by Michael Grosso:
One of the odd facts about our scientific world are the periodic intrusions of events completely at odds with familiar reality. We don’t expect alien light-beings to materialize in our living rooms or ghosts to physically attack us in haunted houses, but they do, and that’s not all.
One of the odd facts about our scientific world are the periodic intrusions of events completely at odds with familiar reality. We don’t expect alien light-beings to materialize in our living rooms or ghosts to physically attack us in haunted houses, but they do, and that’s not all.
Take, for example, the case of a man who apparently had super
psychokinetic powers, but was of fairly low moral stature, and in fact may have been a murderer. Fortunately, Dr.
Jeffrey Mishlove, who wrote the story of Ted Owens, treats his subject with the
nuanced approach that it demands. Mishlove knew Owens (d. 1987) for years and
had access to the data based on interviews, reportage, and media coverage. The PK Man is not a book for people with
a fundamentalist cast of mind; one has to be mentally agile to cover this
terrain.
Ted Owens named himself “the PK man” and part of the story
is the intensity with which he sought to be recognized for his powers. He also called himself the “UFO prophet”
and spoke of saving the world.
Throughout the narrative, Mishlove cites many examples of Owens’
predictions and psychokinetic abilities.
I want to stress the singularity of the Owens effects:
causing UFOs to appear (not just seeing them), causing weather events like
lightning and hurricanes, and directing them to occur at certain places. And last but not least, Owens seems to
have mentally influenced the outcome of professional football games, sometimes in
anger to get back at teams that scorned him. Mishlove lays out evidence for this high strangeness that is
hard to ignore.
Grant there is evidence, several ideas stand out. One is the
magnitude of the influence demonstrated. It’s one thing to accept evidence for PK
in dice-throwing experiments or for Nina Kulagina’s ability to physically move
small, light objects. But to be
told that someone can create killer storms and earthquakes, cause plane crashes,
and influence a professional football game by pure intention--that is something
else. And yet, on the basis of
Mishlove’s account, I’m forced to agree that there are people that can do
things that seem straight out of a super-hero comic book.
Ted Owens claimed to be in touch with space intelligences
and described his methods for communicating with them. We learn that Owens taught others to produce
powerful PK effects. The notion of
higher intelligences helps frame Owens’ story: in basic structure, it is
like the saint, prophet, or shaman who strives to contact the appropriate divinities—Owens,
modestly enough, likened himself to Moses. History of course is full of inspired
prophets, revolutionaries, and megalomaniacs. Owens’ reported PK performances do
seem to resemble the marvels of yogis, saints, and magicians. Lacking is moral
insight and concern for the welfare of others.
In all traditional belief-systems—Roman Catholic, Sioux
Indian, Tibetan Buddhist, Semite Sufi or Kabbala—we find people who possess
extraordinary powers. But this is no guarantee of enlightenment. The 11th
century Tibetan, Milarepa, began as a highly destructive sorcerer but only
later became an enlightened mystic. The life of Joseph of Copertino was full of super-PK and
super-ESP, but these were small compared to his heroic efforts to master his
lower self, so clear from his biography, Wings
of Ecstasy. Ted Owens lacked a traditional system that might have helped
him discipline his uncanny talents more constructively.
PK Man (p. 264) ends
with an assessment of the Owens phenomena by a Western-educated Nigerian who
was an expert in the Yoruba Ifa tradition. David Wilson (his Western name) reports that in his
experience he observed shamans successfully invoke both rain and lightning. In that and other African (and Hopi
Indian) traditions, belief in numerous forms of otherworldly life forms os
common. After observing a shaman stop a windstorm that was disrupting a
ceremony, Wilson asked the shaman how he did it. The reply: “You have to believe that you can.”
It so happens there is a thing in parapsychology called the “sheep-goat”
effect; the data show in a given psychic test, belief in psychic power
correlates statistically with success in psychic testing. Meanwhile, in the Catholic saint
tradition, levitator Joseph of Copertino would say the exact same thing; you
have to believe you can do it. (Have
faith, was his constant message). So, African shaman, Catholic saint, and
scientific parapsychology all agree.
Belief in the ‘impossible’ is conducive to performing the ‘impossible’. The interesting problem is what kind of
belief, confidence, and expectation makes for success. Surely, there’s more to it than simple
assent.
Mishlove concludes that, in light of all the evidence, an “intelligent
energy worked with Ted Owens throughout his unusual career as a demonstrator of
paranormal phenomena”. “Intelligent
energy” is a usefully minimalist term. The mystery remains as to the nature and
origins of this intelligent energy. Mishlove concludes by offering Owens as the symbolic “PK
person” who lives and breathes, latent in us all.
I came to the same conclusion from my research on Joseph of
Copertino—as we might from the entire range and spectrum of extraordinary
abilities. As human beings we are
bearers of mysterious powers that the history of our race has sporadically
revealed. That such powers exist at all and for what purpose is still shrouded
in obscurity—especially in our mainstream
consciousness.
I had a very strange experience a year ago or so.
ReplyDeleteMy wife and I had just left a store and were driving onto the highway when I noticed a car dealerships advertising balloons with long tethers (two balloons maybe 3 feet in diameter)and said to my wife, "I bet those balloons would like to fly free"
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Coinkydink?
It would be absolute bedlam if everyone had and could awaken this latent PK power. Like nuclear weapons we're not morally advanced enough to have this at our disposal.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteI agree that we are not morally advanced enough to possess these powers, which is why it seems nobody has control over them except rarely with some highly evolved individuals.
ReplyDeleteUnknown, it wasnt a coincidence, it was presentiment
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In terms of nuclear weapons please consider that qigong master Chunyi Lin reported to have stopped nuclear attacks - with the help of angels - through meditation in full lotus. So it works both ways - and these PK visions are also precognitive. And the qigong master calls this "embodying the Emptiness." So it is only due to the ego not getting in the way, that such miracles occur. The qigong master has worked with the Mayo Clinic - so he has corroboration of his abilities. http://springforestqigong.com
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