Introduction
A phrase enunciated by most followers of Spiritism is
the famous sentence: “We are all mediums”. And, in fact,
a series of daily procedures at the Spiritist Center are
guided by this basic idea.
However, the mediumistic theme is known to be a highly
complex subject just as the mediumistic faculty is known
for presenting very particular and distinct nuances from
individual to individual. Therefore, it is up to us to
question whether this generalization is consistent with
reality.
For a better assessment of the topic, we need to
question the origin of this paradigm. In fact, this
concept is, in principle, derived from a Kardec text. It
remains to be seen whether it is being well interpreted
and well used as a foundation for the usual practices of
Spiritist centers.
The most used Kardec text:
Therefore, let us see the Kardec’s text in question,
which is found in item 159 of chapter XIV, entitled "The
Mediums", of the Second Part of "The Book of Mediums"
(we are using the translation of Professor Herculano
Pires):
“Every person who feels the influence of the Spirits, in
any degree of intensity, is a medium. This faculty is
inherent in man. For this reason, it is not a privilege and
there are few people who do not have it,
at least in a rudimentary state. It can be said,
therefore, that everyone is more or less a medium. Usually,
however, this qualification applies only to those who
have a well-characterized mediumistic faculty, which
translates into overt effects of a certain intensity,
which depends on a more or less sensitive organization.
It should be noted, further, that this faculty is not
revealed to all in the same way. Mediums generally have
a special aptitude for this or that order of phenomena,
which divides them into as many varieties as there are
kinds of manifestations. The main ones are: physical
effects mediums, sensitive or impressionable mediums,
auditory mediums, speakers, seers, somnambulists,
curators, pneumatographers, writers or psychographers”.
(my emphasis)
Let's analyze the beginning of the discussion of the
Encoder of Spiritism:
“Every person who feels the influence of the Spirits, in
any degree of intensity, is a medium”.
Kardec starts the discussion by establishing that
everyone who feels the Spirits “in any degree of
intensity” could be considered a medium. However,
interestingly, he does not say that everyone, without
exception, feels this influence. Furthermore, he seems
to suggest that the intensity levels of mediumistic
sensitivity are very variable.
"This faculty is inherent to man."
In this sentence, Kardec suggests a generalization for
the occurrence of mediumship, or, at least, he wants to
indicate a naturalness for the phenomenon. For a text
published around 160 years ago, it is reasonable to
assume that Kardec was not contradicting himself in
relation to the previous sentence, as the emphasis may
be on the fact that it is a natural phenomenon and not
pathological or wonderful, and this is in fact an
important record. Did he want to emphasize that this is
a phenomenon experienced by 100% of individuals? Or was
he just rejecting the miraculous character normally
attributed to mediumistic phenomena, especially at that
time? To advance this understanding, we need to continue
reading Kardec’s text.
“For this reason, it is not a privilege and it is very
rare to find someone who does not have it, even if in a
rudimentary state”.
This statement by Allan Kardec seems to clarify the
doubt that arose in relation to the previous comment.
When the Encoder states "For this reason it is not a
privilege...", he is making it clear that the medium
should not be treated as a "superman", a "predestined",
or an "out of the ordinary", as it is still common in
the nineteenth century. Therefore, this placement seems
to signal that the previous statement ("This faculty is
inherent to man") is much more a prevention against the
excessive mysticism that mediumship awakens, than the
establishment that such faculty is an occurrence
observed in the entire population.
In fact, when Kardec states “...and people who do not
have it at least in a rudimentary state are rare...”, he
admits that some people might not have mediumship at all
(using the word “rare”). Therefore, in principle, the
possibility of Kardec claiming that 100% of people are
mediums would be excluded. In addition, Kardec seems to
suggest that many of those who have it, present
mediumship only “in a rudimentary state”, which would
be, apparently, something so little expressive that, in
practice, it would be as if the individual did not have
mediumship.
“It can be said, therefore, that everyone is more or
less a medium”.
To simplify the issue, Kardec states that “it can be
said that everyone is more or less a medium”. Although
this statement by Kardec really gives rise to the
statement that “all are mediums”, he builds it almost as
if it were a concession (“It can be said...”), that is,
a cruder didactic simplification. This is especially
evident if we analyze it together with the previous
sentence. In fact, Kardec would not fall into such a
brutal contradiction, even more into two juxtaposed
positions. Furthermore, the “...more or less a medium”
suggests that this concession should be used with some
caution, as some may be “more mediums”, but many could
be “...less mediums”.
“Usually, however, this qualification applies only to
those who have a well-characterized mediumistic faculty,
which translates into overt effects of a certain
intensity, which depends on a more or less sensitive
organization”.
Kardec concludes his first paragraph, stating that the
term “medium” is commonly used only for those who
demonstrate a significant mediumistic “intensity”, “well
characterized”, with “overt effects”. Now, it is easy to
see that only a very small minority of the population is
capable of presenting mediumistic phenomena at this
level of intensity.
“It should also be noted that this faculty is not
revealed to all in the same way. Mediums generally have
a special aptitude for this or that order of phenomena,
which divides them into as many varieties as there are
kinds of manifestations. The main ones are: physical
effects mediums, sensitive or impressionable mediums,
auditory mediums, speakers, seers, somnambulists,
curators, pneumatographers, writers or psychographers.”
Kardec starts the second paragraph highlighting the
eminently personal and variable character of mediumship.
Moreover, interestingly, to differentiate mediumistic
nuances, Kardec cites as mediumistic types even very
rare cases of mediumistic specialty, such as the case of
“pneumatographer” mediums. This allows us to infer that
we must be careful when using the term “medium”, as it
was, in practice, used for someone who was really an
intermediary of very representative phenomena.
Therefore, it is important to note that the basic
predisposition to the phenomenon, which does not
generate any concrete mediumistic perception that can be
analyzed in experimental meetings, constitutes, in
principle, the condition of most human beings. On the
other hand, what is conventionally called “ostensive
mediumship” or “action mediumship” constitutes a
condition of a micro minority of human beings. Kardec
also highlights that this condition "...depends on a
more or less sensitive organization", implying that, as
it depends on an organic predisposition, there would be
limitations in our possibilities to expand it, in a
single incarnation, from an organic condition
unfavorable to the most striking mediumistic
manifestations.
Implications regarding the Spiritist Movement
From the popularization, without further explanation, of
the simplistic phrase “all are mediums”, a series of
questionable procedures commonly found in our Spiritist
movement have been explained or allegedly justified.
Systematic referrals to the mediumistic meeting of a
large number of interested or just curious have
generated meetings in which the presence of any
ostensible or action medium is not noticed. This would
not necessarily be a bad thing if the meeting were
understood only as a preliminary test, that is, if there
was a minimal understanding that the mediumistic
exercise might not really generate anything concrete.
However, this is rarely the case, implying that the
proposition and mainly the maintenance of “mediumistic
meetings without mediums” has frequently generated
animistic-mystifying processes difficult to be
corrected. This occurs due to an exaggerated expectation
regarding what the mediumistic meeting can provide and
also due to a lack of knowledge of the limitations of
mediumistic phenomenology, especially for those who are
not “ostensive mediums”.
Initiation courses to the Spiritist Doctrine, with
different names, and with greater or lesser emphasis on
the study of mediumship, have generated an enormous
number of mediumistic or mediumistic development groups.
It remains to be seen whether all these groups have at
least one ostensive medium per meeting or, at least,
whether the meetings that do not have ostensive mediums
have, on the part of their participants, a clear notion
of the limitations in terms of mediumistic intensity of
all components.
This care must be well worked out in advance by
directors, indoctrinators, lecturers and students of
mediumship in general, in order to avoid the occurrence
of meetings in which auto-suggestion and imagination end
up being taken as “patent” mediumistic phenomena.
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