Field Guide to the Spirit World: The Science of Angel Power, Discarnate Entities, and Demonic Possession
Autor Susan B. Martinez Ph.D. Cuvânt înainte de Whitley Strieberen Limba Engleză Paperback – mai 2019
A comprehensive examination of the many ways the spirit world affects the material plane and our minds
We are spirits housed in a body, and just as houses can be haunted, so can people. When the living succumb to dissociative states of consciousness, they become a magnet for lost but clinging spirits. Known as jinn, dybbuk, daemon, wuqabi, or simply the undead, they hover unseen on the earth plane, ready to inhabit the most suitable body available.
Documenting the life of wandering spirits and their impact on vulnerable human targets, Susan Martinez offers a radical departure from the standard psychological explanations for a host of pathological behaviors--including multiple personality, autism, epilepsy, migraines, obsessive compulsive disorder, depression, schizophrenia, anxiety, PTSD, self-destructive urges, and strange outbursts--and reveals that hallucinations are often true impressions of spirit input. Martinez explains how mental health comes down to the delicate balance between self-control and spirit-control. When trauma triggers an escape response, the soul takes flight, leaving the mind susceptible to possession by discarnate entities. However, the spirit world can also bestow gifts upon those whose psyches are open, such as in the case of mediums, shamans, people who communicate with angels, and many of the world’s creative geniuses.
Martinez presents “overshadowing” by spirits as a universal, cross-cultural phenomenon, documenting modern and traditional accounts as well as corroborating indigenous beliefs. She examines soul decay, soul travel both before and after death, as well as how knowledge of the spirit world can offer positive treatments for disorders like schizophrenia and autism. Providing a detailed guide to the spirit world and its inhabitants, the author offers checklists of symptoms of “overshadowing,” methods from the world’s top exorcists, and instructions on how to free spirits so they can continue their journey into the beyond--all the tools necessary to forearm us against soul snatchers and other enemies of the Light.
We are spirits housed in a body, and just as houses can be haunted, so can people. When the living succumb to dissociative states of consciousness, they become a magnet for lost but clinging spirits. Known as jinn, dybbuk, daemon, wuqabi, or simply the undead, they hover unseen on the earth plane, ready to inhabit the most suitable body available.
Documenting the life of wandering spirits and their impact on vulnerable human targets, Susan Martinez offers a radical departure from the standard psychological explanations for a host of pathological behaviors--including multiple personality, autism, epilepsy, migraines, obsessive compulsive disorder, depression, schizophrenia, anxiety, PTSD, self-destructive urges, and strange outbursts--and reveals that hallucinations are often true impressions of spirit input. Martinez explains how mental health comes down to the delicate balance between self-control and spirit-control. When trauma triggers an escape response, the soul takes flight, leaving the mind susceptible to possession by discarnate entities. However, the spirit world can also bestow gifts upon those whose psyches are open, such as in the case of mediums, shamans, people who communicate with angels, and many of the world’s creative geniuses.
Martinez presents “overshadowing” by spirits as a universal, cross-cultural phenomenon, documenting modern and traditional accounts as well as corroborating indigenous beliefs. She examines soul decay, soul travel both before and after death, as well as how knowledge of the spirit world can offer positive treatments for disorders like schizophrenia and autism. Providing a detailed guide to the spirit world and its inhabitants, the author offers checklists of symptoms of “overshadowing,” methods from the world’s top exorcists, and instructions on how to free spirits so they can continue their journey into the beyond--all the tools necessary to forearm us against soul snatchers and other enemies of the Light.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781591433323
ISBN-10: 1591433320
Pagini: 304
Ilustrații: 20 b&w illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Colecția Bear & Company
ISBN-10: 1591433320
Pagini: 304
Ilustrații: 20 b&w illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Colecția Bear & Company
Notă biografică
Susan B. Martinez, Ph.D., is a writer, linguist, teacher, and paranormal researcher with a doctorate in anthropology from Columbia University. The author of several books, including Time of the Quickening, she lives in Clayton, Georgia.
Extras
Chapter 1
Spirit at Large
As you, dear reader, may well know, the Great Age of Spiritualism hit the ground running in America in the year 1848. In very little time, distinguished personalities, including Abraham Lincoln, were taking active interest in mediumistic circles. Sweeping the country like brushfire, the movement, nonetheless, drew as many detractors as proponents. John Dods, for one, thought he could explain the apparent manifestation of spirits in a purely materialist way. His book The Philosophy of Electrical Psychology met with great success, especially in the scientific community.
In 1851, Daniel Webster, Sam Houston, and Henry Clay personally invited Mr. Dods to the capital to lecture on his ideas. Spirits, Dods explained in his talk, were not a reality; what we mistook for spirits were merely the body’s electrical emanations, produced for the most part by the operations of the brain. A few years later, though, Dods was disturbed by an unnerving experience, an apparition. Four spirits appeared before him, four relatives who were living in Norfolk, Virginia. They told him they had just passed into the spirit world, dead of yellow fever. When Dods later confirmed the fact, his unbelief was shaken. Over the next six months John Dods struggled with his unsettling experience, trying to convince himself that the vision had been some sort of psychological quirk. By early 1856 he gave up the fight and joined the ranks of the spiritualists, publicly embracing the immortality of the soul.
The question is sometimes asked: Why were there so many manifestations and full-form apparitions in mid-nineteenth century compared to today? One explanation, drawing on the Oahspe bible, lies in the matter of cyclic dawns or “dan’has.” These are times of light, ushering in a new era that then lasts for some three thousand years. “Kosmon” is the name of the present era that began in 1848. The light of heaven is revealed at the start of each new dawn:
Jehovih gave this sign to man on earth; which is to say: In the beginning of the light of dan’ha, the spirits of the newly dead shall have power to take upon themselves the semblance of corporeal [physical] bodies, and appear and talk face to face with mortals. Every three thousand years Jehovih gave this sign on earth.
Oahspe, Book of Jehovih 7:4
Like Dods, his contemporary Dr. John Ballou Newbrough (1828-1891) went from skeptic to believer. In 1874 he published a small booklet entitled Spiritalis. The tract was in a Q and A format in which he posed questions to his spirit teachers. At one point (Question # 19) he inquired about electricity (a la Dods) and magnetism: the favored theory then currently held was that paranormal phenomena devolved on a living magnetism or electricity belonging to the body of the medium; the magnetizer’s art was thought to depend on withdrawing that “electricity from the system.”
However the jolting answer to Newbrough’s Question # 19 was that “dead magnetism cannot impart intelligence” and electricity is inanimate--“it grows not.” Moreover Newbrough was told that “the power that springs from the living body is spirit”; only spirit could “receive and impart knowledge.”
I think it follows that “energy,” like electricity, is an inadequate solution to such manifestations as show intelligence. Yet, one hundred and fifty years have done nothing to settle the debate. Even today’s parapsychologists--who should know better--tell us that “flying objects in a poltergeist situation, some of them huge and following elaborate patterns--are being thrown about by ‘psychic energy’ emanating from the ‘unconscious’ . . . Most incredible,” add Hunt and McMahon (116), “is the continued insistence of these skeptics that such amazing physical phenomena are caused by the subconscious release of a mental force innate within themselves.” Hauntings, it is still stubbornly argued, are not caused by any intelligence, but by energy which psychic-sensitives merely “interpret” as personalities. No, ghosts are not ghosts, but “some kind of psychic energy [italics mine] that has been imprinted on the atmosphere and can be picked up by certain people” (Underwood, 219). Just how this splendid magic is wrought is never explained. Nor are we given the slightest clue how “an impersonal bundle of violent psychic energy [italics mine]” could be “the fallout from an emotional explosion which may have occurred centuries ago” (Spraggett, 164). If this were any other field of study, these theorists would be drummed out for wild speculation and gross incompetence.
Ghostly entities, in fact, exhibit not only intelligence but also cunning--as well as precise timing, showing up, as they so often do, on the anniversary of some pivotal event. How could we possibly call this an “impersonal” energy? I’ll tell you how: twaddle that it is, it is nonetheless the materialist’s last redoubt against the actual reality of ghosts. Ghost and earth-bound entities (EB for short) are inhabitants of neither heaven nor earth. Neither here nor there, they wander in darkness. It is not that unusual for money matters to hold a spirit back. Take a recent American case: A man dies. His wife cannot find his life insurance policy. The husband comes in a dream, revealing that the papers are in a strongbox in the attic. And that is just where she finds them. Sometimes it is only the deceased who can reveal a hiding place. After the death of Dante, it was realized that the thirteenth canto of his “Paradiso” was missing. Soon, the dead poet appeared to his son Pietro Alighieri and told him to remove a certain panel near the window of the room in which the poem was written. And there the missing canto was found, mildewed but legible. (Olcott, 99-100).
Spirit at Large
As you, dear reader, may well know, the Great Age of Spiritualism hit the ground running in America in the year 1848. In very little time, distinguished personalities, including Abraham Lincoln, were taking active interest in mediumistic circles. Sweeping the country like brushfire, the movement, nonetheless, drew as many detractors as proponents. John Dods, for one, thought he could explain the apparent manifestation of spirits in a purely materialist way. His book The Philosophy of Electrical Psychology met with great success, especially in the scientific community.
In 1851, Daniel Webster, Sam Houston, and Henry Clay personally invited Mr. Dods to the capital to lecture on his ideas. Spirits, Dods explained in his talk, were not a reality; what we mistook for spirits were merely the body’s electrical emanations, produced for the most part by the operations of the brain. A few years later, though, Dods was disturbed by an unnerving experience, an apparition. Four spirits appeared before him, four relatives who were living in Norfolk, Virginia. They told him they had just passed into the spirit world, dead of yellow fever. When Dods later confirmed the fact, his unbelief was shaken. Over the next six months John Dods struggled with his unsettling experience, trying to convince himself that the vision had been some sort of psychological quirk. By early 1856 he gave up the fight and joined the ranks of the spiritualists, publicly embracing the immortality of the soul.
The question is sometimes asked: Why were there so many manifestations and full-form apparitions in mid-nineteenth century compared to today? One explanation, drawing on the Oahspe bible, lies in the matter of cyclic dawns or “dan’has.” These are times of light, ushering in a new era that then lasts for some three thousand years. “Kosmon” is the name of the present era that began in 1848. The light of heaven is revealed at the start of each new dawn:
Jehovih gave this sign to man on earth; which is to say: In the beginning of the light of dan’ha, the spirits of the newly dead shall have power to take upon themselves the semblance of corporeal [physical] bodies, and appear and talk face to face with mortals. Every three thousand years Jehovih gave this sign on earth.
Oahspe, Book of Jehovih 7:4
Like Dods, his contemporary Dr. John Ballou Newbrough (1828-1891) went from skeptic to believer. In 1874 he published a small booklet entitled Spiritalis. The tract was in a Q and A format in which he posed questions to his spirit teachers. At one point (Question # 19) he inquired about electricity (a la Dods) and magnetism: the favored theory then currently held was that paranormal phenomena devolved on a living magnetism or electricity belonging to the body of the medium; the magnetizer’s art was thought to depend on withdrawing that “electricity from the system.”
However the jolting answer to Newbrough’s Question # 19 was that “dead magnetism cannot impart intelligence” and electricity is inanimate--“it grows not.” Moreover Newbrough was told that “the power that springs from the living body is spirit”; only spirit could “receive and impart knowledge.”
I think it follows that “energy,” like electricity, is an inadequate solution to such manifestations as show intelligence. Yet, one hundred and fifty years have done nothing to settle the debate. Even today’s parapsychologists--who should know better--tell us that “flying objects in a poltergeist situation, some of them huge and following elaborate patterns--are being thrown about by ‘psychic energy’ emanating from the ‘unconscious’ . . . Most incredible,” add Hunt and McMahon (116), “is the continued insistence of these skeptics that such amazing physical phenomena are caused by the subconscious release of a mental force innate within themselves.” Hauntings, it is still stubbornly argued, are not caused by any intelligence, but by energy which psychic-sensitives merely “interpret” as personalities. No, ghosts are not ghosts, but “some kind of psychic energy [italics mine] that has been imprinted on the atmosphere and can be picked up by certain people” (Underwood, 219). Just how this splendid magic is wrought is never explained. Nor are we given the slightest clue how “an impersonal bundle of violent psychic energy [italics mine]” could be “the fallout from an emotional explosion which may have occurred centuries ago” (Spraggett, 164). If this were any other field of study, these theorists would be drummed out for wild speculation and gross incompetence.
Ghostly entities, in fact, exhibit not only intelligence but also cunning--as well as precise timing, showing up, as they so often do, on the anniversary of some pivotal event. How could we possibly call this an “impersonal” energy? I’ll tell you how: twaddle that it is, it is nonetheless the materialist’s last redoubt against the actual reality of ghosts. Ghost and earth-bound entities (EB for short) are inhabitants of neither heaven nor earth. Neither here nor there, they wander in darkness. It is not that unusual for money matters to hold a spirit back. Take a recent American case: A man dies. His wife cannot find his life insurance policy. The husband comes in a dream, revealing that the papers are in a strongbox in the attic. And that is just where she finds them. Sometimes it is only the deceased who can reveal a hiding place. After the death of Dante, it was realized that the thirteenth canto of his “Paradiso” was missing. Soon, the dead poet appeared to his son Pietro Alighieri and told him to remove a certain panel near the window of the room in which the poem was written. And there the missing canto was found, mildewed but legible. (Olcott, 99-100).
Cuprins
Foreword by Whitley Strieber
INTRODUCTION
The Final Bound
1 Spirit at Large
2 Flight of the Soul
3 The Black Dog Unleashed
4 Soul Murder
5 “I Shall Walk the Sky”
6 The Unseen Guest
7 Countless Mental Vagaries
8 The Overshadowing
9 Possession
10 The Reincarnation Hoax
11 Freeing the Ghost
APPENDIX A
Coprolalia
APPENDIX B
Exposure to Death
APPENDIX C
Trauma
Bibliography
Index
INTRODUCTION
The Final Bound
1 Spirit at Large
2 Flight of the Soul
3 The Black Dog Unleashed
4 Soul Murder
5 “I Shall Walk the Sky”
6 The Unseen Guest
7 Countless Mental Vagaries
8 The Overshadowing
9 Possession
10 The Reincarnation Hoax
11 Freeing the Ghost
APPENDIX A
Coprolalia
APPENDIX B
Exposure to Death
APPENDIX C
Trauma
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
“The depth and quality of research exemplified by Susan B. Martinez, Ph.D., in her previous books are evident again in Field Guide to the Spirit World. The spirit world is all around us all the time, and this very helpful book provides a key to the spiritual world and a guide to working with it for the treatment of mental disorders caused by ‘overshadowing.’ As Whitley Strieber says in his foreword, ‘Step out of the prison of materialism in order to see such experiences in ways that might deepen our understanding of ourselves and the amazing universe’--as Strieber demonstrates when he talks about the loss of his wife, Anne, and how that opened his spiritual vision.”
“From all accounts, the world beyond the veil is a labyrinth chock-full of entities both good and ill. With her new book Field Guide to the Spirit World: The Science of Angel Power, Discarnate Entities, and Demonic Possession, Susan B. Martinez has contributed an important work that helps to demystify the other side. It warrants an important place on your Fortean bookshelf and, more importantly, in your hands as you read and learn.”
"When I was initiated into the world of spiritualism, I was taught that protection was the most important thing when contacting disembodied spirits. I was also told that a majority of people in mental institutions might be there because they are “oppressed by negative entities." Now Susan Martinez, who has a doctorate in anthropology from Columbia University, has written this book about encounters in the spirit world that run the whole gamut from selfless helpers to those trapped by their attachment to the material world I am grateful to Susan Martinez for beginning the dialogue in such a knowledgeable and caring way."
"Martinez does not simply take a surface tour of so-called supernatural, but instead she delves deeply into each topic, offering support for the facts with numerous real-life examples, all of which are supported by experts she quotes. This is a text book of the supernatural, overflowing with a daunting amount of information. The most notable aspect of Field Guide to the Spirit Word is its extensive documentation. This book deserves serious consideration to those interested in baffling phenomenon."
“From all accounts, the world beyond the veil is a labyrinth chock-full of entities both good and ill. With her new book Field Guide to the Spirit World: The Science of Angel Power, Discarnate Entities, and Demonic Possession, Susan B. Martinez has contributed an important work that helps to demystify the other side. It warrants an important place on your Fortean bookshelf and, more importantly, in your hands as you read and learn.”
"When I was initiated into the world of spiritualism, I was taught that protection was the most important thing when contacting disembodied spirits. I was also told that a majority of people in mental institutions might be there because they are “oppressed by negative entities." Now Susan Martinez, who has a doctorate in anthropology from Columbia University, has written this book about encounters in the spirit world that run the whole gamut from selfless helpers to those trapped by their attachment to the material world I am grateful to Susan Martinez for beginning the dialogue in such a knowledgeable and caring way."
"Martinez does not simply take a surface tour of so-called supernatural, but instead she delves deeply into each topic, offering support for the facts with numerous real-life examples, all of which are supported by experts she quotes. This is a text book of the supernatural, overflowing with a daunting amount of information. The most notable aspect of Field Guide to the Spirit Word is its extensive documentation. This book deserves serious consideration to those interested in baffling phenomenon."
Descriere
A comprehensive examination of the many ways the spirit world affects the material plane and our minds.