Jenny’s
Story.
(As told to
Roy Vincent)
Jenny grew up in
a gentle and close family in Gloucestershire.
Daughter of a carpenter and joiner, with two brothers, the family living
in a small house adjoining the forge of the local farrier.
She writes: I am writing an account of mental and
spiritual experiences which, hopefully, will help others, both those who are
suffering the distressing condition known as schizophrenia, and those who try
to understand and treat it. I expect
that some will recognise these experiences as being similar to those that they
have had. But to those who have not, I
merely suggest that they keep an open mind and believe that I have written only
the truth.
I
was brought up to go to church, and took part in the choir and many
church-based activities. Following
success in the Higher School Certificate in 1947, I went on to Reading University to study for an Honours
degree in English. I had known
throughout my early teens that I wanted to be a Librarian, and after my degree,
and following a year’s practical training in Reading Public Library, I attended
the School of Librarianship
at University College ,
London . With a Diploma in Librarianship, I began work
at the National Central Library in London .
I grew up with the normal range of
childhood ailments, but at ten, I began to have severe pains in my side and
stomach, accompanied by severe headaches and vomiting. Doctors could find nothing specific, and one
told my mother that I would have to take pain-killing drugs for the rest of my
life. My mother, however, was determined
that I should be spared this horrifying prospect, and took me to see an
American doctor who practised as a chiropractor in Cheltenham . Using skilled manipulation and various
medications that she prescribed, this most kind lady effected a cure that has
lasted until this day.
My mother described me when young as
having a very vivid imagination. What I
was seeing were what can only be described as ‘visions of glory’. William Wordsworth wrote about such an experience
perfectly in his ode “Intimations of immortality from recollections of early
childhood”. The whole poem expresses so
exactly what I also have experienced.
Not
in entire forgetfulness
Not
in utter nakedness,
But
trailing clouds of glory do we come
From
God, who is out home”.
The beauties of nature, the colours
of the flowers, birds, trees, the rhythms of the seasons, all were a joyous
part of and at one with an inner light, often pure white light, which I could
see. Not only was I seeing the external,
physical sun moon and stars, but on many occasions, visions of an inner sun
moon and stars, also of beautiful sky-scapes which delighted me. I could sometimes ‘see’ through physical
walls to far distant beauties. I now
realise that my consciousness was on a spiritual level, which meant that material
things were not registering as solid, as normal everyday consciousness.
These visions, and many others that I
could describe if invited to do so, lasted for many years. I also felt swirls of wonderful, blissful
energy as if I had been caught up in a whirlwind. It would happen while walking particularly in
the countryside. A “still, small voice”,
heard when I was walking in a lovely garden in Oxford , called me by name. I later dedicated my life, even though lived
in the world and not in an enclosed community, to God through Jesus
Christ. At that time, I did not know how
unusual my experiences were, but all of them filled me with complete bliss and
love for everyone and everything.
Gradually my consciousness was drawn out
into the everyday world and visions ceased.
Looking back, I realise that the lower vibrations of the material world
gradually ‘came in’, as I call it and encircled the inner vision, causing
darkness and the forgetfulness of the former glories. At the time one does not know that this is happening. The whole process is, in my opinion, spiral
movement. As we live on a spinning
planet, with different levels of energies acting and interacting on human
bodies, the mind becomes enmeshed in the human condition. It is a downward spiral at first, which in
due course becomes an upward one.
At age
nineteen, while studying at University, under great pressure trying to get accustomed
to living alone in lodgings – although I had a very kind landlady – never free
of persistent catarrh causing dull headaches, anxious about keeping ahead of
work commitments, having very little leisure time and depressed by the failure
of two developing, but platonic friendships, I said to myself one day in utter despair
“There is no meaning in anything. It’s all just words, words, words”.
At that
moment something in my head just snapped, causing complete chaos inside. I could hear voices uttering unspeakable
blasphemies. Whenever I lay down to sleep
at night, shapes, colours, people’s faces churned round and round endlessly. For the first three nights after my
breakdown, I cannot remember sleeping at all.
This went on ceaselessly, day and night, utter torment, complete
hell. At this point I must state categorically
that the ‘still small voice’ heard in that garden in Oxford , was totally different from these
demonic ones.
Outwardly, although it may seem hard to
believe, I seemed normal, if somewhat withdrawn. I could still talk to people, do my work,
although with considerable difficulty in concentration. I could shop, eat, do chores, cycle to
lectures. My mother, whom I only saw
occasionally in those days, since I was living away from home, remarked during
one visit that I seemed “hag ridden”.
How apt that phrase was! I did
not tell her or anyone, except by letter to the University psychiatrist
describing what had happened, but never received an answer. However, I think the psychiatrist must have
asked one of my Tutors to keep an eye on me, because she started inviting me to
her home and taking me to the cinema.
I was like a zombie, my mind that had one
time been so clear, now darkened. I
remember staring at myself in the mirror, my body feeling dead, but yet
something in me still aware of all that was happening. At no time did I contemplate suicide, but I
desperately searched my memory for something that would alleviate the horror of
my inner turmoil. I remembered having
been given a palm cross one Palm Sunday, when I was only seven or eight. The recollection of that lovely day, the joy
of that time, surrounded by loving people, the sun shining brilliantly outside
the church, was calming and consoling.
For years, during every waking moment, I tried to keep the thought and
picture of that cross in my inner vision.
I read the bible voraciously, copied whole chapters into a notebook,
kept a crucifix under my pillow. I also
tried to visualise in the inner darkness, the colour and shape of the ‘inner’
sun, moon, and stars that were once so natural to see.
After leaving University, doing a year’s
practical library work and obtaining my Diploma in Librarianship, I started
full time work. I met and married a very
considerate and loving husband. We had
no family. The ‘voices’ did not abate
even during the period of our marriage, but although he knew that I was
suffering from some mental struggle, he did not know the details. He was vegetarian, just not liking meat from
boyhood. He never tried to convert me,
but gradually I became vegetarian myself, for several reasons, and have never
wanted to revert to meat eating. He died
in 1981.
I have had several good, satisfying jobs
in libraries; made very many friends; have all sorts of hobbies – walking,
reading, listening to music, embroidery, knitting, attending evening classes
and study tours abroad. I do voluntary
committee and community work since taking early retirement, do gardening and
have a pet cat.
Through being a vegetarian, I was led to
a guesthouse in Glastonbury ,
which turned out also to be a spiritual centre.
I had remained through all the years a staunch Christian, attending
church, if not really regularly, at least at all the main festivals, but this
was something, at Ramala as it is called, which began at long last to draw me
out of the darkness. The Christ light is
worshipped there as living reality.
Their teaching and associated art work reawakened my visions. I don’t mean by that that I experienced them
as I had done in childhood, but I knew that they were being expressed through
the work of Ramala. It led me on to an
even more wonderful realisation, connected with the former glory, which has restored
live, life, light hope, joy.
By dint of
keeping my inner vision fixed on the symbol of the cross, and on the memory of
the glorious light, through all the pain of the psychological, mental spiritual
ordeal – and at times it has been physical pain too – the voices have gradually
lessened.
For quite some time now, a kind of inner
peace has been growing. The noisy anger
racing round inside as trapped energy seeking outlet, has been brought under
control by my not permitting it to erupt, but transmuting it into a
constructive, loving force. I mean that
by also holding in my mind’s eye, the picture of a perfect pink rose, symbol of
pure love, and by sending out to all whom I meet, good will, as we are
commanded to do, the mind settles down.
Incredible though it may seem, the body has come through all this
practically unscathed, as I have been in good physical health after shaking off
the childhood migraines and the catarrh of student days.
This experience has taught me numerous
things about the body and mind, especially the necessity, whatever happens, of
keeping on bravely with what one knows to be the inner truth. It is best, at least for me, to try not to
‘think’, but to empty the mind, which is fantastically difficult to do as there
is always something buzzing into it. One
has to try to trust the invisible higher power than man, which does guard and
guide, if one will only ask. I had
placed my life in God’s hands years ago.
The positive and negative forces of
energy are forever working on the human organism. Everything is seeking the balance and rest of
the inner core. The ordinary conscious
mind flies outward to the perceived world, getting distracted, pulled down and
obsessed by material objects, be they animate or inanimate. If one can so concentrate the mind on the
central, inner peace, in whatever form that may take for the individual – and
it takes iron-willed determination, perseverance and above all, hope,
regardless of what is happening to the body in daily life - letting go of
worries, be assured that progress begins to be made, even if it does not seem
like it.
Gradually, so very
gradually, the niggling, saw-like, anxiety-filled tensions of the mind fade
away, and one is left with renewed clarity of vision, revivified joy in the
beauties of nature and peace which passes all understanding.
It helps, too, if one can observe the
whole process impersonally, as if it were someone else’s mind; again, difficult
to do, but not impossible, the key word being detachment. This does not mean that one should not do all
one can for others when one sees their problems and difficulties, but while
sending out goodwill to all, learn, as doctors and nurses have to, not to
become emotionally involved.
As an explanation of the Gospel of St. John states:
“The physical has its work and purpose, otherwise God
would not have created it, and the physical life too has its place in the
development of man. We cannot cast aside
material duties, for we are here on earth to master matter, and the soul who
neglects to watch where it is going has a tumble and suffers a few cuts and
bruises. There must be a harmonious balance
between all planes of being. Harmony,
balance, this is the object of life”.
This passage
underlines many of the things which I have been trying to express.
Christ of St John of the Cross - Salvador Dali
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