Personal EE/EHE Stories

 

PART 1

 

          Through the decades as a parapsychologist, as editor of the Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research, and as founder of the Exceptional Human Experience Network, Rhea A. White must have collected many thousands of exceptional experiences [EEs] and exceptional human experiences [EHEs].  In her essay, The Act of Sharing EHEs as a Catalyst, she describes how, whenever she went to conferences and so forth, she would take several examples of each of many kinds and would use them to encourage people to share their own stories.  This was from the very early 1990s and back, so she was one of the original   researchers instrumental in coaxing people to come out of the closet with their exceptional experiences.

          Although I have been studying these stories and their implications for many years now, only with the creation of this still quite new website [2007] and another web project yet to fully materialize, has it become possible to collect these in an organized way from others.  So for the moment, most of what I can offer you by way of example is some of my experiences and the few that have come to me through family and friends.  That can be useful, because I have a very strong feeling I'm quite average or normal as such things go.  In fact the results of a 2001 Gallup Poll indicated that better than one in two people answered they have had some sort of psychic [I read that as 'or spiritual'] experience.  So I'm one out of two, and chances are better than 50% that so are you!  

          That means that what you find here is representative of what most people will recognize as familiar, which is cause for hope, because until not that many years ago, no one talked about these, admitted to these.  Until very recently, even out-of-body and near-death experiences and various stripes of other spiritual experiences could be identified in some form or other in the PDR [Physician's Desk Reference] as indicative of psychological illness!  So we are all just barely crawling out from the ol' rock together to discover LOTS of us share these very normal and nurturing types of experiences that can help us not go crazy in spite of all the other stuff that is part of the destructive weirdness we do find in the world and that for some peculiar reason is not listed in the PDR!  Go figure.

          Quick, back to the Mocha-Cream-Lattes that keep us in touch with what feeds our souls and allows us to share a very REAL sense of what life is meant to be about, such as love and laughter and celebration despite the nightly-news drama and hand-wringing.  Who doesn't enjoy hearing people's stories, especially of a spiritual or paranormal  nature?  Okay there are a few, but deep-deep down, out of a mutual recognition of that Something More that is innate to what it means to be Human, by far most of us find something quite positive and hopeful and nurturing in the give and take of the story telling.

          But if you think about it, the one person specific stories have any real relevance for is the experiencer.  I picked ones easy to share with others on the basis of how truly "ordinary" they are, meaning, these are examples many of you will recognize or identify with, because you have yourselves had such experiences or you are aware of others' similar occurrences.   

          The kinds of questions you may find helpful to ask yourself about your experiences or to look into regarding others' EEs/EHEs have to do with what if any significant differences they have made in the life of the experiencer.  Looking back over my life and these incidents, which were always deeply meaningful but rarely dramatic, I can tell you their cumulative effect has been like the process of a slow-to-boil pot.  At first I simply marveled at them; they were few and far between, and at one point, I pondered the possibility I was experiencing something like a Whitman's sampler of chocolates, but only one at a time and god-knows-how-long between these always out-of-the-blue gifts.  

          This started in my memory with a recurring nightmare that eventually resulted in a lucid dream that broke the nightmare pattern, then an out-of-body experience that certainly got my attention and left me with the clear awareness we are not these bodies, then it was a series of quite other things over decades, and each one was unique to me, except for a few more forays into OBEs or near-OBEs.  It felt kind of like a surprise lollipop or a friendly nudge now and then that life is MORE than the earthbound dramas of angst and worse that seemed to press like a thick cloud over my growing-up years and on into adulthood, a familiar litany to many of my contemporaries -- not that it's so different [maybe worse!], now -- the ever looming threat of nuclear annihilation, the fact that people who mostly didn't even know each other could harbor hatred and violent animosity over something like skin color, the Viet Nam War, .. you get the idea.  Not to mention environmental concerns that really began to hold their own center stage from the '60s forward.  Nearly everyone has a pet list like this to remind them why life here can be so pathetic.  

          One of the most empowering, stabilizing, helpful things we can learn from these spiritual experiences, contrary to the overwhelming and relentless message of public opinion, is that life is really GOOD, speaking of one of the best kept secrets!  In A Book of Angels, Sophy Burnham tells a provocative yet universal story, quite an adventure, in which she nearly lost her life in a skiing mishap.  She says, 

          ... I fell, and found myself sliding on my back head first, downhill.  When you fall skiing, you're supposed to twist your skis around to the downhill side, dig into the snow, and brake to a stop.  No matter how I tried, I could not make that twist.  The ground was hard and somewhat pebbly.  It acted like a billion ball bearings, carrying me along.  I remember thinking it was ludicrous, sledding on my back, headfirst, battered against small stones.  I was not afraid, though I knew I was off the piste [ski tracks in Europe].  After two or three attempts, however, to flip my skis, I decided it didn't matter, that soon I would hit a tree -- no, I meant a rock -- and stop.

          For my attention was captured by the sky.  The sky!  It wasn't just blue sky.  It radiated blue, green, yellow, pink; and my heart was wrenched out of my body with rapture as if it recognized something -- Home!  I was barreling downhill at thirty or forth miles an hour, bumping over stones, yet filled with joy.  I saw the perfection of all things, including this mad, headfirst slide.  What did it matter if I died right then?  I thought irrationally.  That, too, was welcome.  Wondrous.

 

Then her certain death was brought to an abrupt halt through the intervention of an angel, and with quite a few witnesses -- one of the most dramatic such encounters I've come across.

 

 

See "Personal EE/EHE Stories, PART 2"

 

 

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