Premonitions
and Spirituality
by Larry Dossey, M.D.
Spirituality
involves an awareness of being connected with something greater than the
individual ego or self. This "something greater" has
traditionally been called God, Goddess, Allah, Great Spirit, the Almighty,
the Absolute, and many other names. Some consider it as the Universe, or
as a sense of infinite order and beauty. Many individuals prefer to
attribute no name whatever to it. But whether named or unnamed, the
awareness of a connectedness with something greater than the "I"
has been a source of strength and meaning for individuals throughout human
history.
Individuals
often find that their power of sensing and knowing expands as they mature
spiritually. These expanded capacities often involve the capacity to know
yet-to-be events that lie in the future, as the unbroken stream of
prophets, visionaries, seers, and shamans throughout history attests. A
modern analog of this ancient ability to know the future is premonitions,
sometimes called intuition, gut feelings, or sixth sense.
Premonitions
are often regarded as unrelated to spirituality, but there are profound
connections. The most obvious involves love, as in the following example.
Amanda,
a young mother living in Washington State, awoke one night at 2:30 A.M.
from a nightmare. She dreamed that a large chandelier that hung above
their baby's bed in the next room fell into the crib and crushed the
infant. In the dream, as she and her husband stood amid the wreckage, she
saw that a clock on the baby's dresser read 4:35 A.M. The weather in the
dream was violent; rain hammered the window and the wind was blowing a
gale. The dream was so terrifying she roused her husband and told him
about it. He laughed, told her the dream was silly, and urged her to go
back to sleep, which he promptly did. But the dream was so frightening
that Amanda went to the baby's room and brought the child back to bed with
her. She noted that the weather was calm, not stormy as in the dream.
Amanda felt foolish -- until around two hours later, when she and her
husband were awakened by a loud crash. They dashed into the nursery and
found the crib demolished by the chandelier, which had fallen directly
into it. Amanda noted that the clock on the dresser read 4:35 A.M. and
that the weather had changed. Now there was howling wind and rain. This
time, her husband was not laughing.
Amanda's
dream was a snapshot of the future -- down to the specific event, the
precise time it would happen, and a change in the weather.
Love
appears dramatically as a mediator of premonitions in sudden infant death
syndrome or SIDS, the abrupt, unexplained death of an apparently healthy
baby between one and twelve months of age. Premonitions are a recurring
feature in the experiences of SIDS parents. An example is Don, a physician
in a large metropolitan area. During the first trimester of his wife's
pregnancy, he sensed the happiness his son's birth would bring would not
be lasting. A few months before the birth, he would occasionally find
himself contemplating a nearby cemetery, where his son would eventually be
buried. The day he was born and Don first held him in his arms, he felt,
for no obvious reason that the newborn was not supposed to be with them.
Beginning around two to three weeks before his death, Don would be
awakened from his sleep with thoughts of SIDS. The day before his son
died, he heard a voice very similar to his own say repeatedly, "Take
a good look. This is the last time you will see him."
Don's
apprehensions increased when his wife planned a flight with the baby to
visit her parents, who lived in another state. Although they disagreed
about whether the baby should go, Don didn't make his fears clear to his
wife. As he was driving them to the airport, negative feelings came
flooding in. At the airport, walking to security, he heard a clear warning
that he'd never see his son again. He knew his baby would die during the
trip. While walking back to the parking lot, the voice told him to go back
and get his son. Finally the voice softened and stopped, as Don ignored it
and kept walking. Early the next morning his wife called, hysterically
relating that their son had died. He later would find that his aunt had
similar apprehensions about the baby.
Looking
back, Don said, "The process has been a shock to me since I knew
before-hand this [death] was going to happen. The only thing I didn't know
was when and where... I have no idea of its meaning. The only thing I
can say is that perhaps if I would have listened to 'my heart' many
mishaps could have been prevented... I think people have the ability to
perceive things and give it a purposeful meaning which can be used for any
future event."
Many
of the SIDS parents experienced dreams, visions, or feelings of being in
contact with their infants following death. They felt uniformly positive
about these experiences, and were left with a sense that their baby was
being cared for and was in a better place.
There
are other benefits that are profoundly spiritual. Premonitions open
us up to each other and to the greater world. As mentioned, they show
that we are part of something larger than the individual self, that we are
an element in the great "pattern that connects," as
ecologist-philosopher Gregory Bateson put it. Premonitions suggest that we
are linked with every consciousness that has ever existed, or that will
ever exist.
Many
outstanding scientists have realized this. The renowned physicist David
Bohm said, "Each person enfolds something of the spirit of the other
in his consciousness." Nobel physicist Erwin Schrödinger also
believed that minds are in some sense united and one. He said, "To
divide or multiply consciousness is something meaningless. There is
obviously only one alternative, namely the unification of minds or
consciousness... [I]n truth there is only one mind."
By
linking minds across space and time, premonitions reveal the oneness of
which these scientists -- and many spiritual traditions -- speak.
Premonitions therefore imply that we are not isolated individuals, but
beings whose consciousness operates outside the present and beyond our
physical body. They suggest that in some sense we are nonlocal or infinite
in space in time. When we deeply sense this, we may become
"transparent to the transcendent," as mythologist Joseph
Campbell put it.
Through
love, premonitions link human beings across space and time. There is no
more fundamental aspect of spirituality than love. Premonitions are a
window through which we glimpse our connection not only with one another,
but with the Infinite as well.
©2009
Larry Dossey, M.D., author of The Power of Premonitions: How Knowing
the Future Can Shape Our Lives
___________________
Larry
Dossey, M.D., author of The Power of Premonitions: How Knowing the
Future Can Shape Our Lives, is a leader in bringing scientific
understanding to spirituality, and rigorous proof to alternative medicine.
He is the author of the New York Times bestseller Healing Words,
the first serious look at how prayer affects healing. He has been featured
several times by Oprah -- her TV show, radio show, and magazine -- and is
an international advocate for the role of the mind in health and the role
of spirituality in healthcare. He lives in New Mexico.