans actually approved of Mussolini during most of his reign.

Here’s the Washington Post’s evaluation of Trump’s fascist tendencies.

 

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ANIMALS AND THE PANDEMIC

During this pandemic, I’ve noticed some oddities among animals. So I’ll start with our Golden Retriever, Nigel. Back in March and April, when dog parks were closed, we took him to a vacant lot every afternoon where he could run and chase Frisbees and balls. He didn’t seem to mind the absence of other dogs or people. But that’s normal for him. What wasn’t normal was how in the evenings he wanted one of us to sit outside with him and toss endless Frisbees and balls. It was when I wished we had young kids around who would play with him, engage him, make that fluffy tail whip back and forth 24/7.

I also noticed that Nigel seemed to become close friends with our cats, Nala and Beowulf. In the evenings when one or both of us sat outside in the front yard, tossing endless balls and Frisbees, the cats usually joined us. Sometimes, Nala pounced on Nigel’s ball and batted it away from her and Nigel would catch it. Beo often went up to Nigel and rubbed his head against Nigel, who responded with a butt sniff and a head bump with the cat.

Recently, we’ve been having trouble with mice, which were probably brought in by the cats and then escaped. The other day, the two of the mousetraps Rob had sent went off, I found a small snake – dead – in the living room, and a dove one of the cats had caught had gotten loose in the house. It had settled in a high nook in the living room that once had housed books.

We threw open the front doors, then tried to gently coax it out of that high spot toward the front door. Instead, the dove flew into the kitchen and ended up in a corner of the room, on the floor, utterly terrified. Nigel just watched the whole spectacle, apparently awed. The cats were outside. I finally scooped my hands under the dove and hurried outside with it.
Nigel followed me. I stood there in the sunlight, this beautiful little creature sitting unrestrained in my open hands, and we looked at each other. “Go,” I whispered.

It didn’t move. Those eyes remained locked on mine. Then I raised my hands higher and it suddenly took off, flying for the blue sky beyond our fence, and I thought, Go, go and keep going. And when I turned around, there was Nigel, watching the dove fly away.

I like to think he understood the importance of the moment, but perhaps he was only curious about why I was holding a bird. Or maybe he was captivated by the bird’s ability to fly. Or maybe he just enjoyed being outside. I don’t know.

We attribute human qualities to our beloved animal buddies, but perhaps the reality is stranger than we imagine. Suppose our animal buds are watching us? Suppose they’re asking who the hell we are?

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The Mystical Underground: Alex Tsakiris: Why Evil Matters

A new episode of The Mystical Underground is live! “Alex Tsakiris: Why Evil Matters”:

Join Trish and Rob for a conversation with…

Alex Tsakiris, best known as the moderator of Skeptico podcast for more than ten years. Over that time, Skeptiko has become the number one podcast on the science of human consciousness. With millions of downloads, and tens of thousands of worldwide listeners, Skeptiko’s provocative interviews explore the tipping points of science and spirituality. Many of the world’s leading researchers and thinkers on consciousness and spirituality have participated in those interviews.

Among the topics discussed on the shows are the science of near-death experiences, parapsychology, consciousness research vs. conventional science’s take on who we are, spirituality, the strangeness of UFOs and close encounters, skepticism and what we should make of the “skeptics.”

Alex is the author of “Why Science is Wrong…About Almost Everything,” and his new book soon to be released is called: “Why Evil Matters.”

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