Channeling

 

   Extrasensory Deception?

 

  Suhotra Swami

 

     "If the guides were not guides after all, who were they?"

 

 

     -Hungry Ghosts by Joe Fisher, p. 202

 

     Seth, Ramtha, Lazaris, Ashtar, Mashiyach - the vaguely Biblical-sounding  names have the ring of "prophet" to them. Indeed, for millions the world over,  these and other garrulous "channeled entities" are prophets who enjoy a  command of mass-media access that would have left the sandal-shod Old  Testament visionaries tongue-tied with astonishment.  Alexander Blair-Ewart,  publisher and editor of the Toronto esoteric magazine Dimensions, notes a bit  ruefully that "in sensationalist fashion, journalists and cameramen zoomed in  on crystals, channeling and a confused and over-excited Hollywood actress" as  the the burgeoning New Age movement's instant celebrities.

 

     Channeling is defined by Arthur Hastings of the California Institute of  Transpersonal Philosophy as "the process in which a person transmits messages  from a presumed discarnate source external to his or her consciousness."  The  most widely researched kind of channeling phenomena is communication with the  dead, which, as eerie as it may sound, seems to be on the increase.  The  University of Chicago's National Opinion Research Council recently found that  42 percent of American adults believe they have made contact with the spirit  of a departed individual. Of these, 78 percent said they saw, 50 percent heard  and 18 percent talked with the deceased.  Thirty percent of Americans who say  they don't even believe in life after death still claim to have had contact  with someone who has died.  It is the surfeit, not the rarity, of channeling  that puzzles investigators.

 

     Acolytes of the New Age hail channeled entities to be "highly evolved  beings", "spirit guides for all mankind", "angels", "devas" or even "God."   There are precious few suggestions that they might be demonic.  Since cameras  and microphones won't penetrate the veil of oblivion that separates us from  them, all we get to see are the subjects through whom the entities speak -  housewives, schoolteachers, insurance salesmen and similarly quite ordinary  people.

 

     Channeling is a little different from mediumship.  Mediums are  experienced clairvoyants who "fish" for discarnate entities. Channellers are  initially psychic greenhorns who, unwittingly or even unwillingly, are taken  over by the entities.  The first contact can be most disconcerting.  In 1963,  thirty-four-year-old Jane Roberts of Elmira, New York, was suddenly  overwhelmed by what she called a "fantastic avalanche of radical new ideas  burnt into my head with tremendous force, as if my skull were some sort of  receiving station turned up to unbearable volume."  The entity in this case  was Seth, who turned out to be a prime catalyst of the emerging New Age.  From  the early 1970s until her death in 1984, Mrs. Roberts channeled a series of  best-selling "Seth Books" that blazed the way to public acceptance of what in  an earlier period would have been condemned as necromancy.

 

     Even more shivery-quivery is the Australian channeler Shirley Bray's  description of how a group of entities called "the Nine" contacted her: "I  felt as if thin wires, like acupuncture needles, were being inserted into the  base of my skull.  It was uncomfortable so I stirred, moving my head from side  to side.  A voice firmly but gently said, 'Be still, it will not be long.'"

 

     But once the channeler overcomes the shock of such close encounters of  the first kind, the relationship may prove to be profitable beyond his or her  wildest dreams.  Jack Pursel, who admits that he was frightened to tears the  first time he channeled Lazaris, now runs a highly successful corporation  called Concept: Synergy that markets Lazaris audio- and videotapes to 500  metaphysical bookstores worldwide.  The erstwhile ordinary housewife J.Z.  Knight takes in more than two hundred thousand dollars per weekend for a  channeling seminar featuring her guide Ramtha; she says he's earned her  millions of dollars.

 

     A glance at the teachings of the discarnate entities reveals an  intriguing pattern.  Here's a sample from Mashiyach (pronounced Moor-shark),  channeled by Shirley Bray: "He who would find power must know that he extends  from balance in Me, that I am he.  He and thee and Me are ONE in light ...  Create ye a world within the knowing of Me within you.  Look upon your  creation and know it is the sum total of your thinking.  Thinking is creating.  Man has created his world."  From a Krsna conscious standpoint, this is called  Mayavadi philosophy.  Mayavada means "doctrine of illusion" - indeed, there's  a chapter in Ms. Bray's book (A Guide for the Spiritual Traveler) that's  entitled, "Life is Just an Illusion."

 

     When psychology professor Jon Klimo recounts the themes commonly  expounded by channeled entities, he's giving us nothing more than a breakdown  of the main tenets of Mayavadi philosophy, to wit: we all have a higher self,  which is ultimately One Self (called "All-That-Is" or "The Universal Mind);  this One Self is an impersonal, absolute God, perceivable only as light and  achieved only through silent contemplation; the material world is an illusion,  merely the dream of this God, and until we realize we are God, we are subject  to that dream of our separate individual existences in the cycle of birth and  death. [See Chapter Four of Klimo's Channeling: Investigations on Receiving  Information from Paranormal Sources, 1988]

 

     We'll return to these philosophical issues a little later on.  Its clear  that the entities have an agenda and, uncorporeal though they may be, they  have the means to fulfill it.  But who are they?  That's what a British-born  investigative journalist named Joe Fisher wanted to find out - because, while  gathering material in Toronto for a book on channeling, he fell in love with a  channeled entity named Filippa.

 

     Fisher, who's written two best-selling books (The Case for Reincarnation  and Life Between Life), met Filippa in Toronto in the summer of 1984 through a  channeler he calls Aviva in his latest book, Hungry Ghosts.  Aviva, an avowed  Marxist, was forced to suspend her unbelief in the supernatural after she was  taken over by an entity calling himself Russell Parnick while being treated by  hypnotherapy for myelocytic leukemia.  The more she allowed Russell to use her  body as a channel, the more her disease gradually subsided.  As word got  around Toronto's esoteric scene, Aviva's regular seances attracted followers,  among them Joe Fisher.

 

     There was no doubt in the minds of those in attendance that something  very extraordinary happened to Aviva each time she was put into trance by her  hypnotist.  As Fisher describes it, "her voice was barely recognizable.  Gone  was the high-pitched jocularity ... Her enunciation was now unequivocally  masculine; the English accent was unmistakable.  This was an entirely  different Aviva, strangely assertive and uncompromising.  This was a voice  which claimed to belong to Aviva's guide [Russell] , a discarnate individual  who had lived as a sheep farmer in Yorkshire during the last century."   Russell in turn introduced other entities: Hanni, Willian, Mi-Lao, Sebotwan,  Ernest, Sonji, Tuktu, Kinggalaa - and Filippa Gavrilos.  They became the  guides for the regulars attending the seances.

 

     Through Aviva, Filippa spoke to Fisher with "Greek inflection lending  charm to broken English.  Her delivery was subdued, pensive and poignantly  tender ... Whatever the quality of her speech, Filippa always spoke to me like  a lover for whom the fire still smoldered."

 

     Filippa told Joe that they'd indeed been lovers in the 1700's, when they  lived in Theros, a Greek village "five day's walk from the Black Sea."  He had  been Andreas Cherniak, a militiaman born of a Greek mother and a Slavic  father.  Filippa was a small, fair-skinned, black-haired Mediterranean beauty.   But their affair ended tragically when the village elders disapproved.   Andreas/Joe was judged by the priest and banished from Theros.  After her  death at age fifty-three, Filippa's astral self withdrew into the non-physical  plane of existence (called bardo by the Tibetans: bar - "in between lives", do  - "island").  Joe was now in his fourth life cycle since Andreas.

 

     Joe found Filippa's chronicle appealingly plausible. "Sitting on the  floor of Aviva's living room, I found myself breathing the air of a bygone  era, roaming parched valleys and ancient crypts.  I imagined Filippa's dark  eyes and long black tresses."  Ten years before, he'd written his first novel  on the Greek island of Siphnos and had been quickly captivated by the land and  its culture.  He had a natural fondness for small, dark-haired women.  As a  boy, he'd felt a strange fascination for the name Filippa.  Now he knew why.

 

     Joe longed to establish "guide contact" (direct mind-to-mind  communication) with Filippa.  To this end he took up daily meditation, never  completely linking up to Filippa but coming tantalizingly close.  Once he had  the insight of a dusty pathway winding to a stand of tall, spindly trees in  the distance. Through Aviva, Filippa excitedly proclaimed that this was where  they used to meet as lovers.  Sometimes he'd get a loud buzzing in his ears.   He'd then feel Filippa's presence strongly, and "a strange sense of  contentment and reconciliation and a suspension of worldly anxiety" would  settle around him for as long as the buzzing lasted.  In March, 1985, he had  the fleeting vision of a young woman walking towards him wearing a long white  garment.  He knew this to be Filippa, and wept out of joy and sadness, loss  and anguish.  "My terrestrial love life was doomed," Fisher writes. "No woman  of flesh and blood could hope to emulate Filippa's love and concern."

 

     Joe became obsessed by his impossible love.  "If Filippa could have  assumed a physical body, I'm sure I would have married her.  But she was only  a voice, a voice that resonated with more love, compassion and perspicacity  than I had ever known.  Within the space of a few months, she had demonstrated  an acute awareness of my feelings and foibles, she know the people in my life  and their effect upon me, and she was even able to relate specific  circumstances in which I had found myself, situations unknown to Aviva or  anyone who attended" the seances.  "'I can see energies,' is how she explained  her ability to know me inside out.  'I can see in your mind.  If you make in  your mind, I can see.'"

 

     The more Joe Fisher loved Filippa, the more he hungered for tangible  proof of her existence.  Proof that Filippa was really who she said she was  would further lend force to the book he was preparing to write.  And proof  would require a journey to Theros, the mountain village in the parched  mountains of northeastern Greece, to find evidence of her earthly sojourn.

 

     Not only did Fisher set out to unearth Filippa's past life, he wanted to  verify the last incarnations of Englishmen Russell Parnick, William "Harry"  Maddox and William Alfred "Ernest" Scott.  Two, Harry and Ernest, said that  they'd died in this century, Harry in WWI and Ernest in WWII.  These claims  could be easily cross-checked by a look at British military records. Russell,  Aviva's guide, had given ample dates and placenames from his life in the  Yorkshire Dales for Joe to trace.

 

     But as Joe Fisher would find out after two trips to Europe, the four  entities had been clearly and deliberately lying from the start, though they'd  managed to string him along by clever use of half-truths, ambiguity and  obfuscation.  Filippa's lies turned out to be the most blatant and most  crushing for Joe personally.  She'd repeatedly claimed to have journeyed by  foot from Theros to Alexandropouli.  But Alexandropouli, which Fisher presumed  to be an ancient site of Alexander the Great, turned out to have been founded  only in 1920.  It got its name from King Alexandros, who visited it in 1919.   For a seventy-year period before that, it was known as Dedegats, a settlement  of Turkish merchants; prior to 1850, the place had no history at all.  Thus  Filippa, deceased in 1771, remembered a city that was not then built.  She  called it by a name that she could not have known and told of ships in a  harbor she could not have seen.  A professor of Greek language found many  other discrepancies in her memories of life in eighteenth-century Greece.   There was no trace of a town called Theros.  And no Greek could understand  Filippa's taperecorded utterances of her putative native tongue.

 

     "Their knowledge is impressive," writes Fisher of these four and other  channeled entities he investigated, "their insight remarkable, their  charismatic hold on their followers undeniable. Moreover, the voices'  ostensible link to a higher and greater state of being seems to place them  above suspicion in the minds of those who prize their counsel.  Yet surely it  is important - essential, even - to establish, if possible, the nature of the  beast that is shuffling through the pipeline created by the trance state.  Who  are these entities really?

 

     "The answer to that question is as unwelcome as it is unavoidable ... the  evidence left me in little doubt that earthbound spirits or 'hungry ghosts'  have wormed their way into that juicy apple of spiritual regeneration known as  The New Age."

 

     But is it logical to suspect all channeled entities because of the  mischief of a few?  Can't we hope that there are some genuine guides out in  the ether somewhere?

 

     Joe Fisher tried to keep this hope alive even after being cheated by  Filippa.  He visited renowned channeler George Chapman at his home in the  Welsh village of Trer-Ddol.  Chapman's special distinction is that his guide,  Dr. William Lang, has been authenticated beyond reasonable doubt as the spirit  of a distinguished Middlesex ophthalmologist who died in 1937.  Despite their  initial disbelief, surviving members of the good doctor's family have  testified that the entity speaking through the entranced George Chapman can be  none other than Dr. Lang himself.  Medical professionals have confirmed the  entity's thorough familiarity with the diagnosis and treatment of eye diseases  - even as they watched, Lang through Chapman has healed hundreds of patients.

 

     But Fisher came away from his session with Dr. Lang unsatisfied.  "...I  felt much the same in the company of the charming and deferential Dr. Lang as  I did while conversing with the spirits whose claims remained unsubstantiated.   I couldn't put my finger on it, but something was wrong.  While seeming to  co-operate fully, Dr. Lang was fudging.  He told me nothing new, nothing  incisive.  And when I raised the question of charlatan spirits who crave  physical sensation, the discarnate surgeon avoided the topic completely ...  Comparing him with other, blatantly suspect entities, I was haunted by one of  Lt. Col. Arthur Powell's observations in The Astral Body.  He wrote that it  was impossible to distinguish truth from falsehood in communications from the  next world 'since the resources of the astral plane can be used to delude  persons on the physical plane to such an extent that no reliance can be placed  even on what seems the most convincing proof.'"

 

     "Hungry ghost," the term Fisher uses for the entities who speak through  channelers, is a translation of the Sanskrit word preta.  According to the  Preta Kanda section of the Garuda Purana, an ancient book of Vedic wisdom, a  preta is a human being deprived of a gross physical body because of  sinfulness.  His soul is trapped, earthbound, within the subtle body (composed  of mind, intelligence and ahankara or false sense of identity). Like any  ordinary human, the preta's mind is agitated by the urges of lust, but he  lacks physical senses with which to satisfy his desires.

 

     Milton, in Comus, captures the pathos of "shadows" (ghosts) clinging to  this world even past the point of death.

 

 

    Such are those thick and gloomy shadows damp

 

Oft seen in charnel vaults and sepulchres,

 

Lingering, and sitting by a new-made grave

 

As loath to leave the body it lov'd,

 

And linked itself by carnal sensuality

 

To a degenerate and degraded state.

 

     Having no bodies of their own, pretas hunger (hence their name) for  vicarious pleasures through the bodies of humans, much like decrepit lechers  who seek gratification through pornographic movies.  Hungry ghosts seem benign  because they are genuinely attentive to the physical health of their subjects  - witness Aviva's remarkable turnaround in her fight with cancer when Russell  arrived.  But as Joe Fisher states, "Their eagerness to communicate, their  concern for the medium's health and strength, their preoccupation with life  after death and reincarnation and the occasional admission that they missed  the pleasures of incarnate life, all suggested humans who no longer had  physical bodies yet longed to live and breathe once more."  Seth, who called  himself an "energy essence personality," sometimes requested his host Jane  Roberts to drink beer or wine for his gratification.  Joe Fisher tells of two  entities who seemed to want sex through their subjects.  He recalls the mental  exhaustion, emotional turmoil and muddled thinking that plagued him during his  time with Filippa - symptoms hinting of psychic vampirism.

 

     The Garuda Purana states that in cases of preta-possession (pretadosa),  "mysterious events do often occur ... many are the signs of ghosts."  Dr. John  Nevius, who studied possession extensively in China during the last century,  wrote, "The most striking characteristic ... is that the subject evidences  another personality, and the normal personality for the time being is  partially or wholly dormant.  The new personality presents traits of character  utterly different from those which really belong to the subject in his normal  state ... Many persons while 'demon-possessed' give evidence of knowledge  which cannot be accounted for in ordinary ways ... They sometimes converse in  foreign languages of which in their normal states they are entirely ignorant."   And Emanuel Swedenborg, the famous eighteenth century clairvoyant, warned:  "When spirits begin to speak with man, he must beware lest he believe in  anything; for they say almost anything; things are fabricated of them, and  they lie..."

 

     Pretas hover in homes where Vedic principles are not observed and haunt  persons who are unclean and unregulated.  By these standards, practically the  whole population of the western world is open to pretadosa, New Agers  included.  And what better way is there for a hungry ghost to seduce  starry-eyed New Agers than with pap "we're all one" philosophy?  Joe Fisher  takes point-blank aim at the whole fraud.  "When all is said and done, there  is no shortcut to Nirvana.  But in this narcissistic age of instant  gratification and swift solution, the great deception of channeling is that we  may glide effortlessly back to the Godhead.  All we have is pay our money,  take our seats and dream on as loving discarnates lead us to enlightenment.   Why, the Big E. is just around the corner and anyway - didn't you know? - we  are God."

 

     Many bogus gurus have succeeded in the West the same way. In fact, in the  late 1970's a world-famous Mayavadi yoga society was almost shaken apart when  a Sanskrit-quoting preta that claimed to be the group's deceased founder began  speaking through a senior staff member.  Though at last exposed, the spook  held sway over fifty people who deserted the organization rather than give up  their belief that the great yogi had returned to them.

 

     The way Back to Godhead is not the way of pretadosa.  Krsna declares in  Bhagavad-gita, bhutani yanti bhutejya: "those who worship ghosts and spirits  will take birth among such beings." By the chanting of the holy name of Krsna,  the evil influence of ghosts and sinful life is destroyed immediately  (bhutebhyo 'mhobhya eva ca sarvany etani bhagavan-nama-rupanukirtanat prayantu  sanksayam sadyo, from Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.8.27-28).  But as Srila Prabhupada  used to say, "This world is a place of cheaters and cheated."  People's  spiritual aspirations are channeled by their stubborn resistance to the holy  name of Krsna into the most inauspicious realms of consciousness.  Their  welcoming of hungry ghosts as spiritual guides is indicative of their  desperate devotion to lowly habits and fallacious ideas.

 

     The desire to understand the real self beyond the body and to link our  consciousness with the Supreme is an exalted aspiration, indeed the only goal  of human existence.  But successful completion of this goal requires that we  be purified of lust, which impels us to the sinful activities of meat-eating,  illicit sex, intoxication and gambling - activities that according to the  Garuda Purana are very attractive to ghosts.  Purification need not be  troublesome, however.  Krsna is the Supreme Pure, our dearmost friend and  indwelling guide, and He has made Himself available to the fallen souls of  this dark age of Kali-yuga by the simple process of hari-nama, His holy name.   We should obtain the holy name only from those devotees whose attentive  hearing and chanting of transcendental sound has carried them beyond the grip  of material desire.

 

     For all their seductive cant, the hungry ghosts and bogus gurus are dead  wrong.  We are not God, and our individual existence is not a figment of  cosmic imagination.  Life is not an illusion.  There is a purpose to  everything, and it is realized when we recover our eternal link to the Supreme  Person and His pure devotees.