DESCRIPTION
PSYCHIC EXPERIENCES AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
ASSOCIATED CLINICAL PROBLEMS
TREATMENT
CASE EXAMPLE

DESCRIPTION
Psychic experiences are occurrences that a person considers paranormal, such as:

  • clairvoyance (visions of past, future, or remote events)
  • out-of-the-body experiences
  • telepathy
  • poltergeist phenomena such as physical disturbances in a house with no apparent physical cause
  • precognitive dreams that provide formerly unknown information

Synchronistic events are often a feature of psychic experiences. Psychic experiences do occur in other forms of spiritual emergency, such as shamanic crises, kundalini, and mystical experiences, but in this type of spiritual emergency, psychic experiences are the central feature of the person's experience.

Psychic experiences are also associated with many spiritual paths and altered experiences of consciousness. In yoga and Buddhism, such experiences are referred to as siddhis. The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali and the Buddhist Abhidhamma include specific practices that are purported to lead to the development of psychic abilities, but practitioners are taught that these are distractions from the true path of spiritual development.

While the scientific status of psychic experiences is still the subject of much debate, there is no question that people have such experiences. Gallup polls show that a majority of the population have extrasensory experiences, and the percentage is increasing (from 58% in 1973 to 67% in 1986). Both sensationalism (in tabloid media) and commercialism (fee-based psychic hot lines) is associated with this topic, but extrasensory perception has also been the subject of scientific research for 100 years, and continues to this day. (see Rhine Center for history)

PSYCHIC EXPERIENCES AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
Psychic experiences are reported by people in psychotic and dissociative experiences. Thus differential diagnosis is a key issue. The therapist needs to know about the variety of ways that psychic phenomena can manifest and how people cope with them.

Some types are well known such as telepathy and clairvoyance. Others are just now getting attention in the healthcare field, such as Medical Intuition: The ability to perceive the subtle energy around another individual. In fact this psychic ability is taught in workshops by therapists like Caroline M. Myss, PhD.

Jerome Frank, PhD, former Professor of Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins and considered one of the most influential theorists about psychotherapy, also considers psychic abilities to play a role in psychotherapy:

My own hunch, which I mention with some trepidation, is that the most gifted therapists may have telepathic, clairvoyant, or other parapsychological abilities. . .They may, in addition, possess something. . .that can only be termed "healing power." Any researcher who attempts to study such phenomena risks his reputation as a reliable scientist, so their pursuit can be recommended only to the most intrepid. The rewards, however, might be great. (Persuasion and Healing: A Comparative Study of Psychotherapy)

To acquaint yourself with the range of psychic experiences reported by people, visit the About.com story archives, which has dozens of first person accounts of "normal" people's paranormal experiences.

ASSOCIATED CLINICAL PROBLEMS
Fear that "I'm going crazy" and confusion are common reactions to spontaneous psychic experiences. Charles T. Tart, PhD. has described how people can become quite fearful upon the awakening of their intuitive abilities. People also report feeling isolated from others because they feel they cannot talk about these experiences with their friends and family.

TREATMENT
Many people who have had psychic experiences are able to integrate them without any professional help. But some do seek out a therapist for assistance in understanding such experiences and coping with their reactions to them. Arthur Hastings, PhD [1] suggests that,

The focus of this counseling, given therapeutic purposes, rather than research purposes only, should be to assist the person to a experience of balance, integration, and judgment relating to apparent or genuine parapsychological experience (p. 143).

He describes 7 steps in working with someone who has had a disturbing psychic experience:

  1. Ask the person to describe the experience or events
  2. Listen fully and carefully, without judging
  3. Reassure the person that the experience is not "crazy" or "insane" (if this is appropriate)
  4. Identify or label the type of event
  5. Give information about what is known about this type of event
  6. Where possible, develop reality tests to discover if the event is genuine or if there are non-psychic alternative explanations
  7. Address the psychological reactions that result from the experience

This approach is very congruent with the treatment approach outlined in Lesson 5, particularly the therapist's role in normalizing spiritual emergency experiences.

CASE EXAMPLE
The Terrifying Amherst Poltergeist

About.com story archives has dozens of first person accounts of people's paranormal experiences.

WWW LIBRARY
The WWW Library contains articles on parapsychology, interviews with Francis Vaughan, PhD on awakening inutition and with Arthur Hastings, PhD on channeling, and a link to the professional Parapsychological Association.

REFERENCES
1 Hastings, A. (1983). "A counseling approach to parapsychological experience." Journal of Transpersonal Psychology 15 (2): 143-167. p. 143.

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