Berserk2
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Roger,
As you know, the ADCs of Telly Savalas and my parishioner, Leonard, are as spectacular as any ADCs in history. I assume that both cases met certain conditions, some of which we can grasp and others which we cannot. For example, Leonard told me about earlier spectacular psychic experiences that were impressive in their supernatural character., but he never shared the details with me. He was apparently psychically gifted, and so, might have been uniquely attuned to his deceased son's " vibration." You seem to assume that Telly was an unlikely candidate for his ghostly encounter. But is it not possible that Telly, like Leonard, was uniquely gifted psychically? Also, two Greek guys (Savalas and Agannis) might have been uniquely attuned for ethnic and cultural reasons as well as for spiritual compatibility. Note also that both were outdoors when they were coping with an emotionally difficult situation--the unexpected death of a son and a car out of gas in an torrential rainstorm. Certain types of emotional shock can stop the mind from censuring possibilities and generate an unconscious longing for a romantic escape from discomfort and anxiety. Such speculation cannot explain uniquely bizarre paranormal events. But beneficiaries of such ADCs should be examined more closely for clues to unknown conditions that they unwittingly satisified to enhance their role as psychic "receivers."
For example, when I am about to have a powerfully clairvoyant experience, I notice subtle alterations in my state of mind. Such experiences almost always "sneak up on me" and take me by surprise. They never happen when I intensely desire them and unwittingly try to make them happen. Wishful thinking is the enemy of psychic power. On the other hand, it seems essential to be immersed in the right kind of meditation on a problem crying out for resolution.
For example, I was walking down Oak St., unconsciously musing over a pastoral problem. Seniors from nursing homes were supposedly being denied food and medication simply because they attended my church and showed up late for lunch at the nursing home. Suddenly, I felt a gentle urge to walk back and enter a Christian book store that held no interest for me. I did so, and found myself unintentionally explaining my problem to the salesman. It turned out that his wife was in charge of feeding nursing home patients and providing their medications. My problem was quickly solved. I had no reasons to share my problem with the book salesman and no reason to imagine that he wuold care or be in a position to help me.
This experience is very typical of how I receive divine guidance. Though I have prayed about the problem, I am not consciously engaged with the problem in an anxiety-producing, intense manner. I am not currently TRYING to solve the problem. Rather, the problem is "on the backburner" of my mind and I am unusually open to inrrational impulses. I am willing to feel foolish by acting on these impulses. That 's the state of mind I find conducive to divine intervention. There are many other elusive distinctions between wishful thinking and the quiet confidence of mountain-moving faith, distinctions that I am currently unable to articulate. But when I'm in a psi-conducive state, I think, "Oh yeah, so that's what it's like! I'll try to tune in the subtle affective shades that make the decisive difference." Wanting it too badly can guarantee that you never have the experience!
Don
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