Edith Fiore is an
American psychologist
who accepted the
concepts of soul
survival and
reincarnation, and
applied them in her
psychotherapeutic
practice. She published,
in 1987, Spiritual
Possession,
reporting much of her
experience, gained over
several years, having
seen more than five
hundred patients.
Edith used the term possession to
refer to the pernicious
influences of
disembodied beings on
individuals. Spiritists
prefer the expression obsession,
as possession gives the
mistaken idea that the
Spirit takes possession
of the victim's body.
What actually occurs is
an influence on the
mental field. The
personality involved
starts to assimilate the
thoughts and feelings of
the disincarnate,
resulting from this
fact, a varied
symptomatology.
Fiore graduated in
psychology in the
University of Miami in
1969 and began her
psychotherapeutic
activity using the
technique of hypnosis.
Through hypnosis, she
achieved greater
relaxation for the
patient, helping him to
understand the dynamics
of his mental disorders.
She considered hypnosis
one of the quickest ways
to reach the
subconscious mind, the
repository of all
memories.
Something strange
occasionally happened to
some of her patients.
Induced into relaxation,
they behaved in a
strange way, as if
another personality was
manifesting itself
through them. Talking
with this supposed
personality, she
verified that they were
disembodied beings who
had been accompanying
her patient, sometimes,
for many years, and that
the disturbing symptoms
were related to that
influence. Moreover, the
most important. By
dialoguing with the
supposed “soul of the
other world” and
clarifying her
condition, convincing it
to accompany the “beings
of light”, the patients
improved markedly. Many
patients complained of
having someone inside
them. Edith thought
they were reluctant
mediums. When the
spirits were willing to
review their behavior,
she would invoke close
spiritual friends of the
victim or disembodied
relatives to help them.
According to her, entities
that had not made
successful transitions
to the afterlife caused
problems, affecting
people in harmful and
destructive ways through
possession. The help
given to the obsessing
spirits to leave
resulted in the
elimination of their
devastating effects,
often dramatically
changing entire lives.
She was deeply surprised
that since I became
aware of this
phenomenon, I discovered
that at least seventy
percent of my patients
were possessed and that
this situation caused
them the disease. She
showed that most cases
had straightforward and
uncomplicated solutions
– some patients improved
with just one session –
but some cases required
a long series of
psychotherapeutic
interventions. A few
could not shake off the
spiritual influence. The
psychologist realized
that the most difficult
cases were those in
which a connection
between the Spirit and
the incarnate who
referred to a past
existence was noticed.
This connection was due
to hatred or passionate
affective fixations. In
some cases, the patient
felt so connected to the
disembodied entity,
which attracted him, not
allowing him to be
guided by friendly
spirits to conditions
appropriate to his
spiritual situation.
Fiore believed that most
patients in mental
institutions present
their symptoms because
of obsessive influence.
She says that the
voices they hear are
real; some of your
visual hallucinations
are glimpses of the
lower astral plane.
About schizophrenia, she
said that it does not
seem to me that all
schizophrenics are
psychotic because of
possession. I have the
impression that they –
in addition to their
mental illness – are
undoubtedly possessed. Possession
is an additional burden
for them to carry.
Edith saw the possessing
entities as the real
patients. She stated
that they suffer
intensely, perhaps even
without understanding
it. Virtual prisoners
are trapped on the Earth
plane and feel exactly
as they did moments
before their death,
which may have occurred
decades ago. As a
result, she tried to
treat them with great
affection. She said that
my therapeutic goal is
to help possessing
spirits, who are in the
midst of the greatest
suffering, even though
this means for the
patients the need to
remain burdened for a
while longer, while the
possessors' willingness
to leave is cultivated.
If I were able to “shoo
them away,” I would be
creating a monstrous
problem, because they
would revert to being
displaced people and
perhaps cling to other
unsuspecting people.
The author of Spirit
Possession listed
several reasons that, in
her experience, caused
certain entities to
remain attached to the
material plane, instead
of completing the
transition to the
spiritual world. The
most common are, she
says, ignorance,
confusion and fear,
excessive attachments to
people or places, or
addictions to drugs,
alcohol, tobacco, food
or sex.
An unreasonable sense of
unfinished business also
often compels Spirits to
stay in the physical
world. Interestingly,
this can cause the
victim to feel an
inexplicable compulsion
to do things in which,
until then, they have
expressed no interest.
Some are determined to
get revenge and cling
odiously to those who
have wronged them.
Communicating with the
Spirits, through his
patients, she learned
that some people were so
convinced, during their
existence, that there
was nothing after death
that they simply refused
to see family members or
spiritual guides who
came to look for them.
Instead, they wandered
aimlessly in a state of
confusion and ignorance
that often lasted for
years. Some people were
in such a deep state of
confusion when they died
that they simply did not
realize they were dead.
This was particularly
true regarding suicides.
Regarding suicide, she
commented: Regardless
of anything else, it
seems that by committing
suicide, they are only
postponing the use of
their lessons and
delaying their spiritual
progress, as they will
have to find themselves
in yet another test
situation, in which
suicide will be a
serious option in some
future existence.
Excessive attachment to
the living was a strong
compelling reason for
some entities to remain
earthbound. Parents
stayed to “help” their
children as they grew
up; marital partners
remained, because of an
affectionate interest in
their respective
spouses, or out of
jealousy. However, no
matter how well
intentioned the reasons,
the attachment of
spirits always caused
serious problems:
overprotective parents
delayed the development
of their children,
because they instilled
in them their fears; the
loving spouses were very
upset when the spouses
remarried, and they
often proceeded to
deliberately destroy
remarriages.
In one case, the Spirit
of a young man came
close to the younger
brother who idolized him
in order to "help" him.
Because the entity had
been addicted to
marijuana, the living
brother ended up using
the drug – and, soon
after, started using
other drugs as well.
According to Edith
Fiore, one of the
strongest ties that bind
spirits to the physical
world is their
propensity for alcohol,
drugs, sex and food. If
a person were to die
while in the grip of
such a tendency, the
most irresistible need
felt immediately after
death was for the
substance or sensation
object of the
inclination. The Spirit,
blind to its own
departure, only sought
to satisfy its
compulsion. Spiritual
addicts, she said, used
to crowd around living
addicts and the places
they frequented, trying
to re-experience what
had once been the
dominant theme of their
lives.
Edith examined in detail
the various clinical
manifestations of
obsessional influences.
She believed that the
influence depended on
some factors such as the
intrinsic strength of
the individual compared
to that of the obsessing
Spirit and the
conditions that weaken
the obsessed, such as
stress, drug or alcohol
use and physical
illness.
Also very important,
according to her, is the
mental attitude and the
control of emotions,
which when unbalanced generate
vulnerability that sets
the stage for
possession. She
believed that most of
her patients were
uncontrolled mediums,
and that her therapeutic
role in relation to such
people led to an
interruption of
mediumship and an aid to
the person to become
firmer, centered and
balanced.
The author listed, in
her work, several signs
that may be related to
obsessive influence,
such as:
1- Voice(s) that speak
to the individual
2- Low energy level,
with a permanent feeling
of physical or mental
fatigue
3- Abuse of drugs,
including alcohol
4- Impulsive behavior,
leading the individual
to do things without
thinking, and often
regretting what he did.
5- Memory problems.
6- Weak concentration
7- Sudden onset of
anxiety and depression
8- Sudden onset of
physical problems with
no obvious cause, such
as headaches, body
aches, bloating,
insomnia, weight gain,
allergies, intense hot
flashes
9- Emotional and/or
physical reactions to
uplifting readings
10- Decreased sex drive
11- Tension and
estrangement between
marriage partners or
relatives
12- Blurred vision, pain
of all kinds and general
tiredness (especially
when the influencing
Spirit had died at an
old age).
13- Various phobias,
sometimes related to the
circumstances of the
obsessor's death
experience.
14- Personality changes,
leading patients to
think: This is not me!
In the process of
spiritual liberation of
those involved, Edith
made use of fraternal
and affectionate
dialogue with the
disincarnate, and guided
her patients regarding
the need to take care of
themselves physically
and emotionally. She
recommended that they
record uplifting and
enlightening messages
and listen to these
messages one or more
times a day. This helped
the patients to maintain
a high mental attitude
and affected their
spiritual companions
too. Patients should
dialogue with the
Spirits in a loving way,
motivating them to
assume their condition
as Spirits, trusting the
spiritual benefactors,
who should guide them.
Patients were supposed
to pray and apply a kind
of mental visualization,
which she called the
white light technique:
Using your creative
imagination, imagine
that you have a
miniature sun, exactly
like the sun in our
solar system, buried
deep in the solar
plexus. This sun
radiates through every
atom and cell of your
being. It fills you with
light from your
fingertips to the crown
of your head and the
soles of your feet. It
shines through and
beyond you at an arm's
length in all directions
- above your head, below
your feet, out to your
sides, creating an aura
- a bright, dazzling,
radiant White Light that
surrounds and protects
you completely against
any negativity or harm.
Finally, she asked
patients to arrange a
group of friends and to
meet with that group.
They should pray,
visualize the white
light, and lay their
hands on the patient,
but without touching
him.
|