The
Day I Remembered My Soul L. J. Carber © Copyright 2023 by L. J. Carber |
Photo by Sina HN Yazdi on Unsplash |
Now
what I’m
about to relate will be believed by some, disbelieved by others, and
the rest will probably just shrug their shoulders and give it no more
thought. Yet is there really any question more important than the
possibility of life after death: That you, your character,
personality, memories-- your consciousness will continue, not for
years or decades but forever. We are the only species out of millions
to have a sense of mortality—then too, we are the only
transcendent species as well. And I think they are related, because
what I was ‘shown’ [the best if rather feeble word I can
come up with] is that I am two beings, sharing the same space or life
as it were for a time: the one mortal, the other immortal, existing
without beginning or end, beyond time itself. The mortal one we all
can see, the other one is trickier—though I suspect far more
people have experienced something of the ‘paranormal’ than one might
surmise, based on accounts I have been told over the
years. [Oxford did a study finding that 71% of the population had had
at least one paranormal experience—and this in secular
Britain.]
I
had been attending
the London Film School in Covent Garden, London. I have loved movies
almost as much as books since childhood. For some reason which I
still do not fully understand a half century later, I dropped out in
my third and final term. The unconscious mind is far more powerful
than most people wish to acknowledge—can any of us really be
said to know ourselves completely? Again, it’s not surprising
that many aren’t aware they have a soul as they can’t
even acknowledge they have an unconscious mind which affects their
thoughts and emotions, not only in their dreams but in the waking
world as well.
Of
course if I had
thought things through, I might have decided to become a screen
writer--I have wanted to become a writer since I started
thinking—really thinking—as a teenager. (There too I
fancied it would be writing the Great American Novel: I never thought
I’d become a published poet in my 70’s.) But I didn’t
think of it, and soon after I returned to the States I fell into a
profound clinical depression, as it was termed in those days. Day
after day I would walk around the dining room table in my parents
house, asking myself why I had abandoned my dream—a hard thing
for anyone, is it not?
Each
day I walked
around that table, all day long, eating less, sleeping less each
night, asking myself why I had ‘run away’ from my one
chance—as I saw it then-- to follow a childhood dream. The more
I did that the more I wished I could go back in time, back to London
and the film school, and stop my foolish self from ‘running
away’. That was part of the torment—seeking a time
machine to correct my near fatal error as it turned out. My parents
were not very sophisticated and thought a camping trip to Vermont
with a high school buddy would ‘snap me out of it’.
But
each day we were
driving through the beauty of that state, things just got worse. I
had largely stopped sleeping or eating, my nerves were so shot my
hands shook with unceasing tremors, and while I knew that the
mountains and valleys we drove through were very beautiful, I did not
‘feel’ that beauty one iota. It was the same when I saw a
pretty woman: I knew I should feel an attraction, but I felt nothing.
It
got worse. One
day we drove up to a scene where a dog had been hit and killed by a
car, and the woman who owned it was weeping profusely. I could not
understand, at all, why she was so upset. I had no empathy, I had no
feelings at all it seemed, good or bad. And in subsequent years I
came to realize that all our mental processes, be they
thoughts/ideas, or appreciation of art and music and literature, all
our human thinking is fundamentally emotional, and MUST BE BASED on
an emotion-- or we cease being human, alive, transcendent-- and soon
become the living dead.
And
that is not
really hyperbole. Depression does not just stop you from relating to
other people, but it cuts you off from yourself as well-- you feel
hollow, empty, a walking shell, very much a living hell. Believing it
was only going to continue to get worse until I lost complete control
and was ‘put away’ to suffer and suffer, without hope as
I saw it then, it seemed logical to end my life as soon as possible.
So one night when we stopped at a large campsite by Lake Champlain, I
decided that after my friend went into the tent to sleep I would walk
into the lake and drown myself (for some reason I had a sense that
drowning was a painless death.) But I wanted to leave my parents a
good-bye note: I still had that much humanity left in me. But my
hands shook so hard that the pen just made scribbles, and at that
moment these words—these exact words-- came into my head: ‘Just
let me write this’.
And
almost
immediately, as soon as I had uttered this ‘prayer’ to
God, the God I had stopped believing in as a teenager, my hands
became completely steady—and yes, I mean instantly. It was like
going from 100 mph to standing still, without any deceleration
whatsoever! Then I looked up from the camp table I was sitting at,
and saw the stars of the Milky Way and ‘felt’, for the
first time in weeks, their beauty—and I thought to myself, why
would I want to die? So I went into the tent and slept, the first
good night’s sleep I had had in a long time.
The
next morning I
woke up, refreshed, happy to be alive (the depression seeming like a
bad dream, now over), and my vanity had returned: I would shave and
shower. But as I walked towards a large building where the showers
were, I felt ‘something’ come from behind me and into
me, as it were, and before I got to that building I had begun shaking
again, like a dried leaf blowing in the autumn wind, soon to fall to
the dirt. I tried to shave but my hand shook so much I knew I would
just cut myself.
And
now I was
desperate. I don’t know why I was so naive the night before
when weeks of suffering disappeared as soon as I sought help from the
God I thought I had stopped believing in. It could have been the
‘placebo effect’, my mind did not want to die along with
my body so its unconscious part shut down the depression—I am
pretty sure this is how my shrink interpreted it when I told him
about it. I might have agreed with him, except that it was not
logical that my ‘mind’ would then return me and my body
to that profound clinical depression, and make it even worse than
before!
As
we drove into
Montpelier that morning I saw a bridge and knowing I had very little
time left before I lost complete control, I told my friend to go for
breakfast and I would join him after I walked some to ‘calm
down’. I walked to that bridge that spanned the spring-swollen
Winooski River and hesitated! Not because of fear—I still saw
death as extinction and so preferable to the living hell I didn’t
seem able to escape. Twice I walked to the ledge to jump but
something pulled me back: I interpret it as the ‘life force’
that many writers have alluded to-- whatever it is in us (and it is
not fear) that wants to keep us alive. But I knew as I walked away
that if I did not do it then, I would not be able to later—so I
turned and ran to the ledge, and flung myself over.
Because
we don’t
forget the best or the worst in life, I remember like it was
yesterday, and not 50 some years ago, how pleasant it was to fall
through the air [I can understand why sky divers love their sport]. I
don’t remember hitting the water, but I do see myself going
feet first through some rock-strewn rapids (I have a scar on my back
from hitting one of those rocks, but thank God it was not my head!).
I went unconscious briefly again it seems because my next memory is
of finding myself swimming in the river, and as I saw the shore I
thought to myself, why am I swimming, I want to die...and I put my
arms straight up and sank.
The
next part is
hard. Not hard to recall—if only!-- but hard to relive, hard to
accept I suppose. At some point I was conscious, not of having a
body, just ‘pure’ consciousness. I have no doubt it’s
hard if not impossible to believe if you’ve never experienced
it: Even in our dreams we have bodies. And I could see, but what I
saw was an infinite darkness, far blacker than the darkest night. I
was utterly alone, and worse of all, in torment. I don’t use
that word lightly: it was beyond any imaginable pain and my
consciousness was roiled by it. And again, I called out to God, not
to end it but with a question: ‘How long will it last?’ To this day I
have no idea why I asked that question.
When
I regained
‘this world’ consciousness, I was on the bank of the
river in a gurney being put into an ambulance—it lasted only
seconds until I passed out again.
I
spent four weeks
on the psych ward and had a series of electroshock treatments, which
appear to have done the trick in alleviating the depression. I began
rebuilding my life, taking college courses for a new career and
seeing a very good shrink for the next two years. He was a good man
who helped me a great deal to explore my ‘unconscious’
side-- talk therapy it’s called today. But I’m sure he
rationalized away the hellish experience of my unbodied
consciousness, my soul, as I was drowning in 12 feet of water.
I
wish I could do so
as well. Accepting the reality of hell can be terrifying, but I am a
big fan of reason [which will surprise the secular minded]. And my
reason tells me if things are not a matter of chance, but are
directed by some Power or Mystery none of us can really comprehend,
then ‘God’ could have as well left me there. The man who
jumped into that river to save me was a Vietnam vet riding by on his
Harley when he saw me jump. There were about 50 people on the river
bank that day (so I was told) and nobody did anything, except for an
ex-soldier who drove his bike to save my life.
I
know our memories
can play tricks on us, but usually it happens for the commonplace:
getting a date or name mixed-up, thinking you did something when you
hadn’t. But from what I’ve read and have been told by
others who’ve ‘dipped’ into the twilight zone’,
we don’t forget trauma. And what could be more real than death,
or the prospect of death? I wrote a little ‘memoir’ some
25 years after the event, and everything was as real then as it had
been when I was 24—and it is all just as real—and yes,
perplexing still, another 25 years later. But not just for me.
When
I started
taking some college classes for a new career, I met a young woman in
one of the them. The mutual attraction we had was immediate and
intense (a few months before when I was depressed I would have felt
no attraction.) Soon we were living together, and while we had an
inordinate amount of passion for each other, we never developed the
friendship that I came to learn was the sine qua non for a long term
relationship. if we had an argument we would just go make love to
resolve it—and yes, we
had a lot of
arguments. Passion, especially very intense passion, really does need
the ballast of friendship, to temper not its joy but its wildness….
So
one ordinary
afternoon after our classes, we returned to our rented studio and
made love, as we usually did in those heated days. No drugs, no
drinking, we intoxicated each other enough. Suddenly I found myself
outside my body, that is, my consciousness. I saw my then lean and
youthful body between her legs (and 50 some years later I see it just
as clearly) and though I could not see her own soul, I sensed it
‘hovering’ near mine—as she told me later she did
mine. [I also remember clearly knowing it was my body but not feeling
any ‘attachment’ to it—it seemed unimportant to my
consciousness then, to my soul.] And then, as suddenly as we had
left, we were back in our bodies.
To
this day I see
that shared experience as a great gift to both of us. I already had
proof that I have a soul, but that awareness was gained in a very
different circumstance. Over time several people have related their
own ‘out-of-body experiences’ (OBEs) to me [people seem
to relax with me when I share my own paranormal encounters and tell
me things they say they don’t readily share with others]. In my
late 20’s I was teaching ESL in Tokyo and one night having a
beer at a bar with an Australian. He was a typical Aussie, friendly,
down-to-earth, a surfer as far from ‘mystical’ as one
might expect. He told me that one day he had been sunbathing on Bondi
Beach near Sydney when suddenly he was about 50 feet up in the air
looking down on himself and everyone else. He still seemed freaked
out by it, emphasized that he wasn’t drinking or on drugs—I
smiled and told him, ‘That was your soul’.
At
the other end of
life was a 91 year old man I met at my health club a few years ago. I
don’t ask people if they believe in God-- the question is too
emotional, it seems, for both some believers and skeptics. Instead I
ask if they think anything of themselves continues after death. He
told me he didn’t used to think so, until in his 40’s one
Sunday when as usual his wife ‘dragged’ him to Mass with
the family. Sitting bored as usual, he suddenly found himself, his
consciousness, hovering beneath the nave of the large church, looking
down on himself. his family and the entire congregation. As with
myself and the Australian surfer, he soon found himself (his
consciousness or soul) back in his body. He added as a postscript:
‘After that I got in good with the priests.’
There
are thousands
of written accounts of NDEs and OBEs and other paranormal events,
going back at last as far as Plato’s telling of the near-death
experience of the soldier of Ur after a great battle. I understand
why many people are skeptical-- I probably would still be an
agnostic-materialist myself if I hadn’t gone through what I
did. The body-brain is such a complex organism that if you open a
closet and something falls off a shelf, your hand will automatically
reach out for it before your ‘conscious’ brain is even
fully aware. And of course we’ve learned so much about medicine
and science, but any good doctor will admit medicine is a much art as
science [one question I like to ask MDs is if they know of patients
who died who should have lived given their prognosis, as well as
patients, whom their doctors had written off, surviving—and
every one so far has said yes.
And
while I’m
a great fan of science and its myriad benefits [I’m alive and
walking because of it], it is important to remember that science is
an impartial method, not a ‘god’. Be it hi-def TV or your
I-phone or thermonuclear weapons, science reflects our human
interests and values, and is only concerned with the natural world,
the universe we can measure. If there is a supernatural world
permeating the natural one, science and scientists haven’t a
clue. We live in only 3 dimensions, 4 if you count time; the naked
eye cannot see most of the spectrum of light, nor can the ear hear
the full range of sound.
Because
I live in a
body in a material world, I have no idea how I could see without eyes
or think without a brain, but I did—as apparently many others
have over time. I know as I know I breathe that my ‘self’,
my personal being, in some form or another has always existed and
always will [though in what place may be the tricky part.] Can’t
prove any of it, but then I can’t even prove I love my wife-- but I’m
beginning to realize only now as an old man, after
being with her the better part of half a century, how much I do love
her, though can I or anyone ever know how much of anything we are in
this world of birth and death?
So
I’ve come
to suspect dying—the great universal human fear (and we seem to
be the only species to fear it in the abstract)-- may be akin to
waking up shortly after a dream: You recall the dream, and how real
it seemed whilst you were dreaming it, but now realize ‘life’
is reality, not the dream. And what about the tens of thousands of
dreams you’ve had and don’t even know you had them? Would
it then be so surprising that if we are re-incarnated, as I suspect
myself, we don’t recall our past lives—save perhaps in
bits and pieces. Like feeling an attachment to certain places, or
taking an instant liking—or disliking—to someone you just
met. Or perhaps the work you seek or the music or books you love?
The
man was right:
for the time being, we can only see through a glass darkly….