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Best Psychic

80695944paranormalWhat and who are those very “best psychics”? Are they people with powerful extra sensory perceptions, metaphysical folk who lead different lives to ours? Or are the best psychics simply an illusion, individuals who encapsulate what we can’t understand? Would it interest you to learn that one of the most brilliant, intellectual and high brow thinkers of our time not only believed in the divine but also the precept that the very best psychics are an important metaphysical phenomena?

Carl Jung

The famous Carl Jung, one of Sigmund Freud’s adepts, was born in Switzerland in 1875 and died in 1961. We believe he would have had a lot to say about the work of our “best psychics “today. No matter how academic his take, metaphysical matters fascinated Jung. His mind was refined and astute, yet he appeared to believe there was a sacred component to life. In fact, he would have sought out the best psychics if he had lived in this century, perhaps to analyze or connect to them, not just from a scientific point of view but from a spiritual perspective.

Jung started have mystical dreams from early childhood and believed someone else lived within him, a being of infinite wisdom called Philemon who had the power to unravel the secrets of life. As his career as a psychoanalyst developed, Jung created and utilised “active imagination” to connect to his patients and the wonder of their spiritual worlds. Our very best psychics today still use these same techniques when they meditate, or visualize, seeing them as the power of Spirit, or the infinite Wyrd. In fact although our best psychics are not as intellectual or as high brow as the great man, they utilize their dreams and their love of “the divine” to communicate with the heart of humanity. Carl Jung had faith in the boundlessness of creation, just like the psychic and empath, but he used what he discovered to be the “collective unconscious” to describe it.

Jung’s research led him to discovering “archetypes”, powerful mythological perceptions that reside within the human soul and he utilized them not only in his mystical perceptions but through his psycho-analytical work. Such techniques enabled him, and some of his patients to experience personal events beyond the rational perceptions of his time. He was revolutionary; in fact Jung eventually broke away from Freud to carry forwards his personal style of psycho-analysis. He was even interested in alchemy and how the soul could transform its base values into higher angelic vibrations. He also wondered at the perception of “sinner” and “saint” and how our civilization can produce a Genghis Khan, as opposed to a Saint. It is evident to us that Jung would have sought out the best psychics if the social mores of his time had been similar to those of today.

Interestingly, Jung experienced the paranormal on many occasions himself. In his country house in Switzerland he lived through a long period of poltergeist phenomena. In 1944 he had a near death experience after a heart attack. He said he “flew” across the Himalayas till he was in the presence of an ancient Hindu Saint in meditation. At the time, the nurse looking after him said Jung was surrounded by an unworldly light.

Jung was also afraid for humanity, as he had perceived a sort of hell in his visionary experiences, where the “voices of the Unanswered, Unresolved and Unredeemed” were imprisoned. His point of view was that we could only save ourselves if we “woke up” to the multifaceted reality of existence, and connected to our spiritual core. He repeats the messages of saints, spiritual leaders and great thinkers, but it is our choice as to whether we want to listen.

Synchronicity

If we compare him to the metaphysical perceptions of today, like our very best psychics Jung believed in Fate but he called it “synchronicity”. In his view there was “an acausal connecting principle” behind life that connected all events. And like believers in the Quantum Theory, Jung stated our thoughts are our reality. So even though Jung was a studious man, a logical man, he was one of the greatest metaphysical thinkers of his time and his belief in the mystical was vital to his life and the lives of all those who have read his work or who came into contact with him. The terms “archetype” the “collective unconscious” and “the shadow” are all terms that Jung discovered and are used to describe the human condition to this day. Both the cultural and spiritual history of mankind has been deeply touched by the philosophy of Carl Jung.

On the day he died, a great storm broke out over his house and lightening struck the most beloved tree in his garden.