Extrasensory - Isn’t Love Enough? | 8
Episode Date: December 9, 2024In the season finale, there’s a shocking twist just as the truth of the Pollock story seems to be becoming clear. An astonishing new version of events emerges. Stevenson gets a definitive c...hance to find out whether reincarnation is real. And the Pollock family attempts to lay to rest the ghosts of the past.Extrasensory is an Apple Original podcast produced by Blanchard House. Follow and listen on Apple Podcasts.apple.co/Extrasensory
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1967, Charlottesville, Virginia.
Stevenson has had an idea.
He's at the locksmiths, Brown's Lock and Safe to be precise, and no, he hasn't lost his
keys.
This is an experiment.
He's buying a padlock, a combination padlock.
$16.95, so about $160 today, not cheap.
But then he wants this lock to last a long time.
I mean, maybe for eternity.
So it's worth getting a good one.
The professor heads back to his office and I think think it's fair to say, he's feeling
pretty excited about all this.
He's been inspired by an Englishwoman, a Mrs Greaves, whose dead husband left behind
a safety deposit box, a locked safety deposit box with a combination lock.
She wants to get into it, see if there's anything valuable inside, but there's a problem. Mrs Greaves doesn't know the combination, so she and her son try various random sets of numbers.
They try and they try, but it's useless, a waste of time, until...
One day Mrs Greaves had the experience of seeming to be in contact with her deceased husband,
who was trying to give her the correct
combination. When she tried the sequence of numbers which came to her in this fashion,
the lock opened and the lid of the box sprang up.
So, yeah, this gives Stevenson his bright idea. He arrives back at his office with his brand new padlock and he selects a combination.
It's like the lock on a safe.
It has one dial which goes up to 50 from which you choose three numbers.
Are you following?
That means 125,000 possibilities.
Stevenson doesn't write the combination down.
He doesn't share it with anyone.
It's vital that nobody can work out this number.
He remembers it using a memorable phrase that only he knows.
Stevenson has thought all of this through.
Of course he has. He says,
I have no fear whatever of forgetting it on this side of the grave.
And if I remember anything on the other side, I shall surely remember it."
He clicks the padlock shut and places it in his drawer.
Then he tells a colleague that after his death, he will try to communicate the combination
to whomever he can via whatever
means he can, maybe a dream. If he's successful, that's pretty darn good evidence that death is
not the end, that in some way, shape or form, our personality, our soul, our essence survives.
Then of course Stevenson does what he always does.
He writes a paper on the subject.
The combination lock test for survival.
Stevenson's 49.
How long before he has a chance to test his hypothesis?
Well, for a man with a chronic lung condition, all bets are off.
So that padlock stays in Stevenson's drawer
throughout all of those trips to the Pollocks,
throughout all of those trips to India
and the Far East gathering case studies.
It's there, still in that drawer.
As the 60s turns into the 70s,
as Stevenson gathers even more case studies,
it's there as Florence Pollock dies,
as the 70s turn into the 80s, as Stevenson's
first wife Octavia dies, as John Pollock dies, as Lauren Pollock is born. As Stevenson amasses
yet more case studies, it's in there as Stevenson gets remarried to his second wife, Margaret.
That lock is still there as the 1980s turns into the 90s,
as Stevenson takes his last field trip.
It's there as the new millennium dawns,
as Gillian Pollock dies in 2002.
And it's still there in his death straw in 2007,
as Stevenson lies in his bed in the nursing home,
a very, very sick man, watched over by his
wife and brother.
Stevenson is 88 and he's breathing his last breaths.
It's time. Time to crack open the padlock. Time to unlock the truth. This is Extrasensory, an Apple original podcast produced by Blanchard House, I'm Will Shaw. Episode 8 isn't love enough.
The following episode contains mentions of sexual abuse. Discretion is advised. If you
or someone you know need support, go to apple.com slash here to help.
John's granddaughter Joanna thinks the Pollock family have experienced more bad luck than
most. In fact, she has a term for it, as she told producer
Poppy.
The Pollock curse, we call it.
And when you say the Pollock curse, what do you mean?
If anything can go wrong, it will go wrong. I think it started with Joanna and Jacqueline,
because he was on the milk round. The kids were killed, and it was just everything after
that failed.
And certainly Jennifer Pollock has had some pretty tough times in her life.
Her first marriage wasn't a happy one.
They divorced. Then she lost a partner in a completely horrific way.
He fell 30 feet to his death.
He fell 30 feet.
They don't know whether he was post or whether he fell.
Because I heard this all muddymighty bang and I thought two
cars had crashed together. I opened my flat door upstairs and saw him lay down on the floor with his
arms spread like that. So, unimaginable. And as we've heard, Jennifer lost her parents,
John and Florence, when she was in her 20s. Both had heart attacks. Then she lost her twin sister Jillian. She
was just 44. She had a series of heart attacks, then died from an infection following heart
surgery. It was their brother Ian who broke the news.
Ian came up to me and just said, Jill's dead. And I just could not, we just couldn't,
could we? It was just horrendous. It was the most awfulest thing I've ever, one of the most awfulest things I've ever been through.
Awful. So early deaths, failed relationships, estrangements, failed businesses.
If anything can go wrong, it will go wrong.
And when Joanna talks about the Pollock curse, she's clear on who it all comes back to.
Where the blame lies, all of it.
She pins it all on John.
I don't think there would have been a Pollock curse without him, because he was the root
and stem of everything, you know?
Now, we've heard these next clips before, but they're worth hearing again.
Remember, this is how Joanna and Lisa describe
their grandfather and his reincarnation claims.
Truthfully, narcissistic gaslighting little man.
Pathological, narcissistic liar, self-aggrandizing, hateful, pathetic little man, you know, and he roped everybody into
it, everybody.
He tainted everybody.
He didn't care who he upset, who he hurt in the process.
It was all about John Pollock.
And it's to set the record straight that it was him, nobody else.
So, yes, it was all John's big lie, and everyone in the family paid the price,
none more so than Jennifer and Jillian.
The twins were, you know, they had their 15 minutes of fame, and then they were thrown aside.
My grandfather destroyed them, just destroyed them.
You know, to aggrandize himself.
Strong words, but Jennifer sees things differently. Like really, really differently, as Poppy finds out.
Joanna and Liza were very strongly felt that that your dad kind of made it all up basically,
and felt really like he intentionally made it up because he wanted the attention.
That's their position.
That's not right, no.
But I just wanted to ask you because to be fair to you to say what their version was.
He wasn't like that. He wouldn't have made lies up. I think what he said was the truth,
the whole truth, as he believed it and his prediction came true about us being born.
I think he went to go through all that and with us as well, if he put us all through
that, if he was lying about it. He was a very, very, very big spiritualist and he really
intruded from the bottom of his heart,
he believes that we reincarnated.
So you think they've got it wrong?
I think they've definitely got it wrong.
So maybe John didn't lie. John wasn't the sort of man who would lie. He just wasn't
a liar. He believed it all from the bottom of his heart and according to Jennifer, he
certainly wouldn't have coached the twins or told them what to say because that's what
Lisa suspected. Yeah, I hope you don't mind me asking what to say, because that's what Lise suspected.
Yeah, I hope you don't mind me asking because they say different, I've got to ask you what they said.
And their perception was that maybe you'd been told what to say.
I mean, moment I've never pushed anything or anything.
If they say, if you can't remember, don't say nothing.
But if you can remember something, tell them and make sure it is the truth.
Yeah, don't lie about it. Just tell the honest truth
So he did say that he said actually tell the truth and don't lie about it and there's one other important thing
remember this
Did the twins know they had two sisters who?
Passed away. Oh, no, we've never told them never told them
As you can see, we don't
even have any photographs of them. We kept all the photos in a drawer. Have you ever
talked to them about the accident? Oh no, no, we've never talked about it. No, no.
Which is important because if the twins didn't know about their sisters and the crash, it
makes what the twins said as little kids much more credible. So when did Jennifer find out about the crash?
Jennifer We didn't really know anything about the
girls until we were well into our teenage years. So we just lived a normal life really.
I mean, I suppose if we knew about the girls before we were teenagers, things might have
been different, but nobody ever mentioned it till we went into our teens.
Jennifer says that John and Florence never spoke about it.
Her brothers never spoke about it.
It was all a tightly kept secret until that documentary team came to visit.
Only then does she remember John and Florence sitting her and Gillian down
and telling them,
You're old enough now to understand this, that you lost two sisters, one was six and
one eleven, and a car come up on the pavement and killed them. God, that would mean you
were like gobsmacked.
So according to Jennifer, it's all just as John told it. The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
And Jennifer's husband, Steve, doesn't doubt that either.
Yeah, nearly 30 years, the story she told me eventually,
which she didn't tell me about at first,
only after we were married,
but the story's never changed at all, not one bit.
You know, it's all the same.
And you understand the scepticism.
I understand the scepticism very well.
I was myself at first, because I thought,
is John the, you know, try and make a few pound here
or something, you know, but no, the guy,
as over years I've come to realise,
he's a very honest man.
He just called it as he was.
He never told the twins, as I know. He never told them what to say or prepped them in any way for these interviews with
Dr Ian Stevenson.
In fact, he never spoke about it to them.
So okay, let's take one last look at the evidence shall we, in detail.
The evidence that John put forward, the evidence that Stevenson
scrutinized on his many trips to see the Pollocks, trips which started in the
60s and continued right through to the 1980s, and let's start with Hexham.
Remember Hexham? That was where Jacqueline and Joanna were killed in the
car crash. John and Florence took the twins there for the first time when they
were four years old.
and Joanne had played there. The twins never... Extraordinary. Extraordinary.
But there's a bit of a problem.
Do you remember being in Hexham in that moment happening?
No I don't.
Then there's the dolls. Remember as little kids, Jillian and Jennifer apparently knew
the names of their dead sister's dolls without being told.
Well, Jennifer remembers the dolls, but the whole names thing?
That's all very, very hazy.
Okay, fair enough.
She was only four.
So what about the phobia of cars?
Kids who say that they're reincarnated often have phobias, phobias related to how they
died in a previous life. Do you remember
this? The twins act very strangely around cars, Dr Stevenson. Yes, I mean they're much more scared
of the road than other children their age, I'm sure of it. You mean when they're crossing the road? Yes,
crossing the road? Yes. Well, I remember Joanna and Jacqueline were very careless, very careless.
And not so the twins. Not, not Jennifer and Jillian. No, no, they always stop,
always hold my hand. Very, very careful. I see and remember of course they know nothing about the accident
of course I can remember that me and you were absolutely terrified to cross a road
from one side yeah when we were younger my mum used to you're gonna be crossing the road to go over the other side we We're absolutely terrified crossing the road I don't know why I just think it was a fright of the traffic. I don't know what that was
Okay, so maybe we are getting somewhere. In fact, even now Jennifer doesn't like cars. No, I'm not keen on traveling in cars
They told me really so to this day you still are not keen on going on not knowing cars. No and
There's this
John there's something I had my notes from last time and I wanted to ask you about
it.
Something about brushing hair?
Oh yes, correct.
Joanna and Jacqueline loved combing and brushing other people's hair, especially mine, and
well, the twins started doing that as well. They like combing my hair as if it's the most natural thing in the world.
Do you ever remember combing each other's or other people's hair, particularly your dad's hair?
It says Stevenson reported that you both love to comb people's hair, especially your father's,
and that this was something that your sisters had also loved to do.
Absolutely spot on, 100 million percent, yes. I used to love comb me dad's hair, used to love combing my mum's hair,
and then get some curlers and pretend we were putting curlers and curling her hair.
Yeah, I remember that, 100 percent.
So, yes, this is strong stuff.
Jennifer's memory of that feels very clear, crystal clear.
Anything else like that?
Yes, the way Jennifer holds her pen, she holds it in her fist.
And that's exactly how Jacqueline used to hold her pen. Isn't it, Flossie?
Yes, that's right.
They used to say that you held your pen like the sister who died. You kind of wrote like this with a fist.
Do you remember that at all?
Yes, I can remember that. Yeah, because Jill used to hold it like that in between her two
fingers or something like that.
I see. And you held it in a fist.
I held it like that.
Again, Jennifer doesn't seem to be in any doubt about the whole pen thing. So this is
all starting to feel like much more solid ground.
Also, the way Jillian walks her gait, the way she holds herself, it's exactly the same as Joanna walked.
Sort of a splay footed, you might say.
Did you and Gillian walk differently?
Yeah, because when Gill walked, it was funny. When Gill walked, she walked with her feet like that, like a penguin.
That's what people used to be our nicknames, they you're penguins. They used to call us penguins.
Because that's what it says in the report was that you had different gates as they call it
and that she did have sort of angled feet.
Yes she used to walk with her feet out like that.
Wait hang on, did she do that just to goof around or did she actually walk like a penguin?
No she actually walked like that honestly. They called Gillian Pollock the penguin.
So you walked normally like just straight
footed, you're gonna walk for me now? So yes, Jennifer gives Poppy an extensive demonstration
of how she walks and we can confirm firsthand Jennifer does not walk like a penguin. So actually
on that point that's completely true because again apparently he noticed that
she walked differently to you.
That one is spot on 100% that one defeat.
Once again Jennifer's memory is very clear on all of that.
And of course most important of all is this.
Jennifer love, come here a moment. Stand here love. Stand in front of Dr Stevenson.
Show me your waist. There it is. There's the one birthmark and there. Just above the left
eye. That's the other. Can you see that? Just there.
Poppy asked Jennifer if she still has that birthmark on her waist.
I don't know if I can see it, you know.
There's nothing there. Is it on the other side?
Or maybe it's a bit, it might be a bit lower, but.
Oh, there it is. Yes. Little brown, little tiny brown birthmark there.
Birthmark on waist, check.
But what about the birthmark above her eye?
That's the crucial one,
because Stevenson saw a photo of her dead sister Jacqueline,
which seemed to prove that she had a scar
in exactly the same place.
Does Jennifer still have that birthmark?
I've got a birthmark just in between there,
and it just goes just a tiny little bit there.
Because from here I can't really see it. So you do have that birthmark?
Yeah, just in between my eyebrows there.
One of the reasons Poppy can't see the birthmark is that Jennifer usually wears makeup.
And then maybe I was thinking we could use your magnifying glass and like have a look at it?
If you need a magnifying glass, this is the right place.
Jennifer and Steve have two rather good ones.
Double magnification.
Oh, oh my goodness.
You just went and removed your makeup, did you?
Yeah, just off the top of me.
Okay, great. I'm just going to use your magnifying glass and get really close.
Yeah.
Okay, I can see that.
Yeah.
Yeah, you've got, there it is.
It's like a little tiny birthmark you wouldn't notice, but it is sort of a penny size and
kind of pinky in colour.
That's right, yeah.
It's a pale pink next to your kind of natural skin tone, but it is very distinctly different
colour.
Red, yeah, that's it, yeah.
If I look at the picture of Jacqueline and the location of it,
let me have a look.
By comparison,
it's pretty spot on.
Yours kind of moves into the center a little bit more.
Maybe hers is a bit more distinctly over her left eye,
but it's a similar discoloration
and probably about a penny size as well. So it's sort of spot on. I think it's a similar discoloration and probably about a penny size as well so
yeah it's sort of spot on. I think it's perfect. So yeah you would say it's a pretty good match.
Yeah definitely. I would say it's a pretty good match. Bang on. Bang on yeah.
So Jennifer still has that birthmark. Seeing is believing and it's in pretty much the same place as Jacqueline Scar.
So I guess what this is all building up to is the big question.
We know by now what everyone else believes.
But what does Jennifer believe?
So on the question of, do you believe you are reincarnated, what would you say?
I'm like, I'm, it's like 80%,
I think it's reincarnation than the other amateurs a bit.
Because I think there must be something there, definitely.
It'd be nice to solve the mystery once and for all,
but I think it's always going to remain a mystery.
It's up to people, they make their own minds up.
They can believe it, they cannot believe it.
It's what we've told you is true.
Took best of our abilities.
Her father never lied, as we know of.
No, my dad, no, I guarantee you,
he didn't know he wouldn't lie anything about that.
He wasn't that sort of person.
Jennifer is certain that her dad didn't lie about his beliefs.
But even Jennifer says that John was no angel.
Far from it. That he had affairs more than one.
And then she told us this story from when she was about 16.
We knew that he had an affair because he took us to a woman's house.
And my dad said, if the husband comes back first, just say that you've come to see his wife
but actually my dad was seeing his wife. He put me in an absolutely awkward position to say I'm lying
for my dad he's coming that guy walks in from work and he says what are you doing here? I said oh we just
come to see your wife. And just you he brought you along as his cover story? Yeah, yeah he did. So I
said it's nice seeing you again I said I, I'll see you soon, to the wife,
where I've never even met or even seen. And we got back and I said to me, don't ever put me in that
blooming position again. I said, you really embarrassed me. He said, no, he said, I know
that I'm sorry, but what could I have done? I said, you should have left her alone.
So that is a significant story, because it shows that John was more than capable of lying.
Not only that, it shows that he wasn't beyond using his children to perpetuate these lies.
And then there's John's study. John's retreat, where he'd smoke, drink scotch, listen to his classical music and read his books.
That all sounds pretty mainstream stuff, but that's not all that went on in there.
His office was just up the stairs and he used to go and tell me, he used to say to me,
what the heck have you got now? And he used to have this voodoo doll that used to be sat on his desk
and he said to me, I don't know what he said with it, with pins. No one knows what he's got. That was like pins into it. I don't think it to me, Dad, what? Anyway,
eventually he got rid of them. Using his children to cover up his affairs, voodoo dolls, even
Jennifer thinks this stuff is a bit off colour. But voodoo dolls are trivial in comparison to what
comes next. This is something else entirely.
And it's where things get really, really dark, and this bit is definitely not suitable for kids. So feel free to skip ahead two minutes if you need to.
But we have to tell you, because Joanna wants us to tell you.
And no, it certainly wasn't just drinking and smoking and music and voodoo that went
on in John's office.
Come on up to the study, Joanna.
You know, we'll read some books and you're just new.
You're just new.
And these books, well, let's just say these were not books suitable for little children.
All about autopsies and murder victims.
I'm just like, I'm sure I was only like three.
Violent things. Horrible things. In fact, the worst things you can imagine.
When I'm just, you know, flicking through and not thinking anything of it, you know,
and that's when, you know, the touching starts and you're my good little girl and...
I just...
You would always be on your own because then there's no witnesses, you know?
Remember what Joanna told us about the doll's house that she loved playing with?
I... Oh god, this is going to sound so terrible.
she loved playing with. I...
Oh god, this is going to sound so terrible.
I asked him if I could have it once.
I said, when you die, Granddad, can I have the doll's house?
And that was my payment.
Of course you can, Joanna.
Payment.
So, yes.
What happened in John's study, that was the payment.
He was a monster. He really was. He was a pathetic monster, you know, just a pathetic,
fat little old man monster. God. I still hate him. I do. He was a vile human being.
Off mic, we asked Jennifer about the allegations of sexual abuse, and she said it was the first
time she'd heard about it. She told us that she'd never seen or heard anything like that.
Stevenson dies on February 8th, 2007. His brother and wife are living in the same nursing home
and a friend is visiting. Later the friend writes,
We all waited, perhaps as if he might come back. We all sat or stood silent. He did not
come back.
But as we know, it's not as simple as all that. Remember,
Stevenson had a theory about the intermission between lives. So Stevenson could well be there,
waiting in the middle of his own intermission, maybe enjoying a gin and tonic. But the big
question is, did Stevenson himself believe in all that?
Where did Stevenson think he was off to as he took his last laboured breaths?
Well, the truth is, the man himself kind of dodged the question.
I am frequently asked whether I myself believe in reincarnation.
I decline to answer this question, because my beliefs should make
no difference to anyone asking such a question. But he does say this.
Before the modern investigations, a belief in reincarnation had to rest on the basis
of faith, usually inculcated by the scriptures or oral teachings of a traditional religion.
Now, one may, if one wishes, believe in reincarnation on the basis of evidence."
Yet it seems not enough people wished to believe. Remember, Stevenson saw himself in the same
mould as Charles Darwin. The problem was, most of his academic colleagues did not see
him that way at all.
Tom Schroeder
I think he never really felt that his work had gotten the acceptance that he had always
hoped it would. So, I mean, it was a little bit sad at the end, I think, for him.
And here's Jim Matlock.
Stevenson did have a difficult time.
He really did.
A lot of the skeptics, most of them didn't even bother to read his work.
They just criticized it.
And he was really not prepared for the degree of pushback that he got.
And I think he was disappointed really for the rest of his life.
So was it all in vain?
Jim Matlock says no.
According to Jim, in the West,
before Stevenson, reincarnation just wasn't a thing.
It wasn't really known in Britain or in the States.
It really wasn't known.
But Stevenson put all that out there and on the table,
and by spending 40 years at it,
he put out so much data
that now it's
impossible to ignore it.
Jim is a true believer. He's a research fellow at the Parapsychology Foundation, though for
him belief is completely the wrong word.
For me it's not a belief, it's a conclusion that I've reached on the basis of the evidence.
I've seen enough evidence for the survival of bodily death. What I want to do is understand
how it happens, because if reincarnation is a fact, then this change is just about everything
about life, right? It's going to change everything. Jesse Behring has sifted through hundreds of
Stevenson's cases for his forthcoming book, The Incredible Afterlives of Dr. Stevenson.
He was a sort of rogue but almost necessary figure in the history of science because there
are a set of findings that, if you look at them in the right light at least, really makes
you second guess everything you thought you knew.
Here's Jeffrey Long of Elizabethtown College.
I'm looking forward to the day that this is taken seriously as a field
that science explores and I think Stevenson's an important pioneer in that regard. That if that
time comes we'll look back on Stevenson as someone who helped pave the way for the new paradigm.
And here's how Stevenson saw himself. I am the scientist who provides the evidence with which others can form their own conclusions.
So back to the Pollock case.
What if the whole thing was just a hoax?
John Pollock was faking it all.
Where would that leave Dr Stevenson and his science?
Well, you'd have to say it would be a pretty massive fail, right?
Remember, Stevenson said that the Pollock case provided...
Some of the strongest evidence known to me in favour of reincarnation.
But what did he really have? What was that evidence?
Well, here's where we're at.
There's really only two pieces of evidence that don't rely on John and Florence for
verification.
The birthmark, which Stevenson verified, and Poppy has now verified too, and the phobia
of cars, which Jennifer has confirmed.
Everything else is down to John and Florence's word, their word that the behaviour of the
twins was consistent with the behaviour of their dead sisters Jacqueline and Joanna.
As we know, Stevenson saw himself as a man of science. He was rigorous, and he was a
shrink, a shrink who read people for a living, who prided himself on having a really well
honed bullshit detector. So if it was John's big lie, it was Stevenson's epic fail. But beyond
the Pollock case, is Stevenson part of an even more epic fail? Because our story starts in the
60s right? And there's an argument that says everything changes in the 60s. And it's not us
saying this by the way, it's people like Kurt Anderson in his book Fantasyland, and the theory goes something like this. Up until the 60s, science and reason were
one thing, faith and belief were something else entirely. But during the 60s, serious scientists
like Stevenson start dabbling in stuff like parapsychology and studying reincarnation, that kind of thing.
Suddenly, science and reason and faith and belief get all modelled up.
What is real? What is fiction? What is fantasy? What is reality?
That's Kurt Anderson. So, yeah, science and belief start to challenge each other in the same space.
The danger being, nobody can tell one from the other anymore,
which grows into the political space. I'm most troubled about the direction which we're going,
you know, and the post-truth, post-scientific age that we may be entering. That's one theory,
but Stevenson was part of a really big cultural change.
Interesting idea.
So, how do we square it all?
All the different accounts, all the contradictions, all the inconsistencies.
The John that Lisa and Joanna knew, John the grandfather, controlling, abusive.
And the John that Jennifer knew, John the Father, loving, fun.
Well maybe Lauren can help us out here, remember she's John's granddaughter but he died
two years before she was born.
We told her everything and we asked her what she makes of it all.
Now she already knew that her dad, John's son Keith, hated John.
And she knew the rough outline of the family legend,
saw it on that grainy VHS in that religious studies class in high school.
But beyond that, most of it Lauren's been hearing for the first time.
I believe that yes, he was not a very nice man. And I think he probably did some really horrible
things. But with the twins, he was probably an absolutely wonderful doting father who treated
them like princesses because they, you know, were his absolute joy. They were his daughters back
from the dead that he was so grateful for. He probably wanted to protect them and pretend like
nothing had ever happened. And maybe the boys were a reminder of that awful past. I definitely
think parents can do that, but you know, you change in life, don't you?
So the other thing is, they say that it was a hoax, and Joanna specifically says she believes
that the girls were coached or encouraged.
I could easily think like that as well. The only thing that makes me believe that it's real is because I have a belief in spirituality.
I believe that people don't pass away.
I believe that spirits live on and I know that I feel spirits.
So I feel my sister and my mum and my dad.
And so for two little girls that had died, it's not weird for me to think that they would
come back in another way through other people.
That could make sense to me.
Whether or not it's the truth, whether or not anything that John said or the twins,
whether or not anything like that actually happened, I've always grown up with a belief
that something could happen.
I'm open to the idea.
Lauren and Jennifer have never spoken about any of this stuff.
They're hearing most of it for the first time in this podcast and, in truth, they barely
know each other.
They haven't seen each other since Lauren was a kid, but now Lauren is keen for them
to talk. And let's face it, is keen for them to talk.
And let's face it, they've got plenty to talk about.
They've got a lot in common.
I mean, they're both Pollocks at the end of the day, but it goes much further than
that.
They've both lost a lot of people in their lives.
Both lost their parents young.
Both lost a sister young.
And they're both spiritual.
Lauren feels spirits all around her, the spirits of her loved ones, and Jennifer does too.
The spirit of her twin sister Gillian, who died over 20 years ago. Still with her, in her, all the time.
Because on nighttime I can feel somebody touching me.
I can literally feel something.
Like I'm sitting here now, I can feel Jill's body coming through mine now.
I can hear it, the way she's used to talking and speaking.
I can feel it on me now.
Can't explain to anybody what it's like.
If I'm upset or something like that,
somebody was whispering to me,
don't cry, don't cry Jenny, don't cry.
And I thought, is that you Jill?
And it just went.
Wow.
Yeah, I sat there and they said, don't cry, don't cry.
Don't cry Jenny, don't cry.
So Lauren and Jennifer believe, big time.
But not all the Pollocks are believers.
Joanna in particular.
I'm not spiritual. I have no faith in any sort of invisible being. I have faith in human beings
killing each other and doing shitty things to each other. But as long as you personally
But as long as you personally live your life and don't cause harm to others, when you die, you're done.
You know?
God, because I couldn't do this all over again.
No!
I don't have the closet space.
Okay, that's fair enough.
And now, there's one last thing we want to tell you.
This one time, Stevenson was caught off guard. He was with Carol Bowman, who we've heard
from, and she asked him a question. To which the answer is very revealing.
For once, it gives us a glimpse into the real Stevenson, not Stevenson the man of science
who fancied himself as the next Charles Darwin, but Stevenson the man, Stevenson who lost
a child and who nursed his first wife through her final months.
And maybe this gives us a glimpse into his motivation, why he dedicated a lifetime, a long lifetime, to reincarnation in the face
of hostility and ridicule, even though it was a trial, across the bear.
So Carroll asked him why he thought we'd be reincarnated into the same family.
Stevenson, whose defining work is 2,268 pages long, answered in just three words.
Isn't love enough?
Isn't love enough?
Now Lauren really liked this idea, and it got her thinking about Joanna and Jacqueline.
I think that's really lovely.
I think as two little girls, you know, you can imagine whether they would have talked about it together
and been like, oh, where should we go?
Once they died, they've been like, what do we do now?
Where do we go now?
Yeah, well, let's just go home.
And it's nice to think that maybe they had each other.
They weren't acting alone.
They were working out together what they wanted to do and where they wanted to go and how
to move forward after they'd died. You know, your comfort is your family. So it's like,
that's where you feel the most safe and the most loved.
So you return there because,
yeah, that's all you ever want in life.
Love, that's all you ever want in life.
And isn't it love that sustains Lauren and Jennifer's beliefs?
It's not evidence, not proof, not those things
that Stevenson spent so many years hunting for.
But love, love is enough.
So, one of the Pollock Curse.
Even Joanna, the non-believer, believed in that.
Well, she thinks that the curse is now broken, consigned to the past.
She's living in California, surrounded by those pistachio farms, sewing her Renaissance
costumes.
The North of England feels a very, very long way away.
And she's still intending to repair that doll's house.
Her sister Lisa, meanwhile, loves spending time with her mum and her grandkids.
She drives over every week to see them.
Lauren had a very happy childhood.
She lives by the sea now, the spirits of her lost loved ones all around her.
She's moving in with her partner any day now and they're expecting a baby.
While Jennifer and Steve, they just seem very happy together after nearly 30 years of marriage.
Jennifer watched over, protected, comforted by the spirit of her twin sister Jillian.
All is well.
So this is the end, but what do we make of it all?
What's the takeaway?
Well, Faith surely does have something to tell us about this story.
About the Pollock story.
And about John Pollock.
Because remember what we said at the start, everything in this story does come
back to John. So let's try this and you can take it or leave it. Beware of false prophets
who come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly are ravenous wolves. And reincarnation or not, maybe that's about as close as you can get
to an eternal truth.
But I reckon the question that you're really asking is this.
What about Stevenson's padlock?
Has the spirit of our professor managed to crack it open?
Well the answer to that is no.
Sorry about that.
The padlock is still firmly locked but oh hang on a minute.
What's this?
Dr Stevenson? is still firmly locked but oh hang on a minute what's this dr stevenson dr stevenson
you've been listening to extra sensory an apple original podcast produced by Blanchard House and hosted by me Will Sharp.
The producer is Poppy Damon. Extra Sensory is written by Lawrence Grisel. Additional
production by Seren Jones. Original music by Daniel Lloyd Evans, Louis Nank Manel and Toby
Matamong. Sound design and mix engineering by Vulcan Kisseltug and Daniel Lloyd Evans.
The part of John Pollock was played by Peter Peverly, Florence Pollock by Jasmine Hyde
and Dr Ian Stevenson by Mark Arnold.
Research by Alan Sargent, Fact Checking by Jesse Behring and Karen Walton.
Our Head of Rights is Jim Peake, Legal Counsel is Angie Mel.
Our Managing Producer is Amika Shortino Nolan. The
Creative Director of Blanchard House is Rosie Pye. The Executive Producer and
Head of Content at Blanchard House is Laurence Grizzell.