Traveller in time?
Relaxing in a blue velour armchair in a dimly lit room in 2002, lawyer Steve* was about to meet his bloody end—as it had taken place almost 1900 years before. In the midst of past life hypnotherapy, the married father-of-two had seemingly uncovered a previous existence as a commanding Roman legionnaire. “We were in a canvas tent discussing the battle-plan. Everything was under control. There was the clinking of swordplay outside as the men sharpened their skills,” he recalls. “I felt upbeat, excited and confident.”
While Steve remains unsure of what to make of his experience, this much is certain: the memory of what happened next has forever changed the course of his present life. At the hypnotherapist’s prompting, he projected forward some days to the battle, but was unprepared for the “incredibly powerful feelings” that consumed him. “I was totally gutted, perhaps in both senses of the word. There were thousands killed—friends, loyal followers, youngsters. It was all my fault. I could barely speak. My eyes were red and wet with tears,” he says. “The feeling of personal responsibility and guilt for leading the men into a massacre was unbearable. The weight of despair is impossible to convey.”
The year, as Steve saw it during the regression, was 111 AD, yet the misery in his words is as palpable as if he were mourning last week’s loss. Whatever forces were at work when Steve took his journey in the Jason recliner, the topic of past lives has enthralled Westerners at least since 1952’s (since debunked) case of a Colorado woman who recalled meticulous details of living as a 19th century Irishwoman named Bridey Murphy. On the net, you’d need a whole separate life just to explore all the websites the subject has spawned. If you’re game, $14.95 is the price to download software that purports to unearth your past lives—one brief credit card transaction, and the rest is history.
Or is it? Whether the memory is true or not is irrelevant, according to Melbourne hypnotherapist Dr. Frank Jockel, PHD. Anxiety, physical pain, fears and phobias, he claims, can melt away with the recollection of a past life. “People look to past life therapy because they feel stuck in a rut, they’ve been to psychiatrists, psychologists, clairvoyants and fortune tellers searching for an answer,” says Jockel. “A client who’s a doctor had a pain in his neck that had been there for a quite a while. During past life therapy, he saw himself being chased by a mob and someone threw a stone and it hit him in the neck. Ask the question ‘Did it actually happen?’ Who knows? But has the pain in the neck gone? Yes.”
Would this work for me? I don’t have a pain in the neck to contend with, but what plagues me—an obsession with King Henry VIII and his six wives—certainly might feel like that to my Tudor-tired family and friends. One glimpse of historian David Starkey on the TV and the blood drains from my husband’s face and he flees, shrieking down the corridor like the ghost of Henry’s fifth wife, Catherine Howard, is said to do. Starkey’s bricklike Six Wives: The Queens of Henry VIII commands my bedside table, and in the kitchen, my trusty Music From the Reign of Henry VIII cassette (yes, cassette) means a volté at breakfast time is never out of the question. Not even a 750-piece puzzle depicting all of Henry’s hounded ladies is beneath me.
Could this fascination endure because I once walked among them? The idea has accompanied me since childhood, and now, with the image of myself in rustling damask reignited, it was time to finally see if I’d lived before.
First stop was Sydney psychic Kate Barnes. The willowy strawberry-blonde who claims to have channelled Michael Hutchence for Australian Style magazine, describes herself as a medium, healer and clairvoyant—the latter, she explains, means “sight with your eyes” so she’ll view my former selves projected like a film before her open eyes. “I’m looking at a jungle environment,” she declares in her thick-as-the-bush Aussie drawl. “I’ve got a feeling I’m in South America.” It’s an ancient civilisation, probably Incan, and I’m unsettled by her vision that I’ve “had one child torn away” from me for child sacrifice. That heartbreak is likely to make me an over-vigilant mother today, Kate advises, and I’m eager for her to leave that life behind.
“You’ve been a singer!” she suddenly announces, “I can hear this ooaaahh. It’s very operatic: oooahhh.” As she outlines my glamorous life in late 1800s France or England as a “statuesque” chanteuse with a generous cleavage, I’m reminded of my enthusiastic warbling at karaoke—minus the gowns and “many male suitors” that I was formerly accustomed to. As our 90 minute session progresses, I learn that I’ve belly danced in the Middle East, been a courtier at the Palace of Versailles, a jolly 17th century pirate on the Caribbean seas whose ship was swamped by a massive wave (huge waves are my recurring nightmare) and a revolutionary French poet/journalist by the name of Charles Monseurrat. Kate senses that many of the people around me were guillotined in Charles’s lifetime, and I can’t help but remember the red birthmark at the back of the neck that myself, my mother, sister and daughter all share. Chillingly, Kate also met the spirit of my late Godfather. I tensed at her spot-on descriptions of his distinctive gestures, appearance, and her perception of how he died. But where—I had to inquire, when Kate wonders if there’s something she hasn’t “picked up on?”—was my Tudor life?
For as much as I was enjoying her recounting of some of my 600 (!) costume changes—it’s like the MGM wardrobe department has flung open its doors to you for a personal frock-up—when my moment arrived, it was bittersweet. “I can see a removal of collar for a beheading,” says Kate, delicately miming the gesture. If I hadn’t been Anne Boleyn herself—his famous second wife, whom Henry sent to the block on trumped-up adultery charges—I’d been her lady-in-waiting, she states. These words should have made my blood run cold, but coming as a postscript, it was just like chancing upon a beloved, long-dead relative in a well-worn photo album.
Before leaving, I ask if there is any past life explanation for my current fear of driving. In a heartbeat, Kate sees me steering a red-cross ambulance and dodging bombs in some war-ravaged city. This is exhilarating but doesn’t go far towards explaining my terror. When I mention the scene to my mother her dry response is, “I don’t see you driving an ambulance in this life, a past life or a future life.”
Instead, I steered myself towards kinesiology. Energy kinesiology works on the principle that “muscle testing” can identify imbalances in different structures of the body. The practitioner asks a yes/no question and the resistance of your muscle, usually a forearm, provides the answer. This is a novel method of accessing past lives and I can’t imagine what awaits me at the southern Sydney apartment of kinesiologist Sherry Mead. A gargantuan dream catcher dominates most of a wall, and I wonder what lives we’ll net today.
Answering that proved complicated , but warm-natured Sherry showed cool efficiency in keeping track of the interminable folders, information sheets and lists she had to consult in tracking my past lives. “Muscle testing is our tool to follow the path or to find the story,” she explains. Via what is essentially the method of elimination, Sherry established that I’d been a swordsman in the Spanish royal court in 1521 (right year, wrong country) and a 9-year-old Greek girl in 1013. I thanked Sherry, but more than ever; I was drawn to the bright light of hypnosis.
Hypnotherapy is the quintessential past-life experience, as Steve discovered. “I had been pretty risk averse in my life and reluctant to push myself forward and stand-out from the group,” he says. “The Roman legionnaire experience certainly showed why I might have retreated into a shell. Soon after this experience, I felt that perhaps there was a reason for my ‘blockage’ and it was okay to move on and start asserting myself.” He soon grasped a new professional opportunity and moved interstate with his family. “There is a new energy, excitement and happiness. Now I stand up for what I think is right.”
That’s settled then: I will go under. Imagining my ancient self skipping down velvet English hills, I make an appointment with Sydney hypnotherapist Marlaine Nicholson-Smith.
“Hypnosis is like the dream state but awake,” Scottish-born Marlaine informs me during our pre-session chat. “I have to quieten the conscious mind to access the subconscious. The memories are there within you but a lot of us don’t want to remember, or don’t now how to remember.” For the first few moments in the recliner’s plush embrace, as Marlaine’s hushed voice instructs me to feel “heavy as lead”, I’m remembering only that I’ve left my mobile phone switched on in the next room.
The pesky thought eventually recedes during the guided meditation, where I’m to imagine myself walking down a golden path, inhaling a rainbow of multi-hued “mists.” Soon, I’m plunged into a swirling spiral and when I emerge at the other side, I’m supposedly inside a past life. Then—nothing. But pictures do emerge as, ever so slowly, I lose awareness of where I am, and start to completely inhabit the landscape in my mind. Still, when I listen back to a recording of the session, my answers remain mostly monosyllabic and the vivid detail reminiscent of the most intriguing past life recollections I’ve read about is absent.
I “see” a barefoot young woman with long dark hair, and an empty stone cottage, but there’s no one around—it’s like a ghost town. When I’m asked for the date, there is a long pause before my clipped “1500s”—of course I’d say that, in my hope. Yet, propelled to the day I departed this mundane life, a tear stung my eye as I watched this girl whose features were never clear die in her childbed. Marlaine later assured me that memories are often hazy: “Often, you don’t get a proper picture, you just get a feeling that something’s there.”
The second life I recounted—intended to pinpoint the origins of my fear of driving—flowed better. This time I’m a stable boy of 15 in the days of Roman chariots. He’s as happy as Larius until the day his master invites him to take the reins, for a lark, and the horse and chariot veer wildly out of control, throwing the youth and condemning him to be reborn centuries later as a bus-bound writer with a thing for strappy shoes that lace around the ankle. To curtail my fear, Marlaine suggests that I reimagine the event with a happy ending, then “One: feeling your body return to normal. Two: feeling your spine against the chair, and three: wide awake and refreshed.” I snap my eyes open and drag my tingly, leaden limbs from the chair, thinking all the while that it would have been fun to continue for just one more life…
Barry Williams, the editor of The Skeptic, the journal of the Australian Skeptics association, soon bursts my bubble: “Self delusion is one of the strongest attributes that all human beings have,” he cheerfully tells me. While he immediately poo-poos the psychic reading—“she was never going to tell you that you were a common rag picker who spent most of his time with his finger up his nose”—and my brush with kinesiology–“one of the looniest things people have come to believe”—hypnosis makes him pause for breath. “It is on the fringes of science … the hypnotist is giving you permission to behave how you wouldn’t normally behave, make a fool of yourself if you like.” (Here, I chose to remember the celebrities who cross-dress for TV hypnosis specials, rather than my own purposeful utterings about a crashed chariot.) “You want this to be true,” he sums up. “It’s the same as when people see pictures in clouds.”
But that’s not so bad, is it? Bombarding my vague and pregnant sister with tales of my spiritual quest recently, she surprised me with a decisive: “You know what you were. You don’t need to ask anyone.” Perhaps, I thought, sinking into the couch with my latest guilty pleasure—Robin Maxwell’s The Secret Diary of Anne Boleyn—you could have told me that earlier.
* Not his real name
Author’s note: I was commissioned to write this article for a Sunday supplement more than a decade ago, but it was never published. My sister suggested I post it, so here it is, a little dated in parts, but hopefully still of value. Something that’s definitely changed since I wrote this is I now believe more in the idea of “simultaneous” lives, rather than “past” lives … more on that later!
Lady Gaga the ghost hunter
Lady Gaga is reportedly obsessed with ghosts. The Queen of wacky is said to be terrified of negative forces, and “has every hotel and tour venue scanned by a team of paranormal investigators before she will agree to stay there,” says Britain’s Grazia magazine.
A team of paranormal investigators checking out every hotel? She’s been on her massive Monster world tour for months, so this would be a logistical horror story. A source told the magazine: “She believes in paranormal activity and won’t take any risks when she is on the road. It’s important to her to be safe from spirits.”
The report claims that she’s spent around $50,000 on high-tech ghost-detecting equipment including EMF Meters.
What has she got to be so afraid of? Sounds like she needs to pick up a copy of Spirit Sisters asap. The many stories of people gaining comfort and hope after communication from their late loved ones might assuage her fears. And save her some cash.
Famous Picton Ghost Hunts under threat
I was disappointed to read that the days of the Picton Ghost Tours in NSW may be numbered. It’s literally been years since I first made a mental note to travel to Picton, a small township about 80 km southwest of Sydney, and soak in its haunted heritage. Now, according to news.com.au, locals are calling for the tours to end, citing vandals and hooligans wreaking havoc after hours.
Picton became a talking point back in January when a woman noticed two strange children in one of her photographs. I’m not sure what the truth isi behind that image, but the disappointing fact is that the children appear to be wearing modern clothing. Personally, I like my ghost kids in Victorian knickerbockers and ringlets. Hoops optional.
Anyway, I hope the council does away with its plans to end the tours. The late local historian Liz Vincent began them many years ago, igniting a wealth of spooky sightings and anecdotes for the files, and boosting tourism in the local area. I interviewed Liz during my research for Spirit Sisters and her enthusiasm for history and the paranormal (preferably together) was contagious. Today, her husband John and daughter Jenny are doing a great job keeping her passion alive. I wish them the best, but in the meantime, I’ve moved that mental note a little higher up the ‘to do’ list.
Oxford tourist captures historical ghost?
A tourist on a ghost tour in the beautiful university city of Oxford, UK, has captured what she thinks may be the ghost of a woman in period dress strolling along New College Lane. “I thought it looked so beautiful glowing with All Soul’s College in the background I had to take a photo,” Sue Tomlinson told the Oxford Mail. “When I first saw [the photo] I thought it looked strange and wanted to get home and put it on the computer so I could see it bigger.
You can see the image here: http://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/8427740.Tourist_captures_spooky_image_on_camera/
Looking at the photo, I can make out what appears to be a woman in a skirt (and perhaps a bustle?) Peer a bit closer and she might be wearing a hat and cape and carrying something in her hand. Set your imagination free and she even looks to be in something of a hurry … Then again, I’m ever wary of pareidolia, the psychological phenomenon of a random image being perceived as significant, like seeing patterns in clouds, or deities stamped onto toast …. What else this could be? Well, as the owner of a very sub-standard point-and-click digital camera, I’ll have to reserve judgment, but I’d welcome your thoughts.
A “horny ghost” hits the headlines
Darwin mum Jennifer Mills-Young made international headlines this week with the story of her randy resident ghost, Kevin. In the wash-up of paranormal stories that hit the web and the press each week, this one seems to have stood out mainly thanks to the use of the word “horny” in the headline, and to be fair to Ms. Mills-Young, it’s not a word she appears to have uttered in the interview. Her story may seem a new and amusing angle in paranormal news, but according to myth and legend, the idea of an amorous ghost has been around for centuries: there are variations, but in general, the male version (ie, who seeks to interfere with sleeping women) is known as an incubus, and the female is a succubus. Ms Mills-Young is certainly not alone in her contemporary account of the phenomena. A quick on-line search yielded a multitude of such stories, most of which I make for intriguing and/or unsettling reading.
Thinking of the hundred or so women I corresponded with when I was researching Spirit Sisters, I couldn’t recall one with an experience like this to share. But then I remembered that a story I’ve just finished working on for Where Spirits Dwell concerns a woman who was plagued for 15 years by the spirit of an older man who insisted on trying to get into her bed, even when her partner was sleeping beside her. Intriguing …
As for Ms. Mills-Young, this wasn’t the first time I’d heard of her. Last year, I came across her collection of stories (“Growing up haunted in Sydney”) documented on the website trueghosttales.com, and for a while, she was on my list of interviews to potentially pursue. Yet another example of how few degrees of separation divide the local paranormal community came when I was reading a follow-up to the “horny Kevin” saga: ghost hunter Jason King has offered to travel to the Northern Territory and clear Kevin, free of charge. I chatted to Jason some months ago when he responded to my call-out for experiences in the Daily Telegraph … he was bursting with stories, as I recall, of six-foot shadows at the Quarantine Station, and phantoms he’d spotted during his regular gig as a security guard. Perhaps there’s a good Q&A in this. Watch this space.