The Psychomanteum

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http://weekinweird.com/2019/02/07/p...BAIUvJp0XUorFpx2akjcUb9Efh1H79kYdg7C0hJAKphZg

The Psychomanteum: How an Ancient Tool for Contacting the Dead is Making Breakthroughs in Paranormal Investigation

On the latest episode of Travel Channel’s Kindred Spirits, Amy Bruni & Adam Berry investigate a mysterious haunted mirror in Gettysburg’s famed Farnsworth House. With help from haunted object experts Greg & Dana Newkirk, the paranormal investigators use the object to construct an ancient device meant to contact the dead: the psychomanteum.

Whether using tarot during investigations, performing classic seances, or making use of the Estes Method, sometimes its the most unique tools which provide the most intriguing responses. On Thursday’s episode of Kindred Spirits, Greg & Dana Newkirk, curators of the Traveling Museum of of the Paranormal & Occult, are drawn to construct a psychomanteum, a method of summoning the dead which has been all-but-forgotten by today’s paranormal investigators. But what exactly is a psychomanteum, and how does it work?

Stemming from the Greek “nekromanteion”, which translates to “oracle of the dead”, the psychomanteum was such a popular method of spirit contact that they’re made reference to in the epic Homer’s Odyssey, where Odysseus speaks with his dead mother by gazing into a pit of blood. It wasn’t until the 1950s that archaeologists actually excavated one of the devices in Epiros, officially pulling the psychomanteum out of legend and into reality.

While crystal balls, mirror scrying, and other forms of chiromancy remained popular throughout the years, it wasn’t until 1993 when Dr. Raymond Moody, a researcher of near death experiences, published the book Reunions: Visionary Encounters With Departed Loved Ones and brought the psychomanteum back to life. In his book, Moody recounts how he took inspiration from Greek nekromanteions and other shamanic mirror-gazing traditions from around the world, constructing his own psychomanteum, and documenting some three-hundred individuals’ experiences with the method.

In a room blocked of all sunlight, Moody placed a chair in front of a large mirror hung on a wall which was tilted forward at a 45 degree angle, so as to obscure the gazer’s own reflection. Behind the chair was placed a low wattage lamp, meant to replicate the soft glow of a single candle. Before seating themselves in the psychomanteum, subjects were asked to focus on a loved one who had since passed. Then, the gazing session would begin. The results were astounding.


Out of the subjects, a quarter of them stated that they had made contact with the dead, seeing and even speaking with their loved ones in the mirror’s reflection. About ten percent of these subjects even said the spirits actually came out of the mirrors and touched them. In nearly a quarter of the cases, the contact with the dead didn’t occur immediately, but within 24 hours of the psychomanteum session. Even more startling, nearly every single subject strongly stated that their reunions were not fantasies or dreams, but insisted they were real events with elements of physicality.

Dr. Raymond Moody wrote that the sessions with his modern day psychomanteum weren’t just an effective method of contact with the dead, they quite literally changed the lives of the users, healing wounded relationships with the deceased and reshaping the way they saw the world.

With such a powerful tool so easy to create, why aren’t more paranormal investigators using the psychomanteum? Mostly because they don’t know the method even exists. Like many traditional methods of spirit communication, they’ve been forgotten, replaced with fancy gadgets as seen on television, or branded as “dangerous occult practices”. For this reason, The Traveling Museum of the Paranormal & Occult has spent the last several years roaming the country with a portable psychomanteum, swapping a quiet room for headphones and white noise, and educating the public on the history and practice of therapeutic mirror gazing. On the the third season three episode of Travel Channel’s Kindred Spirits, that lesson will be shared with an even wider audience.

Of course, things are bound to get even stranger when you build your psychomanteum out of a gigantic haunted mirror in one of the most paranormally-active locations in the world.
 
Does this thing have a “Good bye” or off switch?

The description of the physical contacts and the statement of delayed visitations both make me want to scream “Portal!”
I actually think that may be what it is, Wands. I've heard of this before. Now, this group took it to a new level using a haunted mirror, but I know the idea has been around for quite some time.
 
A friend of mine had moved into an old Victorian house a few years back and when he did there had been a closet in one of the upstairs bedrooms that actually had a mirror set up in it for this kind of communication. He actually had a lot of problems in the house with mirrors. It got so bad that at night he had to put cloth over any reflective surface. He said that he would always see things standing in the mirrors that were not there. When he was living there I couldn't be in that house for more than 30 minutes. The whole house had a very uncomfortable vibe. I even tried sleeping in the bedroom that had the psychomanteum set up and that night was by far one of the most terrifying nights of my life.
I agree with Wands, it's opening a portal. I love that this museum is educating more people on this practice because it is very effective form of spirit communication, but it also is a very dangerous one as well. There are a lot of old tradition forms of spirit communication that I believe are more effective than most forms used today my investigators, they just don't know about them.
I also remember my great aunt always warning me about mirrors, because when I was a kid I would sit in front of this big mirror she had in the den, and stare into it for hours. She would always tell me to be careful because " you never know who might be staring back." Makes me think she might have been doing a little psychomanteum when no one was around.
 
A friend of mine had moved into an old Victorian house a few years back and when he did there had been a closet in one of the upstairs bedrooms that actually had a mirror set up in it for this kind of communication. He actually had a lot of problems in the house with mirrors. It got so bad that at night he had to put cloth over any reflective surface. He said that he would always see things standing in the mirrors that were not there. When he was living there I couldn't be in that house for more than 30 minutes. The whole house had a very uncomfortable vibe. I even tried sleeping in the bedroom that had the psychomanteum set up and that night was by far one of the most terrifying nights of my life.
I agree with Wands, it's opening a portal. I love that this museum is educating more people on this practice because it is very effective form of spirit communication, but it also is a very dangerous one as well. There are a lot of old tradition forms of spirit communication that I believe are more effective than most forms used today my investigators, they just don't know about them.
I also remember my great aunt always warning me about mirrors, because when I was a kid I would sit in front of this big mirror she had in the den, and stare into it for hours. She would always tell me to be careful because " you never know who might be staring back." Makes me think she might have been doing a little psychomanteum when no one was around.

I think this is another example of mystical techniques which have been purposely hidden away because of their easy technique and powerful results.
 
I think this is another example of mystical techniques which have been purposely hidden away because of their easy technique and powerful results.
I hadn't even thought about it like that. I know that back in the day it was quite common for people to have small rooms and closets set up for that kind of communication. It would make sense that if it was opening some sort of portal inside of the house causing negative things people would try to hide or even forget the knowledge of how to do such kinds of communication, as well as warn people not to do it. Which as much as I love people who try and educate those on old traditions it often causes issues. Because when knowledge like this is put into the wrong hands it can cause a lot of damage and problems. It's like giving a chainsaw to someone, and just telling them how to turn it on and not telling them how to properly handle it or any safety instructions. It's just not going to end well and someone is going to get hurt.
It's similar to seances, back then they were party games. I mean people would through seance parties, and now seances are not common and people rarely ever do them anymore. Because people have either become more educated on what could happen or it's out of fear.
 
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I think this is another example of mystical techniques which have been purposely hidden away because of their easy technique and powerful results.

This discussion reminded me a good friend, highly educated and a devout Roman Catholic, who believes in the existence of the Chronovisor.
 
This discussion reminded me a good friend, highly educated and a devout Roman Catholic, who believes in the existence of the Chronovisor.
I've heard of this so called window to the future. I need to research when this first began to be believed. Looking for my kernal of truth but I need to look at the history first.