Sunday 14 January 2018

Embracing the Paranormal




Everyone has had a paranormal experience at least once in their lives – of ‘knowing’ a loved one was in danger or dying, a presentiment of personal danger, a prescient dream foretelling an event to come, a bad feeling about a place later confirmed as the site of a tragedy, even ghost-sightings. There are billions of fans of astrology, for its knack of pin pointing personality traits and providing a context for present and future events. Ditto the I Ching and tarot.
   Despite all of that, when fiction or drama include the paranormal, there’s usually a shame-faced quality which ascribes such beliefs to the mad character, or pushes it into the realm of sci-fi. As if it were too embarrassing to validate a strand of life that exists in the (admittedly largely unspoken) hinterland of most people’s experience. 

   Why are we so reluctant? Or put it the other way round why is the paranormal so resistant to being dragged out into the light of day?

   One culprit is the present delusion that science has all the answers. Rather than following Hamlet’s rebuke that “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy,” we assume if there’s no explanation for what we experience then it must be bunkum. Which throws us into a double-bind of knowing and not knowing at the same time. Rather than regarding it as science’s failure to grapple with life in its entirety. 

   There is a push back from serious thinkers but only on the periphery.  “The rise of modern science has brought with it increasing acceptance among intellectual elites of a picture of reality that conflicts sharply both with everyday human experience and with beliefs widely shared among the world’s great cultures.”  Edward F Kelly: Beyond Physicalism.
“Theory is all very well, but it doesn’t prevent things from existing.” Freud.
  
 Another complication is that certain paranormal experiences emerge from an area of the mind that is perilously close to the deeper unconscious. Put succinctly by the Christian occultist (white witch) Dion Fortune. “Those strange byways of the mind the psychic shares with the psychotic.” Disentangling what is hallucination and what has a foot in reality is not always simple. Psychics have fewer of the defensive filters that most develop to keep the extraneous noise of the universe at bay, so do live closer to the unconscious. It is both a blessing and a curse, a talent and a burden. Knowing too much and madness where the boundaries of reality are blurred, do sometimes collide. 

   Astrology sits at the most rational end of the ‘paranormal’, as yet unexplained but not depending on intuition, hunches or visions. The cycling of the planets in our solar system as seen from earth, for reasons we don’t understand, dances to the same rhythm as events below. Direct causation is unlikely to be the reason. Synchronicity is a useful word but it only means they happen in parallel. Who knows why?

   This blog was supposed to be about why it is so difficult to put astrology into novels without sounding naff. ‘You’re Scorpio and I’m Aquarius so we’ll never get on’ - sounds sub-sub-chick-lit, even though it has more than a smidgeon of truth to it. I weaselled round it in my crime thriller BY the LIGHT of a LIE by concentrating on the astrology of countries and current events, which has an element of gravitas to it (as well as being my thing). And giving my fearless investigator heroine Tire the ability to understand people before she interviewed them, by having the amplified, in-depth personality reader of their full birth charts. But even I chickened out by making her hobby of astrology covert to protect her serious reputation. 

   As to battle-hardened Herk’s superstitions about birds, all I can say is that the ancient Greeks and Romans would have wholeheartedly agreed with him.  Tiresias, the blind prophet portrayed by Euripedes and Sophocles and later writers, had the gift of ornithomancy – prophecy by the birds. Another of my things but that’s for another day.  


Read my other blogs: on A Paradoxical Life of Writing: Do I Contradict Myself? Novelists Can Be Whistleblowers, Fictional characters who live on, Memory, Books Better Comforters than Parents, Choosing Names, How to cook up a successful novel - joke.  Subscribe above for regular updates on my blog.
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