TYPES OF PSYCHIC ATTACK
SIGNS OF PSYCHIC ATTACK
IF
we look at the universe around us we cannot fail to realise that there
must be some overruling plan co-ordinating
its infinite complexity. If we take into our hands and examine minutely
any living thing, however simple, equally must we realise that the
ordered diversity of its parts is built up on a determining framework.
Science has sought in vain for this organising principle; it will never
find it on the physical plane, for it is not physical. It is not the
inherent nature of
atoms which causes them to arrange themselves in the
complex patterns of living tissues. The driving forces of the universe,
the framework upon which it is built up in all its parts, belong to
another phase of manifestation than our physical plane, having other
dimensions than the three to which we are habituated, and perceived by
other modes of consciousness than those to which we are accustomed.
We live in the midst of invisible forces whose effects alone we
perceive. We move among invisible forms whose actions we very often do
not perceive at all, though we may be profoundly affected by them.
In this mind-side of nature, invisible to our senses, intangible to our
instruments of precision, many things can happen that are not without
their echo on the physical plane. There are beings that live in this
invisible world as fish live in the sea. There are men and women with
trained minds, or special aptitudes, who can enter into this invisible
world as a diver descends to the ocean-bed. There are also times when,
as happens to a land when the sea-dykes break, the invisible forces flow
in upon us and swamp our lives.
Normally this does not occur. We are protected by our very
incapacity to perceive these invisible forces. There are four
conditions, however, in which the veil may be rent and we may meet the
Unseen. We may find ourselves in a place where these forces are
concentrated. We may meet people who are handling these forces. We may
ourselves go out to meet the Unseen, led by our interest in it, and get
out of our depth before we know where we are; or we may fall victim to
certain pathological conditions which rend the veil.
The Threshold of the Unseen is a treacherous coast on which to bathe.
There are potholes and currents and quicksands. The strong swimmer, who
knows
ħhe coast, may venture in comparative safety. The non-swimmer, who takes counsel of nothing but his own
impulses, may pay for his temerity with his life. But we must not make
the mistake of thinking that these invisible forces are necessarily evil
and inimical to humanity. They are no more inimical in themselves than
are water or fire, but they are potent. If we run counter to them, the
result is disastrous for us, for we have broken a natural law; but they
are not out to attack us, any more than we are out to attack them. We
must face the fact, however, that men and women with knowledge of these
things, have, both in the past and in the present, used that knowledge
unscrupulously, and that we may find our selves involved in the results
of their actions. It may safely be said that the Unseen is only evil and
inimical to humanity when it has been corrupted and perverted by the
activities of these unscrupulous men and women, whom initiates call
adepts of the Left-hand Path.
We must consider the outward and visible signs of psychic attack before
we are in a position to analyse the nature of such attacks and indicate
their source of origin. It is a fundamental rule that diagnosis must
precede treatment. There are many different kinds of psychic attacks,
and the methods that will dispose of one will be ineffectual against
another.
The commonest form of psychic attack is that which proceeds from the
ignorant or malignant mind of our fellow human beings. We say ignorant
as well as malignant, for all attacks are not deliberately motived; the
injury may be as accidental as that inflicted by a skidding car. This
must always be borne in mind, and we should not impute malice or
wickedness as a matter of course when we feel we are being victimised.
Our persecutor may himself be a victim. We should not accuse a man of
malice if we had linked hands with him and he had stepped on a live
rail. Nevertheless, we should receive at his hands a severe shock. So it
may be with many an occult attack. The person from whom it emanates may
not have originated it. Therefore we should never respond to attack by
attack, thus bringing ourselves down to the moral level of our
attackers, but rely upon more humane methods, which are, in reality,
equally effectual and far less dangerous to handle.
People also come into touch with the Unseen through the influence of
places. Someone who is not actually psychic, but who is sufficiently
sensitive to perceive the invisible forces subconsciously, may go to a
place where they are concentrated at a high tension. Normally, although
we move in the midst of these forces (for they sustain our universe), we
are oblivious of them. Where they are concentrated, however, unless we
are very dense-minded, we begin to be dimly conscious of something that
is affecting us and stirring our subliminal self.
It may happen that the barrier between consciousness and
subconsciousness is dense in some people, and they are never able
clearly to realise what is going on. They merely have the sense of
oppression and general malaise, which lifts when they go away to another
place. Consequently, the condition may never be detected, and lead to
years of ill-health and misery.
More commonly, however, if there is a definite psychic
attack of sufficient force to make itself noticeable at all, there will
soon begin to appear characteristic dreams. These may include a sense of
weight upon the chest, as if someone were kneeling on the sleeper. If
the sense of weight is present, it is certain that the attack emanates
locally, for the weight is due to the concentration of etheric substance
or ectoplasm, and is sufficiently tangible to press down the scale of a
balance when it is possible to capture it for measurement. A great deal
of research has been done with materialising mediums upon the nature of
this tangible subtle substance, and the reader is referred to the books
on the experiments conducted by Crawford with the Goligher Circle at
Belfast, and in Paris with Eva C. by other experimenters, for further
information and evidence on this subject. It may be noted that Crawford
eventually committed suicide for no known reason.
A sense of fear and oppression is very characteristic of.
occult attack, and one of the surest signs that herald it.
It is
extremely rare for an attack to make itself manifest out of the blue, as
it were. We are not in our normal state of mind, body and circumstance,
and then find ourselves suddenly in the midst of an invisible battle. An
approaching occult influence casts its shadow on consciousness before it
makes itself apparent to the non-psychic. The reason for this is that we
perceive subconsciously before we realise consciously, and a line of
creeping shade indicates the penetrating of the subconscious censor from
below upwards.
As the attack progresses, nervous exhaustion becomes increasingly
marked, and there may, under certain conditions, which we will consider
later, be such wasting of the tissues that the victim is reduced to a
mere bloodless shell of skin and bones, lying on the bed, too weak to
move. And yet no definite disease can be demonstrated.
Such a case is an extreme example, proceeding unchecked to its logical
conclusion. Other issues are possible, however. The resistance may be
good, in which case the attack is unable to gain a foothold on the
physical plane, and is limited to that borderland between matter and
mind which we perceive upon the threshold of sleep. This is a very
terrible experience, for the victim is afraid to sleep and cannot keep
awake indefinitely. Worn out by fear and lack of sleep, mental breakdown
soon supervenes.
Nervous exhaustion and mental breakdown are the commoner results of
astral attack among white people, for in Europe at any rate it is not often that an attacker is able to
bring the attack to a conclusion in the death of the victim. There are,
however, records of cases where the victim has died of pure fright.
Kipling's terrible story,
The End of the Passage,
gives an account of such an occurrence.
But in addition to the purely subjective phenomena, there will also be
objective ones if the attack has any degree of concentration. The
phenomenon of repercussion is well known, the phenomenon wherein that
which befalls the subtle body is reflected in the dense body, so that
after an astral skirmish during sleep, bruises are found on the physical
body, sometimes bruises of a definite pattern. I have seen the print of
a goat's hoof and the ace of clubs marked upon the skin as well-defined
bruises, passing from blue to yellow and dying away in the course of a
few days, as bruises will.
Evil odours are another manifestation of an astral attack. The
characteristic smell is of decomposing flesh, and it comes and goes
capriciously; but while it is manifesting, there is no doubt whatever
about it, and anyone who is present can smell it, whether they are
psychic or not. I have also known a frightful stench of drains arise
when a ritual belonging to the Element of Earth was being incorrectly
performed.
Another curious phenomenon is the precipitation of slime. I have not
actually seen this myself, but I have first-hand information upon good
authority of one such case. The marks are sometimes as if an army of
slugs had been marching in ordered formation; sometimes there is a broad
smear of slime, and at others, distinct footprints, often of gigantic
size. In the case to which I refer, of which I heard from an
eye-witness, the marks were like the foot prints of an elephant,
enormous tracks on the floor of the drawing-room of a bungalow situated
near the sea.
Odd footprints appearing from nowhere and leading nowhere, are sometimes
observed when there is snow about. I have seen them on two occasions on
the roof of an out building. They alighted upon the edge of it, as if
the walker had stepped off an aeroplane, went straight across, and ended
abruptly at the wall of the main building upon which the lean-to abuts.
They did not return. A single line of footprints came from nowhere and
ended in a lofty wall.
A
similar happening took place on a very extensive scale in Devon some
fifty years ago, and an account of it is to be found in that very
curious book,
Oddities,
by Commander Gould. In this case, however, the prints were not human,
but
were those of what was apparently the hoof of a donkey,
proceeding in a single line and going straight through walls and over
roofs and covering the best part of a couple of hundred miles in a single
night on both sides of an unbridged estuary. Those who want confirmatory
evidence would do well to consult Commander Gould's book, where the
incident is given in detail.
There is a curious phenomenon known to occultists as the astral bell; Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle makes use of it in one of his Sherlock Holmes stories.
This sound varies from a dear, bell-like note to a faint click. I have
often heard it resemble the sound made by striking a cracked wine-glass
with a knife-blade. It commonly announces the advent of an entity that is
barely able to manifest, and need not necessarily be a herald of evil at all. It may simply be a
knock on the door of the physical world to attract the attention of the
inhabitants to the presence of one who stands without and would speak with
them. If, however, it occurs in the presence of other symptoms of an
astral attack, it would give strong evidence in confirmation of the
diagnosis.
Inexplicable outbreaks of fire are also sometimes seen in
this connection. These indicate that elemental forces, not human, are at
work. Poltergeist phenomena also occur, in which objects are flung about,
bells rung and other noisy manifestations take place. Of course there may
be multiplicity of phenomena, more than one type appearing in the same
case.
Needless to say, the possibility of some natural, material explanation
must never be ignored, even in cases where the supernatural element
appears most obvious. It should always be diligently sought in every
possible direction before any supernormal hypothesis is considered worthy
of attention. But on the other hand, we should not be so wedded to
materialistic theories that we refuse to take a psychic theory as a
working hypothesis if it shows any possibility of being fruitful. After
all, the proof of the pudding is in the eating, and if, working on an
occult hypothesis, we are able to clear up a case which has resisted all
other methods of handling, we have pretty good evidence in support of our
contention.
We
must also bear in mind that the element of deliberate fraud may enter into
the most unexpected places. I have seen a drug addict successfully pass
himself off for a considerable length of time as the victim of an occult
attack. A recent writer in the
British Medical Journal
declared that whenever he came across a case of
bell-ringing, knocks, the dripping of water and oil from ceilings, and
other untoward happenings, he always looked for the hysterical
maidservant. Occultists would be very well advised to do likewise before
they begin to worry about the Devil. But on the other hand, the wise man,
whether occultist or scientist, will not insist upon the hysterical
maidservant unless he can catch her red-handed, as he surely will do
sooner or later if she is the guilty party.
Forged bank-notes would never gain currency unless there were such a thing
as genuine bank-notes. It would never occur to anyone to produce
fraudulent psychic phenomena unless there had been some genuine psychic
phenomena to act as a pattern for the forgery.
The
acceptance of an explanation should rest upon the weight of evidence in
its favour, not upon one's dislike of its alternatives. I plead that the
possibility of a non- material explanation should be investigated in cases
where the materialistic hypothesis does not yield results. Not in diseases
of the brain and nervous system, nor of the ductless glands, nor in
repression of the natural instincts, shall we find the explanation in all
cases wherein the mind is afflicted. There is more to man than mind and
body. We shall never find the clue to the riddle of life until we realise
that man is a spiritual being and that mind and body are the garments of
his manifestation.
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