The Medium Who Committed Suicide

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I had intended to write about Ted Serios, the man who was said to be able to take pictures with his mind. But while reading through some 1962 letters about Serios between Dr. J. B. Rhine and Pauline Oehler, who had written an article about Serios for Fate Magazine that year, I got side-tracked by a reference to a medium who killed herself in 1911, and the man who had conducted experiments with her the year before, Dr. Tomokichi Fukurai.

Thank heaven for Google and the internet! The medium was a young woman named Chizuko Mifune and Fukurai wrote about the experiments (and others) in a 1931 book titled Clairvoyance and Thoughtography. I didn’t read the whole book, but they were basically ESP card experiments. Could Chizuko tell what characters were on the cards without seeing them? Fukurai reported that she could at first, but then her abilities declined. There was talk of cheating and scientists became skeptical about all her results. At around this time her sister developed abilities. On January 18th Chizuko killed by taking poison. She was only 24 years old.

Kyohei Iseri, her former school principle and the one who introduced Chizuko to Dr. Fukurai, wrote to Fukurai afterwards. He mentioned that Chizuko’s sister had become clairvoyant, hinting that this was an issue, and that Chizuko’s reaction was, ‘I have now become of no use of the world.’

“She looked very pitiful and I solaced her with all my heart. She confessed: ‘I feel it already hard to read a card in a single envelope …’”

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Fukurai talks about her death in the book, and says it could be due in part to “family affairs,” without explaining what those were, and the fact that she was losing her abilities. He also writes a little about her psychological history, saying she was sensitive and temperamental, had trouble sleeping, and perhaps she had an eating disorder, but he downplays one symptom that I found very interesting.

“She began to hear singing in the ears since about twelve years of age, and this became continuous.  She was, however, fond of music by nature, and, especially after the clairvoyant force appeared, she began to enjoy herself by playing the koto, a Japanese instrument.  She did not find it so difficult to hear music as to hear others talking.”

I’m currently researching a book about singing and the composer Robert Schumann had a similar disorder and it worsened. It drove him crazy and he ultimately tried to kill himself as well, but he didn’t succeed and he was committed voluntarily to an asylum which he never left.

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Chizuko Mifune’s story is a sad one. But apparently she has captured the imagination of the Japanese public. According to Wikipedia, “Chizuko Mifune has recently grabbed the attention of Japanese horror filmmakers and has in some way been acknowledged in such films as Yogen and Ringu.” She has also been the inspiration for various Japanese novels and anime, I’ve read.

In 1919, as a result of his work, Fukurai was forced to resign from the Imperial University of Tokyo, but he continued to study psychic phenomena, and he died in 1953.

“Yes, it is too bad about Professor Fukurai,” Rhine wrote in one of the letters to Oehler. “The poor man was not very careful. I have had several inquiries made about him and what he left. Friends have visited his institute. Had he been more of a scientist he might have made great headway for parapsychology in the Japanese culture, which is much more favorable than ours. But then, too, he might not have found what he claims to have found had he been more careful. Who can tell?”

Columbia University Panel on Spirituality and Healing

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I can’t believe I have to miss this incredible panel at Columbia on Friday, November 19th from 4 – 6pm, titled: Spirituality and Healing: A Revolution of Consciousness. And it’s FREE.

From the website description: Distinguished panelists include: • Larry Dossey, M.D.: Author of Healing Words & The Power of Premonitions; Editor of Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing • Amit Goswami, Ph.D.: Author of The Self-Aware Universe, Physics with a Soul, & Spiritual Activism • Robert G. Jahn, Ph.D.: Dean Emeritus of the School of Engineering and Applied Science, Princeton University; Author with Brenda Dunne of Margins of Reality & Consciousness and the Source of Reality • Wayne B. Jonas, M.D.: Former Director of the Office of Alternative Medicine at the National Institutes of Health • Lisa Miller, Ph.D.: Editor, Oxford University Press Handbook of Psychology and Spirituality, Columbia University, Teachers College.

If you’re in New York on that day you really should try to go. Location:

Teacher’s College, Columbia University
525 West 120th Street (Milbank Chapel)

Count Roman Ostoja

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He’s an interesting character. He was the person referred to as “Jan,” in Upton Sinclair’s book about his wife’s experiments in telepathy, Mental Telepathy. Ostoja was said to have mediumistic abilities.

He was also the medium who performed at a seance attended by Albert Einstein! From my book:

“In the beginning of 1931, while Rhine was refining his experiments, an excited Sinclair wrote McDougall. “Einstein is here and we have seen a great deal of him—a very lovable person.” Einstein was visiting Mount Wilson Observatory where scientists had found evidence of cosmic background radiation, the first real proof that the universe was expanding. Einstein, in turn, wanted to show the Mount Wilson scientists the beginning of his unified field theory. The Sinclairs hoped to get Einstein to attend a seance with Roman Ostoja, the medium Mary Craig had worked with in her telepathy experiments.”

Einstein agreed! (It didn’t go well, I wrote about it in more detail in my book.) I was always a little curious about Roman Ostoja. Who was he really? For instance, was he a count, or was that part of an act? What did he look like? I found a December 1953 article about him in Fate Magazine called Man of Miracles.

According to the article, in addition to being a psychic Ostoja had other talents. He’d bury himself alive for up to days at a time “to prove that man can survive for long periods of time in a state of suspended animation without air, food or water.” It was an extremely odd performance. He’d go into a hypnotic state, where “During the process he turned his tongue backward and swallowed it, so as to allow no air to enter and leave is lungs.” Physicians would verify that he had no pulse.

Apparently Leo Tolstoy and his wife Sophia witnessed one of these demonstrations, but after an hour Sophia insisted they dig him up and sure enough he was about to suffocate. The article included a picture of Ostoja with Tolstoy.

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The article also mentioned another demonstration that Ostoja put on for a group of scientists and Upton Sinclair. This time a chair rose to the ceiling, books flew out of a book case, and some of the participants had their faces slapped and their hair pulled. Ultimately the article didn’t give a lot of biographical information about Ostoja.

It was written by Attila Von Sealay, another interesting character, who was also a medium himself. Attila appears briefly in my book in a section about electronic voice phenomena (EVP). This is the term people use for recording what they believe are the voices of the dead. From my book:

“It was a few days before Christmas. Raymond Bayless, a young man who lived in Hollywood, California, and his associate, medium Attila von Szalay, were testing an amplifying system they’d built in order to better hear what they believed were the sounds of the dead. When all the equipment was set up and ready to go, they asked for a voice to wish them a “Merry Christmas.” It was a paranormal version of “testing, testing.” They were checking the microphone and speakers before the experiment began. Seconds after they made their request however, a disembodied voice clearly said, “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you all.” What they did next was monumental. Apparently only two other people in the world had thought to do this before, and no one in the United States. When they heard a voice where no voice should have been, one of them reached over and turned on a tape recorder.”

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I’m sorry the pictures aren’t better. The ones of Roman Ostoja come from the Fate Magazine article, and are scans of a xerox. It occurred to me that Fate Magazine must have a treasure trove of amazing pictures. I’d love to see their archives. I’m going to contact them and ask!

The picture of Attila von Szalay (I was never able to confirm which spelling was correct, it looks like he used both) came from this website.

It’s such a small paranormal world. I plan to do another post about Raymond Bayless (the man mentioned in the EVP experiment above). Bayless would send reports of paranormal events to J. B. Rhine (the head of the Duke Parapsychology Lab) and I copied a few of them. They’re more Fortean than the kinds of things Rhine was into, but I found them interesting.

UPDATE: In this article about the seance with Einstein, George Pendle says Ostoja was really from Cleveland. I see a Cleveland reference that might be him, but I also found references on Ancestry.com to a Mieszko Roman Maszerski (in another place it’s Mieszko Roman Maszerek Maszerski) who became a naturalized citizen in the thirties, and who changed his name to Roman Ostoja. The age works, it could be him. I no longer have an Ancestry.com account, but maybe someone who does might be curious to research this further. In any case, it looks like Roman died on June 15, 1974.

Staff Meetings at the Parapsychology Laboratory

Every Monday night the Parapsychology Lab staff would get together in the library for what they called Research Meetings. Later, it turned into a daily morning gathering called the Coffee Hour. Everyone would file in, sit at attention, and wait for Rhine to appear. He “entered the room in a fashion unmistakably demanding attention and authority,” Klaus Schmidt-Koenig, a former Lab Research Associate described. They might discuss their current experiments. Or a newspaper article. Or one of the many reports they received from the field.

“The meetings were casual and excited, highly structured, but not formal, not boring,” one former attendant wrote. And interesting people were always stopping by. For instance, during the month of November, 1964, Eddie Albert, Pearl S. Buck, and Burl Ives dropped in for a visit (on different days).

“Anyone who had an idea spoke up, one way or the other,” remembers psychologist Gertrude Schmeidler, an occasional attendee who Rhine once tried to lure into joining them at the Lab. “When all had had their say, heads turned to Rhine and there was silence. Then he spoke, telling us the decision … There was no pretense of being first among equals; Dr. Rhine was first.”

“He ruled the lab almost like an old fashion German professor,” Schmidt-Koenig described. “And he didn’t like to be interrupted,” Rhea White, another former staff member, added. “It made him lose his train of thought.”

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But Louisa Rhine had a sense of humor about her serious husband. She’s the one on the far right in this picture. Someone told how she’d sometimes make affectionate fun of J.B. when he was being particularly serious. The staff would do their best to smother their laughter, but J. B. would sense the change of mood in the room, stop, look out over the top of his glasses, and wonder what the fuss was about.

2011 Haunted America West Coast Conference

Before I forget, I know I’ve been barely posting for a couple of months, but in another month my life will be back to relatively normal and I’ll be posting more often.

In the meantime, I just heard about this conference and it should be fun! Details here. Troy Taylor is the conference host. I’ve never met Troy, but he did a great job researching the story behind the Exorcist. He uncovered a lot of original material, and found people to talk to who had worked at the hospital where the exorcist took place, etc. I just read the bio for the co-host, Lauren Kasak, and what an impressive and interesting background (graduate work in anthropology and history).

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Something Unknown is Doing We Don’t Know What

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Sally Rhine Feather recommended this documentary about parapsychology from Dutch filmmaker Renée Scheltema. I haven’t seen it yet, but I love the title, Something Unknown is Doing We Don’t Know What. It’s a quote from Sir Arthur Eddington, who was referring to the Uncertainty Principle in quantum physics.

This is Sally’s blurb from the website:

“Something Unknown takes us into the labs of several leading parapsychologists for a front row view into their current investigations. Compelling evidence for psychic phenomena is presented, along with thoughtful, even passionate testimony about the meaning and implications of these findings for humanity. Renee Scheltema has done a great service for parapsychology in creating this artistic and unbiased documentary.”

Ghostbusters 3

I read this Bill Murray quote a couple of weeks ago. I forget where I read it, but it was one in of those free NYC papers. He was talking about a possible Ghostbusters 3.

“It as just this imaginary thing. Honestly it’s just the studio who wants it to be made. We did a great one and then we did another one. It’s hard to go to the well again. But really, they’d just like us to be sort of alive, but pass it off to new guys. I don’t wake up in a sweat about it, but it’s getting so annoying I might just write the damn thing and get it over with.”

These pictures are from the event I did last year at the 92nd Street Y, when I moderated the questions for Dan Aykroyd and his father Peter.

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At the beginning, Dan Aykroyd said he wanted to acknowledge the Ghostbusters in the audience. They looked so happy when he said that to them.

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