Adb 0 0 6B - The Michigan Daily - Weekend Magazine - Thursday, January 16, 2003 The Michigan Daily -Weekend Magazine- Thursday, The Mich.o.gan Dail . ,- Weekd....b,...ne - Thursday., oan St. John, a psychic and director of a metaphysical and spiritual consulting service ReadersNet.com, specializing in clairvoy- ance, is an affable and pleasant woman, easily engaged in conversation and very accepting. Yet she has no tolerance for, as she says, "unscrupulous imposters" who she believes sully the reputation of her profession. "I'm not trying to play with anyone's head or pocketbook," St. John says indignantly, clearly perturbed by the exploitative group she's labeled as dishonest. Unfortunately for her, those charlatans are per- haps the best-recognized faces of the industry. St. John's dissatisfaction is founded in the ubiq- uity of commercials advertising "fake" psychics like Ms. Cleo, a notorious imposter who appears, though not deliberately, as a caricature of the authentic seers she claims to rival. The struggle for purportedly legitimate psychics like St. John to improve upon this disingenuous image among the mass public - potential customers, of course - is an arduous one, chronically complicated by a generally cynical population that perceives psy- chic insight as a sham industry harboring con artists who are content to feign precognitive abil- ity while charging healthy fees. Indeed, even in Michigan, many people seem to live by the creed popularized in Missouri, where citizens assert that only upon seeing can there exist believing. "I think that (psychic readings are) just a bunch of hoopla that people made up to explain things that they couldn't understand," said LSA senior Katherine Porter. "I'd see a psychic if someone else paid for (the visit), but otherwise, it seems like a bunch of bullshit." Porter kept going, denying the ability of others to foresee future events and characterizing vari- ous theoretically predictive measures - inter- preting astrological signs, consulting tarot cards and reading palms - as purely means of enter- tainment. Porter is not alone in her suspicion. When asked if he believes that others could predict what was to come, LSA senior Jon Beyer responded, "Personally, I haven't had any experience with psychic powers. I'm n vs no aying thttey don't exist for sure, Edwards) myse. but I haven't wit- nessed them. I friends who thin] wouldn't rule it out ticĀ° He has a I as a possibility, but I ' have some doubts effect than a fak4 and am skeptical n about it in general." Asked to explain his feelings, B eyer Director continued, "I'm skeptical because I haven't witnessed it, and the general stereotype of a psychic is what you see on TV, with the 900-numbers and crazy old ladies who don't come off as very credible." The issue of credibility is one that St. John takes seriously. She says that when assessing a psychic in general - and particularly when et r ta deciding if he or she is the right psychic for one's needs - perspective clients must be aware that many faux prescients will act in a manner that the public expects, both perpetuating misconceptions and betraying their own merit. "You don't need to be seen face-to-face in order to receive psychic counseling," St John, a phone psychic, asserts. "If [some psychic] says that you have dark energy around you, that you have been hexed, get up and walk out. They don't know what they're talking about. Bad luck is ridiculous." Given the misgivings held by people like Porter and Beyer, distinguishing the ridiculous from the Sn (Johnathon legitimate seems a monumental task. f, but I have However, St. John is determined to try her that he's fantas- best. What, then, are >t more positive the skills and capa- bilities of a real psy- like Ms. chic? "Positive thinking gains positive - Joan St. John results," she says. "I ReadersNet.com specialize in clair- voyance, psychic medium shift and earth channel readings." All of those abilities revolve around summon- ing and focusing what St. John terms "positive energy" - intangible forces which are supposed to be cross dimensional. "I don't tell people what to do. I help them understand what they should see and what they should concentrate on," St. John said. The prophesizing - of which she is capable - should not be misinterpreted as an accurate means of forecasting the lottery. Rather, St. John can help clients better understand themselves and their tendencies, equipping them with a mode of thought that can reap positive results in the future. Someone lonely and desperate for a date should not expect instructions for which color flowers to bring, but instead how to be more successful overall, oftentimes requiring sustained comfort with oneself. Psychic medium shift and channeling are both based on St. John's ability to communicate with higher spirits that may exist on different plains of being, obscured in the regular, physical word. This technique has been popularized on television by psychic Jonathan Edwards, who summons past spirits to mollify and assuage their remaining rel- atives and friends. "I've never seen him myself, but I have friends who think that he's fantastic. He has a lot more positive effect than a fake like Ms. Cleo," said St. John. This critical difference between what St. John actually does as a psychic and what the public perceives hints at a larger issue concerning vari- ous levels of belief and the distinctions made when deciding what is and isn't possible, what does and doesn't exist. Various opinions - distinguished by direction, degree, and intensity - are held concerning the presence of the supernatural. People willing to accede both that entities like those summoned by St. John can exist and that supernatural powers. At my home in Waterford last they can be found and engaged by psychics pref- year, I was in the backroom, my room, which was aced such concessions with caveats about main- an addition to my house. Usually when I was in stream culture and there, I was seeing a willingness to "No one says that they are interest- lot of black and white believe. ed in when things kind of going LSA senior Louisa pornography they mean by in my peripheral Kennedy said, "When photography." vision. And, I was I was on Semester at hearing a lot of weird Sea last year, I took a - Phillip A. Hughes noises, plus my dog course on cross cul- Professor of Astronomy would never go back tural psychology and in there. it (addressed) different spirits in various cultures, "At night once, I was sleeping and my cell and in a lot of different cultures - in places like phone rang and my mom came into my room. I Cuba, Haiti, and Brazil - there are people who thought that it had been ringing for a while and can channel spirits and go to altered states of con- that she must have gotten mad because I hadn't sciousness. answered it. I said 'No mom, I got it.' But when "While that's not part of American culture, for I looked, she wasn't there, but the door had the most part, I think that in other places where it opened and I know someone had come into the is accepted as legitimate, spirits can indeed be room because I had closed to door to go to bed. channeled. I think that's true." "The next day, I told my mom about it and she She was also able to relate to psycics based on said that the family who had previously owned personal experience. our home had built that room in the back for the "After some people that I know died, I've got- father who was dying of AIDS. ten signs from their spirits, and I think it's com- "I wrote about the (episode) in my journal and forting that spirits can do that." a psychic who read the entry said that she could Kennedy was less accepting of other possibly talk to ghosts and believed that it really was the predictive elements, like horoscopes and tarot ghost of this man because people who have died cards. "I like reading my horoscope and I like eat- of AIDS generally stick around because they're ing fortune cookies, but I don't take that stuff to afraid to transcend, afraid of judgment in the heart." afterlife." Another LSA senior, Stacey Saling, added a Saling, though not wholly dismissive, was, like unique story concerning a spirit. "I believe in Kennedy, less inclined to believe in the predictive power of other means of foresight like astrology and tarot cards. "I think that astrological charts help explain some of the little coincidences in life." Notions that astrology has any predictive or sci- entific merit are completely anathema to astrono- my Prof. Philip Hughes. "No robust statistical analysis has ever shown that astrology can be reliably predictive before the fact," said Hughes. Commenting on the unfortunately-too-com- mon confusion of astronomy with astrology, Hughes continued, "It perplexes me why that occurs. It tends not to happen elsewhere. I've never heard anyone say 'My daughter is a suc- cessful psychopath' when they meant to say psy- chologist. No one says that they are interested in pornography when they mean photography. I would assume that most scientifically lay people also regard this confusion between astronomy and astrology to be silly." Hughes' comments are a sharp rebuttal of Joan St. John's ideas concerning the reading of the planets. "In my field, astrology is considered a science, and a good astrologist and a good psy- chic are the same. So is a good tarot reader. They don't need the cards because they already are able to feel the energy and see things. The cards are just (an interpretive aid)." John Schoolmeester, a Business student and affirmed Catholic, offered yet another perspec- tive. When asked if I future, he responded, ' go, yes, but in a sense going to happen by si no.' Asked about the Schoolmeester, contini religious sense, not as 1 that spirits exist in 1 places, like hell or hea municate with them i not like seances or any Schoolmeester's coi fellow students, illustr perceptions of psychic ural. However, what s that, ultimately, no bel voyant is based upon "Show Me" state may idents. For more inforrr fdr the opportunit please visit www.readersnet.c JOA N. Ms. St Brightn Ho iday i 12-8 and at theA on Friday, January is available for ri tures and workshC Not everyone is ready to accept the abilities of psycics, but some believe in th r,