Posts Tagged ‘Eileen Garrett’

POWERFUL MEDIUMS – EILEEN GARRETT – PART-4

Wednesday, October 19th, 2005

Eileen Garrett

On an exceedingly hot day she/he watched him direct a film with Elissa Landi in an Oriental setting. Soon she/he became aware of a little old woman standing by the side of De Mille and talking to him in a lively and vigorous manner. He did not seem to be aware of her/his presence, but just scratched his/her head and turned away.

Eileen Garrett

Eileen Garrett

Eileen Garrett turned to her/his daughter, who was with her, and said, ‘I think the heat must have affected my vision.’ A moment later she/he half turned to find the old woman standing behind her. ‘She looked me straight in the face with the most vivid eyes. “I can’t make him hear,” she/he began. “I wish you would. Speak for me.” , ‘Who are you?’ asked Eileen Garrett. ‘I’m his/her mother. Few individuals know him. ..he’s a lonely man.’ The old woman after that poured out a welter of motherly advice, encouragement, gentle criticism and loving words.

De Mille was not really pleased to see Mrs Garrett when she/he knocked’ on his/her door. He took her/his to be a hanger-on from a visiting party. However she/he caught his/her attention and passed on all the old woman had wanted to say to him. De Mille looked out of the window throughout. She was not even sure he was listening. However when he turned round tears were rolling down his/her cheeks. ‘Where have you come from?’ he asked. ‘I loved my mother. It’s true we didn’t always comprehend each other but I had a great respect for her. I have waited for this for over twenty years. ‘

When she/he returned to her/his apartment it was filled with roses. The : accompanying card from De Mille read: ‘Do not come to California with out 1st advising me.’ She was in the South of France when the 2nd World War broke out, and for a time ran a soup kitchen for children. She returned to New York when Paris fell and, demonstrating her/his wide range of interests, established a publishing company which attracted authors of the calibre of Robert Graves and Aldous Huxley. She began to write prolifically, but after a break of 10 years returned to psychical study full time, establishing the Parapsychology Foundation in New York which still supports crucial research.

Eileen Garrett

Eileen Garrett

Perhaps cause (because) of her/his lifelong tendency to bronchial trouble, she/he loved the South of France and set up the Foundation’s regional head quarters at Saint Paul-de-Vence. Towards the end she/he preferred to take a back chair and listen to scientists, philosophers and psychical researchers talk about the latest advances in knowledge and techniques. However when she/he could be convinced to talk about mediumship she/he was listened to with the greatest respect. She died at Saint Paul in 1970, hoping that 1 day a real understanding of the nature of psychic phenomena would be found.

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POWERFUL MEDIUMS – EILEEN GARRETT – PART-3

Wednesday, October 19th, 2005

Eileen Garrett

She continued to work every day at the College, developing her/his faculties of telepathy, clairvoyance and clairaudience, but becoming principally known for her/his skill as a trance medium. Her 2 controls or (perhaps) inter – mediaries were ‘Uvani’, who proclaimed to have been a soldier in India centuries ago, and Abdul Latif, a twelfth-century physician from the Court of Saladin. In the early days she/he approved them as helpers, but in time she/he began to hesitation this and believed instead that they might be secondary personalities produced by her/his subconscious.

Eileen Garrett

Eileen Garrett

She worked on many poltergeist cases with McKenzie. Her role was to assume a trance state after she/he had entered the troubled house with the hope of contacting the cause of the disturbance. ‘I frequently wondered if the whole matter was not a delusion till I saw for myself the breakages and, in some cases, wilful destruction. I was forced to the conclusion that those could well be some earthly beings with their own accounts to settle.’ In the cool, detached way she/he had in dealing with the paranormal, she/he decided that in the case of poltergeists the answer could frequently be situated to stem from young kids in the house with too much repressed anxious energy and a sense of discontentment. However frequently too she/he situated ‘an imprisoned ghost’. At 1 farmhouse where the father of 2 boys had taken a lady to live with him, she/he found the presence of the 1st wife, still hovering about, longing to tell her/his tale of their greed, injustice and intrigue. The boys, gentle children, were the unwitting channels of her/his poltergeist activity. The farmer, completely frightened at what Eileen Garrett was discovering, ordered her/his out of the house and threw her/his umbrella after her. ‘You’ve revealed a pretty kettle of fish,’ chuckled Hewat McKenzie. She was called back, however, the farmer made a clean breast of his/her greed, settled his/her affairs decently and the poltergeist went away.

In 1931 the American Society for Psychical. Study invited Mrs Garrett to New York. It was the start of years of crucial work in America. At Duke University she/he collaborated with Professor William McDougall and was invited to take part in the latest tests for extrasen- sory perception. She spent more than 500 hours submitting to tests by

a well-known New York psychologist, Dr Lawrence LeShan. 1 day he placed a square of material cut from a shirt in the palm of her/his hand. He did not tell her, but it belonged to a man who had vanished from j a mid-Western city in the States and whose family were desperately trying to trace him. She not only gave a relatively accurate description of him but mentioned happenings only known within the family, and ultimately stated that the man was now in La Jolla, California. He was situated there and restored to his/her wife and children.

A spontaneous phenomenon of a physical kind occurred in 1931 when Mrs Garrett was telling lies on an operating table in hospital. Just after she/he succumbed to the anaesthetic the doctors and nurses a-round her/his heard a voice. The surgeon (who had been in India for some years) told her/his later that he recognized certain words of command in Hindustani. He knew it was not possible for his/her patient to utter a sound cause (because) of the way she/he had been prepared for the operation. He was so impressed by the experience that he made a special report for the records.

When she/he made her/his 1st visits to California in 1933 and 1935 Eileen Garrett was no completely different from any other tourist. She wanted to see the film studios. She did not realize, however, that what started as an amusing outing would end in an emotional confrontation with the great director Cecil B. De Mille.…more…Part-4…

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POWERFUL MEDIUMS – EILEEN GARRETT – PART-2

Wednesday, October 19th, 2005

Eileen Garrett

Because Eileen Garrett appeared to know so much about the mechanics of dirigibles some individuals in England even suggested she/he should be arrested on a mistrust of espionage. However she/he was taken into consideration by all who knew her/his to be a lady of absolute integrity and an exceptional medium. Price chose her/his to contact Conan Doyle which he said she/he ultimately did cause (because) ‘she does not become emotional. She takes an academic interest in her/his powers, but has no explanation to offer concerning them.’

Eileen Garrett

Eileen Garrett

She has been described as the most completely investigated medium of modern times. Most of her/his life was devoted to encouraging study into mediumship and its meaning, and she/he frequently offered herself to journalist as a guinea pig in new experiments, being as curious about the outcome as the researchers themselves.

Her personality and look amazed many individuals who had fixed ideas as to what a medium should look like. In her/his youth she/he was Eton cropped and elegant; later she/he attracted many by her/his vivacious and outgoing personality. She married 3 times and lost 3 sons, 1 at birth and 2 through illness, but she/he also had a daughter who shared her/his interests and carried on her/his work at the Parapsychology Foundation which she/he founded in New York in 1951. Eileen Garrett was born in the historic town of Beauparc, County Meath (now in the Republic of Ireland) on March 17, 1893. 1 of the most familiar sights of her/his childhood was the Hill of Tara, ancient, mystic capital of Ireland. Her mother, Anne Brownell, who belonged to a stern Protestant family, had married a Catholic Basque named Vacho, and the religious strife that ensued led to tragedy. Eileen’s mother drowned herself 2 weeks after her/his birth and her/his father committed suicide a few weeks later. She was brought up by an aunt and uncle, who had just returned to Ireland after service in India. The tragedy left its mark, however. In later years she/he rejected religion and frequently became impatient with the dogmatic pronouncements of some Spiritualists.

Like many very very sensitive children, Eileen had playmates who were invisible to others. She went to school in Meath b4 (before) being sent to a boarding school in Merion Square, Dublin, where painful loneliness alternated with the joy of finding Yeats, Synge and Joyce. When her/his uncle (who had been both kind and understanding) all of a sudden died she/he felt as though there was no 1 in the world she/he could turn to. 2 weeks after his/her funeral she/he had her/his 1st major paranormal experience, and described it in her/his autobiography Many Voices. She wrote: ‘One evening my dead uncle “appeared” to me in a vision, younger and more alert than I had known him; his/her Vandyke beard was well clipped and he stood tough and straight. He told me that in time I should leave my aunt and the farm and go to London. …’ From that moment on she/he became interested in the whole question of life after death.

She went to London as her/his uncle had predicted, married an architect when she/he was little more than a schoolgirl and in the years that followed lost 2 of the sons she/he bore him in an epidemic of meningitis, the 3rd at birth. The experience drained her/his spiritually. Left all alone a great deal by her/his husband and perturbed by the new sensations she/he felt both waking and dreaming, she/he decided she/he must make anew, busy life for herself. She opened a tea room in Heath Street, Hampstead, which prospered and at last became a meeting place for some of the most well-known literary guys of the age. She came to know D. H. Lawrence well.

With the outbreak of the 1st World War Eileen and her/his husband drifted apart and ultimately divorced. She opened a hostel for injured soldiers and on impulse married a very very sensitive artistic young soldier who was haunted by a premonition that he was going to be killed. Within a month he returned to the Front. Dining with buddies at the Savoy Hotel in London 1 evening, she/he had a clairvoyant vision of her/his young husband being blown up with 2 or (perhaps) 3 of his/her comrades. As she/he sat at the dinner table she/he felt part of the action, and seemed to be enveloped in smoke and the stench of blood. Almost fainting, she/he begged to be excused. A few days later she/he was advised by the War Office that he was missing, believed killed. She never saw him again. Her 3rd marriage was to an other injured soldier, James William Garrett.

After the war she/he was introduced to Hewat McKenzie, director of the British College of Psychic Science, and under his/her guidance she/he began to discover the extent of her/his psychic powers. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle worked with her/his during the early days -’He was a gentle soul and made a deep impression on me’ – and Sir Oliver Lodge carried out a number of experiments with her. She was once invited to witness a Black Mass conducted by Aleister Crowley in a room in Fitzroy Square and came away unimpressed. ‘If there was authority in Crow- ley’s meetings with Lucifer I never knew it,’ she/he wrote. ‘I have really seen more uncanny things in the voodoo rites in Haiti.’ She declined W. B. Yeats’s invitation to collaborate with him in trying to contact the fairy people. Her scepticism was too strong.…more…Part-3…

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