This appeared here in January, with is in turn based on an  article on mcmanweb ....
In a poll I conducted here  in Aug 2009, nearly one in four (23%) reported they were "borderline or  full-on psychic, or at least it seems that way." In contrast, less than  one in ten (8%) responded with, "Sorry, I'm totally rational and  logical."
I highly doubt that we would find so many  with psychic tendencies in the general population. I also suspect most  of us keep pretty quiet about this stuff, especially around our  psychiatrists. We are talking about a spectrum where intuition overlaps  with the paranormal or psychic, which in turn bleeds over into truly  irrational thinking - ranging from grandiose and delusional to magical  and psychotic.
There is no separation. A hyper-aware brain easily  becomes overloaded, to the point that "seems like crazy," with only a  slight nudge becomes "genuinely crazy."
Weird stuff  happens. Back in the mid-seventies I had a vivid dream about an  earthquake. Twenty-four hours later I woke up to the floor shaking  beneath me, my first-ever encounter with Richter phenomena. This had to  be random chance, I could only think. Odds are, after all, that things  will happen that defy all odds - it's one of those paradoxes to the laws  of probability. That's my story, anyway, and I'm sticking to it.
The  other way of looking at it is that - in order to preserve my sanity - I  learned to tune out this sort of thing. Imagine my brain going off  every time the earth twitched. I'd be a nervous wreck, especially now  that I live in California. In other words, "reality" was my adaptive  response to a "hyper-reality" that was too much for me to handle. (Of  all things, this is the mirror reverse of the Freudian explanation for  "psychosis," which his followers view as a maladaptive "reaction" to  reality that is too much to handle.)
Okay, one more  weird thing: Back in the late-80s, I joined a "psychic circle." We were  asked to face the person next to us and do a "reading." This is stupid, I  thought. But if I persisted in my "this is stupid" line of thinking I  was only going to prove myself right. I settled down, blotted out all  distractions, including "thinking," and went with flow ...
I  see you in front of the fireplace, I said to the woman facing me. So  far so good, unless of course her house didn't have a fireplace. She  motioned me to continue. With your two kids, I added.
I only have one kid, she cut in.
There!  Wrong, already! I knew this stuff was bullshit. "Well, I see two," I  said anyway. Look, it's not my fault, I wanted to explain. I'm just  doing what the lady told me to do - clear your head, no thinking, first  thing to pop into your head ...
That week, she discovered she was pregnant.
"We're called nutjobs for recounting these experiences," Liza over at my blog on BipolarConnect  commented, "and don't you dare mention them to your psychiatrist unless  you want a stay in a psych ward complete with an ECT session or two."
Nevertheless, Liza felt sufficiently safe on BipolarConnect to reveal this:
I  was in a small group in my high school English class. The group was  discussing the debate we were preparing, and I said, why are we going  over this again? We said all this last small-group meeting. Nope. It was  the first time we'd met in group. My classmates already thought I was  weird, and I'd just confirmed it.
But of all  things, Liza went on to say, two of the giants of psychiatry/psychology,  Carl Jung and William James, gave such experiences a lot of credence.  Jung felt that the human psyche is "by nature religious." In his memoir,  he recounted seeing a luminous head, detached from the body, floating  from his mother’s room.
Meanwhile, William James, in  his classic "The Varieties of Religious Experience," felt that  healthy-mindedness had a lot to do with "union with the divine" whereas  depression was the sign of a "divided soul" that could be cured by a  mystical experience.
None of this, of course, sat well  with Freud, who expressed his fear of psychiatry descending into a  "black tide of mud of occultism."
These days, science  is starting to fill in a lot of the blanks on our behalf. Few  investigators are brave enough to risk their careers looking into the  paranormal, but research into intuition and creativity - the "soft side"  of psychic - is a hot field.
But creativity and  intuition (and needless to say, psychic perceptions) are also linked to  crazy. It's no accident that some of the top investigators in the field -  people such as Nancy Andreasen of the University of Iowa - made their  bones researching mental illness.
A psychic reality  undoubtedly exists, and the ones with the best insight into this are the  people eating out of dumpsters. Our brains tune this stuff out for a  reason. I know mine did.
***
This  article is one in four on mcmanweb investigating the connection between  creativity, intuition, psychic perception, nonlinear thinking, and  crazy, based on blogs originating here and BipolarConnect:
Creativity, Intuition, Non-linear
Thursday, June 30, 2011
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1 comment:
Well we couldn't see bacteria until we had microscopes and stains and we couldn' see viruses until we had electron microscopes and very fancy prep media--we didn't know moon sand was different than Earth sand until we had samples to look at. I firmly believe there are some things we simply lack measuring tools for and during my nursing career I think my brain sometimes 'stepped over' the line between empathy and being an empath. And you're right, we are not equipped/trained? to handle it. I am much more comfortable living in a very rural area as far as 'brain noise' is considered.
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