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The beginnings That journey continued through
college where I had paranormal experiences, made friends with someone
who said she saw auras, and attended spiritualist meetings where the
ministers received messages from the dead. One bright sunny Florida
afternoon, as I rested on my bed fully awake with eyes partly closed,
I felt myself floating. I opened my eyes and was stunned to see my body
on the bed below me as I hovered near the ceiling. I thought I had died.
The shock slammed me back into my body in an almost painful way. This
was my first out-of-body experience and I had no idea what it was or
that it even had a name. I told no one about it. The journey stretched into
the 70's when I visited psychics and an astrologer, and did a lot of
reading on the paranormal, and about Hindu and Buddhist beliefs. I remember
reading a book on Vedanta (sect of Hinduism) each morning in the cafeteria
of the building where I worked. I started to see connections in my life
with the colors of the chakras, the seven psychic centers of energy
in the body according to Hindu beliefs. This and other experiences pushed
me into an active plunge into the alluring worlds of the paranormal
and Eastern beliefs. Into the fire Another
reason I accepted the scary stuff was my attitude. I
liked to think I was tough and nothing could frighten
me away. So I would think, Go ahead, scare me.
I can take it! I had a lot of anger and
defiance in me which probably came from dealing with
an alcoholic parent. This angry defiance proved
useful to me in many ways. It helped me get through a
lot of painful situations, and it was going to help
me deal with the bizarre experiences I would face.
But anger and defiance over a long period of time
easily turn into cynicism. I did become cynical
although it was usually hidden, even from myself,
behind a desire to help people. This defiant cynicism
was my defense, as in No one is going to stop
me doing what I want; nothing can scare me away; and
dont try to impress me. Later, after many
occult experiences, the cynicism was deeper. I knew a
lot of people had not done what I had, and I thought
most people were wimps and satisfied with superficial
lives, not searching deeply as I was. But this was my
defense against getting hurt or feeling helpless. I also
learned to meditate, do psychic healing, analyze
dreams, and chant. It was mystical and magical. When
I first started to do Eastern meditation, I felt an
incredible peace. I felt that I was fading away and
merging with something greater. It seemed I was
literally one with the universe, and the teaching
that we are all connected to one force seemed true.
After all, I believed that truth was in experience,
and here my experience was confirming that belief. At
last, I thought, I was connecting to that spiritual
realm. Later, my studies took me on many paths --
Tibetan, Hindu and Zen meditation and philosophy,
spirit contact, numerology, psychic development, past
life regression. Reincarnation seemed to answer
questions and I experienced what I thought were
memories of past lives. However, it was sad to think
that my next life might not be so great so if I did
not learn lessons from this or previous lives. But
why dwell on that? Finally,
it seemed I was on the edge of a hidden wisdom, a
truth higher than the everyday superficial thinking
around me. Books by Edgar Cayce, Ruth Montgomery,
Chogyam Trungpa (Tibetan Buddhism), Annie Besant
(Theosophy), Hanz Holzer (ghosts), and Ram Dass
(Hinduism/New Age), and titles like Seth Speaks,
The Tao of Physics by Fritjof Capra, The
Metaphysical Dictionary, and Autobiography
of a Yogi by Yogananda began to fill my shelves,
along with books on astrology, tarot cards,
numerology, and other occult teachings. My spiritual
progress seemed assured, especially since I was
having so many paranormal experiences. The natural
result was that I felt I was an insider
in the spiritual realm. Unanswered questions I noticed
that while doing chart readings for clients, I would
tune in to the chart in a paranormal way,
during which I felt an energy connecting my mind to
the chart, and felt guided through the chart. It
often seemed that I was being fed information or led
to specific things to say about the client. After so
many years of Eastern meditation techniques, I was
slipping without effort into an altered state of
consciousness while doing astrology. I gave credit to
my past lives as an astrologer and
spiritual counselor, to the help of spirit guides,
and to astrology itself. In those years, the only
source of such information could be good since I did
not believe in evil. Yet, with
all the knowledge and experience I had acquired, what
were the answers? Since I came to believe there was
only ignorance, not evil, stories of vicious cruelty
and murder made me uncomfortable. Though I believed I
would be come back after my death, where would I go
in between and for how long? Some taught that we
would go somewhere that was like a school, then
choose our next life. Others taught that we go
somewhere to be spiritually purified - how, it was
not explained - then our next life would be chosen
for us. By whom? That was not explained. We were
supposed to just trust the process. There was
also the disquieting teaching that whatever thought
was in my mind at the moment of death would determine
the after-death experience for some time. Better not
have a bad thought for too long! Better not fall
asleep with fearful images! This was scary to
contemplate -- but that contemplation was itself a
negative thought! I would try to chase away these
fears by meditating or chanting something -- maybe
the "Hare Krishna" chant I had taught
myself, or repeating a Tibetan Buddhist mantra like
"Om Mani Padme Om." I sought
peace in Zen Buddhism. Trying to detach myself from
all desire involved a meditation that allows
thoughts, fears, or desires to come up and then not
to respond to them. This was to be applied to life
outside meditation as well. For someone like myself,
carrying a lot of emotional pain from my past and my
present, this was appealing. But though detachment
sounded good in all the books, there was a price to
pay. The detachment seemed contrived and unnatural.
Seeing the emptiness behind my
surroundings, another sign of spiritual acumen,
struck me as nihilistic and depressing. Maybe if I
had pursued these practices more devoutly, I might
have gradually replaced my natural reactions and
feelings with non-feeling. But is it human to be
non-feeling, to accept every thought, action, and
emotion without judgment? Being
taught to be natural and holistic on one
hand, but then learning to let go of my natural
reactions on the other, seemed a contradiction. Of
course, rational analysis like this was discouraged,
even attacked. Therefore, contradictions could and
should be accepted. If it didnt make sense, so
much the better. The idea was to transcend the
rational mind which was a barrier between me and
enlightenment. Although I failed in achieving
detachment, I clung to the paradoxical teachings of
Zen, reading books with Zen tales, and continuing the
meditation. I noticed that the peace I had felt with
my initial meditations had decreased, causing me to
meditate more in an attempt to re-capture that
elusive peace. I also
learned that the nature of occult and New Age
thinking is that there is no one answer. There is no
one single truth, and there is no one reality. Truth
is based on your experience, so it changes and can
differ from person to person. If there are
multi-levels of reality and there is no absolute
truth, then there must be many contradicting truths
and realities. In the abstract, this was fascinating
food for thought, and led to being comfortable with
whatever truth I wanted. But on the practical level,
what difference did truth make if one finally
discovered it? Or how did we know if there really was
such a thing? And if not, what did anything that
anyone believed matter anyway? These teachings gave
answers that only raised more questions. Death and love The best
way to help others and stay true to your path, I
heard and read over and over, was to work on yourself
and love yourself. Although talk of love
was common and was taught to be the basis for
everything, it also seemed as if everyone used it to
justify whatever they were doing. So, if your husband
was not your spiritual match, then real
love allowed you to leave him or find another
with whom you had a true bond. After all, this was a
law of the universe: the law of love. But
this love was not defined. It was just sort of out
there - a love force that pervaded the universe.
There was no personal being to love me; there was
this energy coming from the cosmic One and that was
it. Could a force care? Despite
the meditations, trying to live in the
now, and the talk of love, I continued to have
frightening experiences. One of the worst was waking
up to see an older woman staring at me from the
bottom of the bed. I knew she was not flesh and
blood, but a spirit. She did not speak, but I heard
her in my mind say to me, I am here to take
over your body. Too scared to speak, I said in
my mind, No! No! This seemed to go on for
a long time, although I have no idea how long it
really was. Finally, she simply faded away. I was
left trembling, perspiring, and my heart racing. By
the way, I was not doing drugs. The compulsion In the
opening minutes of a service in a large church in
downtown Atlanta, I felt a love I had never known
wash down over and through me, so powerfully that I
started crying. I knew this love was from God, not
from the music, the people, or the place. That love
was the real thing. Coming from an alcoholic home, I
was starving for that love. I returned the following
Sunday, not to have another experience, but so that I
could be where that love had happened to me. After
several weeks, I began to feel unclean about
astrology although no one in this open-minded church
said anything about it. All I knew was that it was
somehow separating me from this God of love. I then
got the impression that God did not like astrology
and wanted me to give it up. Give up my life's work?
Give up my identity and purpose? Outside of my son,
nothing was more important to me than astrology. But
I felt I had no choice; it was so clear to me that
God did not like astrology. Not even believing what I
was doing, I decided to give up astrology in late
1990. At the time, I was chairperson of the
curriculum committee, a member of other committees at
the astrological society, and scheduled to teach an
upcoming class. I had to find another teacher. I had
to tell clients who called I was no longer an
astrologer. (I did give a talk in February, 1991,
after bad advice from a pastor and not liking what I
was doing but not strong enough to get out of it. It
took over a year for full comprehension of what I had
been involved in to sink in.) Now what happens?
Thinking I should read the Bible, I started reading
in Matthew, the first book of the New Testament.
Reading the Bible put me in touch with something
pure, but I didn't know what it was. Although I had
read the Bible before while growing up and had quoted
from it for astrological articles, this time it was
different. I felt as though I was being cleaned from
the inside out as I read it. As real as it gets Jesus was
different from the masters I had studied. He was more
real than the spirit guides, the Ascended Masters,
the Higher Self -- all those airy, elusive things
that gave no evidence of their existence -- because
He came to earth in flesh and He hungered, thirsted,
felt pain and sorrow. He did not give a message that
denied the dirt and dust of life, but He sat with the
outcasts, the prostitutes, and the hated tax
collectors yet remained sinless. He was as real as it
gets. Though fully man, Jesus was fully God
incarnate, equal to God in nature but setting aside
that glory (not deity) to be among suffering men and
women. Jesus Christ willingly was tortured, laid down
His life and died an agonizing death to pay for our
sins. He bodily rose on the third day, conquering
death, so that we can have eternal life with God. No
sorcerer, no spiritual master, no Buddha, no shaman,
no witch, no psychic has conquered death, but all
still lie cold in their graves. But Jesus has power
over death and is living today. Truth and satisfaction Many
people want to know if I had to wage spiritual
warfare after trusting Christ. Well, a few months
later, as I was about to go forward in a church to
publicly proclaim faith in Christ, I got incredibly
ill. When I went home, I got sicker. I felt an angry
presence in the room and I thought it was my spirit
guide. I basically told him I belonged to Christ and
there was nothing he could do about it, that even if
I died, it was too late. You lose, I
said. I was addressing Satan, although I was really
talking to my spirit guide. I do not believe in doing
this now; I do not address demons nor Satan. They
have already been spoken to and defeated by Christ. I
prefer to speak to the ruler of the universe, Jesus
Christ. I do not want to give demons any attention at
all. Yes, I have had a few strange attacks that could
be construed as demonic. But I do not like to focus
on them. My focus is on the One who is worthy of
attention: Jesus Christ, who has power over all
rulers and principalities, in both the physical and
spiritual realms. What is
the biggest difference between my former life and my
life in Christ? That I am happier, that life is
easier? Not at all. The difference is that I am
spiritually satisfied. There is more to learn and
much room to grow, but the learning and growth spring
from Christ as the foundation, not from a search
outside Him. The search has ended; the thirst has
been quenched; the hunger within has been filled. Jesus speaks |
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A Personal Challenge For You The people of the world can be divided into two groups. The first group are those who can clearly point to the intervention of Jesus Christ in their lives. The second are those who cannot. If you are in this latter group PLEASE don't let another hour go past before you get right with God. He loves you and has a great plan for your life! But there must be change. If you are religious but can't point to a definite work of God in your life YOU NEED to get born again in the Bible way. To find out how to get right with God, click here now. If however, you are in the first group and you have a testimony of Christ's working in your life, God wants you to share it. Read HERE about the power of your testimony. You can overcome Satan by the Word of your testimony, and help others to find faith in Christ. Would you like to do this? If so, start writing your testimony as soon as you can, and THEN, e-mail your testimony to me here so we can publish it for you online. Post it on the testimonies bulletin board here. In this way you are helping to fulfil the Great Commission. Some testimonies on this site are reaching 10 or even 20 people per day. Our team wishes to help people share their testimonies through the internet. Let us together bring hope to those who don't know the reality of our wonderful Savior Jesus Christ. Michael |
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