The Telepathy Tapes - Ep. 8: Gatekeepers of Truth - Telepathy and the Spelling Controversy
Episode Date: November 11, 2024In Episode 8 of The Telepathy Tapes, we dive into the controversial world of spelling as a method of communication for non-speakers with autism. This episode reveals the deep divide between families a...nd educators who see spelling as a pathway to independence and those who doubt its legitimacy. Through heartfelt accounts, including a mother’s struggle with her son’s school and the stigmas imposed by professional organizations, we witness the courage of those fighting for non-speakers’ rights to communicate. Expanding the exploration of telepathy beyond spelling, we meet Kyle and his mother Caroline, who communicate solely through dream telepathy and non-verbal communication, demonstrating the boundless forms that connection can take. As we uncover these remarkable experiences, we’re invited to question what we know about communication, autonomy, and the unseen capabilities within us all. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Whether you're in your running era, Pilates era, or yoga era, dive into Peloton workouts that work with you.
From meditating at your kid's game to mastering a strength program, they've got everything you need to keep knocking down your goals.
No pressure to be who you're not.
Just workouts and classes to strengthen who you are.
So no matter your era, make it your best with Peloton.
Find your push.
Find your power.
Peloton.
Visit Peloton at onepeloton.ca. Hey, what's up, everyone? This is Kai Dickens, and you're listening
to the Telepathy Tapes podcast. My son said to me, I can hear thoughts.
What is this phenomenon happening? Why are his mind and my mind completely connected?
Telepathy is the tip of the iceberg with their spiritual gifts.
People don't understand that they can do this.
They don't even have to be in the same room, the same zip code.
For decades, a very specific group of people have been claiming telepathy is happening in their homes and in their classrooms.
And nobody has believed them. Nobody has listened to them. But on this podcast, we do.
Welcome to the eighth episode of the Telepathy Tapes.
Spelling is the greatest hope parents have to unlock their kids,
and it's also the sharpest weapon used against them.
If you're not in this world, it's difficult to understand how contentious and vicious the attacks are against spellers and their method of communication.
Lily, the speller that you met in episode four, sent me this message.
Spelling is the only method that has given hope to non-speakers and shown the world our beautiful minds.
But so many people don't want to believe that the words are our own.
The very existence of this episode is controversial because there is so much at stake.
For the parents, it's hope.
For the spellers, it's their autonomy and education.
And for those railing against spelling,
there's money, systems, and the ramifications
of admitting a mistake that has costed thousands of kids
their education, their hope, and personhood.
In episode three, you met Katie
in Houston, and Katie had lost all hope that her son would ever communicate. And just before he
was done with high school, he found his voice. When Houston first began communicating, I was
so excited. I was writing down every single word he spelled and telling every single person I knew.
And of course, one of the most important people to tell was his school and his teachers and the administrators. And so I was thrilled when I
finally got his teacher on the phone and over the summer and let her know about what Houston was
doing. And she shocked me by saying, oh, oh, that's been discredited. I was shocked by that because I was looking at it. I
knew it was true. I was watching it. And I thought to myself, she must have never seen it. I think
this is a great example of how we have prejudices and don't believe things until we see them. If
someone else says it's not true, then we just take their word for it instead of actually
finding out ourselves. He only had a few months of school left, but I wanted him to
be able to be included in a general ed classroom for the tiny amount of time he had left.
So Katie and the principal scheduled an IEP meeting to get Houston on a different educational
track for the remainder of the year. At that point, I'd been to about 20 IEP meetings,
and I was shocked when I walked in that day and found triple the number of the year. At that point, I'd been to about 20 IEP meetings, and I was shocked when I walked in that day
and found triple the number of people that were usually there.
There were people I'd never met before.
And this was not normal at all.
I was nervous, and I sat down.
And I had always had such a good relationship
with his teachers and everyone in the schools.
And before I even sat down, this woman who was
the director of speech services for the county leaned forward very aggressively and very
aggressively gestured at the stencil and said, we don't believe in that. We don't support that.
And I was thinking, what, you don't support letters? I was confused. I didn't know what she was talking about.
I was clueless that anyone could possibly be against letters or pointing. She then went on to
say that ASHA, who I didn't know what ASHA was, had put out a statement saying they didn't support
it, so they weren't going to support it either. ASHA is the American Speech-Language Hearing Association, and they're in charge of certification
of speech pathologists in this field. My heart was just beating through my chest.
I didn't understand why they weren't for him, why they weren't supportive. They knew him,
and at the end of the day, they let him attend a U.S. history class for his last few months of school.
And that was his whole education.
Houston had been educated like he was a toddler for his entire life.
Nobody believed he was in there.
And he had no way to show that he was,
because learning to communicate via spelling was not taught in his school.
And this is happening all over the country,
where parents are having to fight for their children.
They're having to fight school systems, they're having to fight teachers.
Maria, the speech therapist from Chicago that you met in episode five said,
Many of the students I have, they're hitting roadblock after roadblock.
In order for them to spell at school, they need to prove that they can use this letter board.
Prove it.
Kids don't have to prove they can read before they're taught to read.
So why would they need to prove that they can use this letter board before they can be schooled?
If they speak Spanish, they don't have to speak English completely before they come to school.
So it's just a different language.
Carrie, the speech pathologist from episode five, teaches spelling under the
radar. She even used a pseudonym when talking to me. If we are using it as professionals,
that we risk losing our license. I know that threat, on me it even sits heavy. I know that
behavior specialists, they say right out, if you engage in facilitated communication,
you will lose your license. Spelling as a way to communicate has been controversial based on
outdated research, stigmas, and the long-held belief that non-speakers just aren't competent.
I think one of the key things to understand is that facilitated communication, the first method
of spelling ever devised utilized touch. The
facilitator would often touch the wrist or hands of the speller. And after some high-profile court
cases, which we'll talk about shortly, that method evolved into new methods like spelling to
communicate and the rapid prompting method, which don't use touch at all. Maria, who's worked with
non-speaking students for over 30 years, explains the difference. With the spell to communicate and the rapid prompting method, one of the prime rules is you don't touch them.
Carrie, who has also worked in this space for decades, uses these newer methods of spelling.
There is no physical touch involved at all from the get-go. And the problem is,
ASHA has lumped RPM and ASHA has lumped SGC in with facilitated communication.
And ASHA posted a statement saying they warn against using all forms of spelling.
And many schools point to this statement as the reason they don't teach it.
I am a speech-language pathologist since 1999, and I am a member of ASHA, and I do spell with my child. In episode four, you met John-Paul and Libby, and Libby is a member of ASHA and I do spell with my child. In episode four, you met John
Paul and Libby and Libby is a member of ASHA. Therapists kind of have to be a member of ASHA
if they want to get jobs, if they want to be able to bill insurance, if they want to have
their certificate of clinical confidence. But Libby is also a mother. And we tried every therapy around. I mean,
I have an extensive list. And then when John Paul was about eight years old, I was at a conference.
And another attendee told her about a new spelling technique called the rapid prompting
method or RPM, where non-speakers can point to a letter board. This uses gross motor skills,
unlike speaking, which requires fine motor skills.
I literally was looking at her and thinking, I've never heard of it. I needed to see it for myself.
I know I had tried everything else. So she went to a workshop to observe kids who were communicating with RPM. I saw kids just like John Paul coming in, and they were spelling. I couldn't
believe it. And I just burst into tears. And I just couldn't stop crying.
This is it.
I knew from being a speech pathologist and taking biology and understanding the brain,
it all made sense to me.
And as you all know, John Paul started communicating.
He was able to spell.
He was learning age-appropriate academics.
It just changed his whole world.
And he became quite the poet.
He had a ton of language and knowledge and even knew other languages.
And Libby had to reconcile that understanding with her professional organization
who forbids parents to teach their kids to spell to communicate.
Why would people doubt this?
And I really, truly do not understand it.
A lot of parents and teachers feel gaslit.
They can see with their own eyes that their children or students are expressing unique, independent thoughts, often about topics that they
know nothing about, and sometimes even in different languages. And nobody is pushing their hand or
touching them. So when you're told it's not real and it's not happening, it's frustrating. It's
maddening. It is life-changing. And once the parent learns the method, I mean,
we just would converse at dinner with the letterboard and John Paul is a part of the
conversation. I just don't know why there is so much pushback on it. I visited the ASHA website
where they listed several reasons for opposing spelling, including uncertainty around who's
doing the spelling. And this feels just so bonkers to me. I've seen Akil type into an iPad while sitting by himself across the room from everyone else. I've watched
Houston point to letters while vocalizing them, as you heard during the UNO tests.
Spellers are often relaying totally shocking information to parents,
stuff that never occurred to them. He said that I cannot see my body in my mind.
Like when Akil relayed to his mother that he didn't realize he had hands and fingers.
This was critical information for his mom, and it allowed her to get him the therapy he needed.
There were so many things that Houston spelled that I didn't understand when he spelled them.
He explained that he felt like he was falling out of the bottom of his feet. And he was talking about how he couldn't feel his tongue
and how he would flap his hands so he knew where his hands were
and about having alternating blindness.
And all of these things didn't make sense to me
until I started doing the investigative research.
Their physiology doesn't work even remotely the same.
John Paul could do math.
I have dyscalculia, which is a math disability.
I could never do the math that he can do.
And his poetry and his writings,
they were just effortless for him.
They aren't coming from me.
I can't do what he could do.
The accusation that most spellers
are not actually communicating,
that someone is pushing their hand around or moving around the letterboard,
is unabashedly, unequivocally false.
I have filmed dozens of spellers, and I have never witnessed such a thing.
You can watch the clips of the spellers you've met at thetelepathytapes.com.
I also recommend the Spellers movie, which you can watch for free on YouTube.
It follows many incredible spellers who are communicating independently.
The ASHA website also lists as a concern,
Yes, most spellers need a communication partner, just like those using interpreters or translators or sign language do. Asha also claims the technique lacks evidence,
which reminds me of what Joe,
the special needs minister from Highland Church in Arizona said about evidence in the last episode.
I looked early on and I saw that there were sources
that were skeptical of spelling.
And I actually looked into some of the academic papers on it.
And what I found was the 40 or so negative papers
were earlier on in the process. They were
back in the 90s. Then at one point, the spellers improved their methodology. You find later on,
there's like over 100 papers that are now saying, wait a minute, we missed something here.
I double checked this, and there are over 100 peer-reviewed studies using various methodologies
that confirm that
non-speakers are authoring their own messages. There was a recent study out of the University
of Virginia where somebody even said, let's track eye movements and hand movements and see what
happens first. And what they found is the eye went first to the letter, then the finger followed the eye. So I think those old notions of spelling is kind of phony or fake.
Those are being dispelled.
And I have no doubt whatsoever that the information I'm getting is coming from the spellers.
The thing is, Kai, we can't all be lying.
It's frustrating because everyone listens to the experts and take their word for it.
In my case, I honestly didn't know that this was so controversial.
So I looked into it.
I tried it and it changed our lives.
It makes me sad.
They say we're these desperate parents that are making this up or whatever, because that's
just not true.
I believe that stigma is a big reason asha hasn't changed
its stance a series of high-profile court cases in the 1990s cast doubt on facilitated communication
an earlier method that involved more physical assistance than today's independent spelling
techniques as abc news had reported on primetime live in 1992 a new therapy had appeared on the scene something called facilitated communication or FC
It seemed like a revolutionary idea that if someone holds an autistic child's hand or arm a certain way
That child can type their own thoughts in several cases
facilitated communication produced accusations of sexual abuse against family members or caregivers
produced accusations of sexual abuse against family members or caregivers,
sparking court cases and intense media attention.
It was just a few keystrokes.
A couple of sentences on a computer screen.
The severely autistic Aislinn Wendrow is describing her weekend and types this on her computer at school.
My dad gets me up. He puts his hands on my private parts. Wendro's lives would never
be the same. Allegations like this that turned out to be false turn public opinion against
facilitated communication. Several different cases where individuals who were not trained
and got their messages with the person who was spelling discredited.
ABC News reported that the facilitator in this case
was not adequately trained or prepared to serve as a communication partner.
She sat through one hour, she said, of unpaid training.
One hour?
One hour.
That was enough for Scarcella to facilitate those sex allegations
and everything to follow.
The allegations were just horrific. There is a lot of suspect activity around those cases.
Untrained or barely trained facilitators were working with non-speakers and they should not
have been. But due to these awful cases that really uprooted lives, facilitated communication
took the blame, not the facilitators. Every child who was gaining, learning something and being able, they lost their voice.
It happened so fast. What was so tragic is that facilitated communication got wrapped up in this
controversy. And that seemed to be the story that continued to run in the papers, even though all of these other incredible individuals
were independently communicating. A valuable tool was villainized and taken away from thousands
because a few untrained people weren't properly using the tool. And it's easy to say, great,
let's make sure these other forms of spelling are the norm and facilitated communication is
gone forever because it involves touch. But Carrie, who has worked with hundreds of non-speakers, says this approach isn't helpful
either. We know that autistics have difficulty knowing where their body is in space. I've had
kids who told me they don't feel their hand. They don't feel their arm. So if they're not feeling
their arm or their hand, how can they type? But if I touch them and I put a backward pressure on their arm and they have to push forward,
which is what happens with facilitated communication, they know where their arm is in space.
Libby also says that we shouldn't completely throw out facilitated communication.
It actually brought our spelling to a whole new level
because I didn't realize that there were times
John Paul couldn't feel his arms.
You know, he needed just a little resistance
to get things going.
So Libby would touch John Paul
in the beginning of a spelling session
just to help him out.
And without having tried doing from empathy,
I wouldn't have gotten to an elevated place
of spelling with John Paul.
Some parents get to where they just have to put a
finger on their shoulder so that they can feel their arm. One parent, I know this sounds crazy,
but she actually just had to grab a strand of hair of her child and cool a little bit so that
her child could feel herself. And that's where they got to. But John Paul sometimes needed me
to just put a hand on his wrist just so he could push back initially to feel. And that helped John Paul get to the place where he can type
totally independently without being touched at all, like I witnessed when I was with him.
Not everyone needs it, but the kids that need it have to have it.
I want to pivot back to telepathy now because the spiritual gifts in non-speakers
exists with or without spelling. Like remember that Marianne Harrington, the teacher in Wisconsin,
first realized her student was reading her mind when he drew her pictures of the treats that she
had left in the car. Libby first realized that John Paul might be reading her mind when he'd
find the Halloween candy the second she thought of where it was hidden. Spelling gave parents and teachers the validation that they needed to know
that this was indeed happening.
But the telepathy isn't because of the spelling.
And there are some parents and non-speakers who have foregone letter boards altogether,
utilizing only a telepathic link or non-verbal communication to communicate.
We don't use the letter boarding or sign language
because that's just something that Kyle's never gravitated to. But, you know, music and dreams seems to be our own personal
language. This is Caroline, and she lives with her son Kyle in Cornwall, England. I've been feeling
it for years ever since Kyle was little that I could understand him from a nonverbal perspective.
Kyle is 38 years old, and he and Caroline have communicated via telepathy for most of their lives.
He's never spelled using a letter board.
I would have never met Caroline had she not made the bold choice to come out about her telepathic experience online during the COVID lockdown.
I think I put it up on Eventbrite to start with.
She created an invitation to an online discussion that she was hosting, and she asked the broader community.
Are you a parent, caregiver, or professional working in the field of autism? Have you ever felt that you've had a telepathic
connection with the children that you either teach or care for? For over 30 years, Caroline
was hesitant to expose this truth, to publicly put this out there. I've just come to a point in
my life. If I don't do it now, I never do it. You know, as we get older, one never knows how long
one's got left. And I thought, I'm just going to put it out there. And I really don't do it now, I never do it. You know, as we get older, one never knows how long one's got left.
And I thought, I'm just going to put it out there.
And I really don't know how it's going to be received.
And sure enough, RSVP started pouring in to attend her online discussion.
I had people just saying, yeah, I have this experience.
And yes, I do believe that my child has telepathic skills or can read my mind.
Teachers were coming forward saying, I've definitely
experienced this in the classroom, but I didn't want to jeopardize my career in any shape or form.
Caroline was hearing from people from all over England and Europe.
Teachers and practitioners and parents have been doing this right from the get-go,
but it's just something that's not recognized. We all agreed that safety in numbers. So the more of us that there
are, the stronger and more galvanized this whole movement is becoming. The movement of speaking
this truth, non-speakers are capable of telepathy as well as other unexplained size, skills,
and spiritual gifts. And one of Kyle's unique gifts is that he's able to communicate with his
mom telepathically through lucid dreaming.
A lucid dream is when you become aware that you're dreaming while you're in the dream, which allows you to control it or influence it.
So the first time he came, he must have been about eight.
I was in a dream. I wasn't lucid. I was just kind of hanging out in this dream.
And then Kyle was there and he seemed really like your average guy.
And he kept looking at me as if to say, come on, mom, wake up.
And I was still unconscious in this dream.
I still wasn't lucid.
And then he handed me the Ace of Spades playing card.
Kyle, just a boy at the time, had to find a way to get his mom out of a deep dream and into a lucid dream so they could communicate.
He sort of looked at me as if to say, right, wake up.
And I just didn't. And then he took the card off me and folded it up. And
then he started to rip the corners, a bit like how children make the little snowflakes that
you put in the window. And he held this little card up with all the holes in it. And then he
put it up against my eye and he said, now wake up. And at that point, I went into a lucid dream.
And then he started talking to me.
And then I was saying to Kyle,
you're talking to me, Kyle, you can talk.
And he said, in dreaming, mom, I can talk,
but you have to wake up.
The next morning at breakfast,
Kyle took an ace of spades out of a deck of cards
and held it to his eye like he did in the dream,
validating for his mom that what did in the dream, validating for his mom
that what happened in the dream was intentional. That dream enabled me and Kyle to create a bridge
between the dream world where we can have conversations and I can understand Kyle in
that world, you know, where I can't always in the physical world. There's something called
dream bridging that traces back thousands of years across many different cultures. Indigenous shamans use dreams to communicate with spirits,
ancestors, and guides. Mongolian and Siberian shamans called it soul journeying, and they
believed one's spirit or consciousness could leave the body to explore other realms, including other
people's dreams. Once Kyle is in his mom's dream,
he'll do something unusual to get her into a lucid dream state.
You know, hand me a pink umbrella or something.
He's handed me a glass of water that's had ice in it,
and I've held the ice in my mouth in the dream.
Whatever it is, the cue is for me to wake up
and have a deeper experience with him.
And the reason Kyle makes sure his mom goes into lucid dreaming
is so that she doesn't forget their conversation. I get to hear what his needs are and the
adjustments I need to make in his every day to make his physical world, his physical body happy.
So if he's not feeling well or even to things like food allergies, sometimes he will be like,
I can't eat that anymore, mom. Like tomato ketchup.
He's always liked tomato ketchup. And I'm like, okay, I won't give that to you anymore. And even
myself, he will say to me, mom, you need to listen to me and get rest and stuff like that.
I wanted to understand how often Kyle and his mom communicate via dreams.
The more we do it, the more accessible it is to us and the easier it is for me to
get into a dream. It's a
good couple of times a week. If I've had a busy day, then I might just go to sleep and crash out
and not necessarily go into a lucid dream. But if I'm pretty well restored, then I'll be much more
open at nighttime to have those type of dreams. And so Kyle and Caroline have just never relied
on language the way most of us do. And this has become Kyle's way of telepathically communicating his needs with
almost anyone. He comes to other people too. People say, I dreamt about Kyle last night,
and he was trying to wake me up in this dream. And then all of a sudden, I was having a conversation
with him. I wanted you to meet Kyle because he demonstrates that the spiritual gifts and
telepathy exists whether someone is spelling or not. Spelling certainly seems to open up a deep merging or telepathic channel between people.
But the telepathy and the spiritual gifts are there with or without spelling. And the second
thing Kyle demonstrates is that non-speakers are in there regardless of whether or not they
communicate via spelling. And we know this because Kyle can write and play music. I didn't know he could sing and I certainly didn't know he could play an instrument until
he started having music therapy 14 years ago. The first time his music therapist,
Corinne, came to the house. She gave him her keyboard and he had a whole repertoire
of songs that he'd obviously heard and remembered and logged in his memory somewhere
and started singing Sealed with a Kiss.
And he started playing it on the keyboard.
Sealed with a kiss, it is gonna be a cold, lonely summer.
Because I have absolutely no idea that that was in him.
I think now he kind of, he takes music from somewhere else.
It's like he can access like perfect pitch,
which is really difficult to do.
And he has an ability to pick up an instrument
and play it by ear without any sort of lessons
or being shown what to do.
Kyle is always communicating something with his music.
And one song Kyle played a lot in the beginning
makes perfect sense. Whenever I want you All I have to do is to you
He's never had any formal music lessons
or formal singing lessons as such.
It's all what he hears and he remembers and embodies.
And I don't think that's just happening in the physical plane.
I think that's happening somewhere else the physical plane. I think that's
happening somewhere else for him when he's on his own playing his keyboard and he can pull on this
repertoire that he's gathered. He's able to almost like store it in like his own personal iCloud.
Singing has also become a way that Kyle can communicate his needs quickly during everyday
life. Like if Kyle is hungry, he would find a song that had food involved or like
he's thirsty and it has drink involved and he will just choose from his thousands of songs that he's
got in his mental archive. Some people talk about it as a seculalia, but Kyle always chooses
song titles that are relevant to what's going on in the situation. They're never just
a random thing that he comes out with. They all have meaning and they are a way that he
can make his feelings and emotions and his needs known to me.
Caroline leaned into Kyle's interests, surrounding him with other musicians and music therapy and
even a music producer. He's written two albums and he's just writing another one at the moment. And one
of the ways he writes these albums is through the telepathic link he establishes with People
and Dreams. We bridge through dreaming and that's how the songwriting started where Kyle started
giving me words and would hum a tune when I'd wake up remembering that tune or almost humming
that tune as I was waking up in the morning. For his album named Beyond the Syntax.
He came to me and he told me that he wanted me to write songs about what it's like to be autistic,
what it's like for him to experience the world. He said, these songs I want you to write for me.
You've just got to try and remember. So I dreamt pretty much all the songs in one night. So I woke
up trying to write all the words down that I could
remember and then I fell back to sleep again. And then I got up in the morning, started to carry on
writing again, seeing if I could recall the themes of the songs and some of the words he'd given me.
My job is to get pen to paper as fast as possible to be able to get those words down on paper for
him. And then once they get into the music studio, Kyle can really insert himself regarding any changes he wants made to the song.
When we're in the music studio and we're actually recording them, that's when he's really telling me
if he's happy or not happy, because it either flows or it doesn't. He either sings the songs
that we've written for him and put the music to them, and it's a very organic, natural process,
or he kind of gets almost a bit catatonic and he stops, as if to say it's a very organic, natural process. Or he kind of gets
almost a bit catatonic and he stops as if to say, no, this doesn't feel right. So sometimes we have
to change the melody or we might have to change the bridge of the song so it feels right in his
body. Sometimes if there's a word that doesn't fit with him, he will actually change that word while he's singing. And he also changes the timing sometimes.
Come now, just take my hand.
And then actually the song ends up feeling a totally different song sometimes.
But I think that's him orientating energetically
to how he wants that song to feel
inside him as he's singing it. He's the vessel for the song.
I know he does it for autism and the non-speakers. He feels this to be his mission or he's being of service to all the other people like him
that can't express how they feel and think and what they experience on a daily basis.
The letters take up too much of my time.
The letters take up too much of my time
By choosing this you miss what's mine
By choosing this you miss what's mine
Just listen now and listen on I think he's singing that on behalf of other people that are like him,
that can't communicate through conventional language to the everyday world.
Caroline has also learned to engage in two-way telepathy with Kyle during the day,
where she can hear his thoughts too. And if Kyle wants to communicate with her telepathically,
she said it's almost like she can sense or feel him coming in.
There's like a sort of an invisible pressure that he's impinging a kind of energy on me
that makes me take notice.
This reminds me of the sense of being stared at that Dr. Sheldrake has studied,
this innate sense we all have when someone is focused on us or looking at us without words.
That's my cue to empty out and have nothing in my internal dialogue.
And if I'm quiet and I'm receptive, then that's when he will give me a stream of words or even song lyrics.
Parents and teachers capable of this two-way telepathy say that emptying out is key.
When I think nothing and I'm just in my body awareness, then that's when we really go into that deeper field.
And it's like the waking dream.
that deeper field and it's like the waking dream and sometimes I get a massive download where Kyle might send her lyrics or music for almost an entire album in one sitting which I will sit
and write and I wrote a whole album lyrically in a whole afternoon and I kept showing him and I
went good and he would go like that shaking his head as if to say you know not good you know and
I would then change things and he'd go yes yes, yes, like that. So I hear music and tone and frequency and melody through this channel. ideas. I've woken up in the night with a fully formed script or story and can barely write fast
enough to capture it all. Many creators talk about moments like this. Mary Shelley described
Frankenstein as coming to her in a vivid dream, and Paul McCartney described the melody for
Yesterday coming to him in a dream. J.K. Rowling said Harry Potter came to her almost fully formed
on a train ride. It shouldn't have been four hours. It was delayed. And Harry was there. Harry's star
was there. She's star was there.
She's described this experience as something that happened to her, almost like the story was ready to be told and she was just the channel through which it arrived.
It's a very strange thing, but I know I'm not alone in this among writers. It was as though I was given a piece of information and I just had to find out the rest of the information. It wasn't really as though I were inventing it. I was working backwards and working forwards to see what must have happened. Caroline and others have shared
that this is what it's like to receive a telepathic download from another person. Caroline once
explained that if someone says the word Christmas out loud, it's just a word. But if they send it
telepathically, it's everything. It's the Christmas tree. It's the decorations. It's the turkey. It's
the complete embodiment of an experience.
A speller once told me that telepathy is the purest form of communication.
With telepathy, there's no deception or sarcasm,
there's no white lies or omissions or exaggeration.
You receive exactly what someone is feeling and intending,
unfiltered by ego or worldview.
Can we all become telepathic so we can receive these messages?
Yeah, I'm sure we can,
but maybe we've got to learn
how to meet in the field.
Caroline's brave post on Eventbrite,
inviting people to talk about telepathy,
has grown into a supportive network
where teachers and parents
can share notes and experiences.
I've been talking to some of the mums
and the educators in our meetings online that we've been doing,
some of these educators are almost like, I don't want to say the chosen ones, but certainly they
have a faculty that I don't actually have, Kai. I can't hear the hill and the fields that they
talk about. I can feel some of it. I didn't ask Caroline about it at the time, but I certainly
took note that she said some of the educators and parents in their meetings say they can access the Hill or other fields along with the non-speakers.
For me, it's about normalizing telepathy, normalizing non-speaking communication.
I know we all do it very differently and very uniquely, which is amazing because we need to open the field and widen the field.
Because the truth about telepathy
and spiritual gifts within this community have been kept so secret, there's not yet a shared
language to describe how it works or the elements of it. But Caroline uses a great metaphor to help
explain everything. I think normal, average, everyday, conventional language is in the first
bandwidth. The second bandwidth, I think, is where me and
Kyle communicate through music, when I can feel the lyrics that he's portraying or he's conveying
to me. And that's more of the creative field. And then the third field or the field beyond the
second field, if you like, is more of this collective consciousness, the realm, the field.
You're more likely, I think, to connect with another being or another consciousness of some
description, whether it's human or non-human, that further bandwidth. So I think the further you can
go out or the further you can expand your consciousness into these different fields,
the more information
there is available to you. And so when non-speakers explain going to a different realm to get
information or to even talk to a higher power, it seems as though their consciousness has expanded
enough to make this easy for them. And most non-speakers will say the reason this is so easy
for them is because they are not as bound to their bodies as the rest of us. I don't use the word
savant for Kyle. He's just tapping into something not of your normal bandwidth.
You know, it's not from the narrow field.
It's from a much wider field.
I think this is just like you say, Kai, it's the tip of the iceberg.
We know that language is the minor, not the major.
It's the micro, not the macro.
And this is what's missing in the war around spelling.
The non-speakers are working from the major, the macro, the third ring or beyond of consciousness, where information can be accessed and shared without pointing to letters. And to get them to point to these letters takes so much motor planning and effort that they need someone in the room to help them regulate, to know where their body is, maybe even to help them come down to our little narrow first ring of consciousness, where language rules the day. It'd be really interesting to ask people that
are letter boarders, like, does it take too much energy for non-speakers to actually speak?
Hence why they don't. I just wonder if they lose their sense of self by speaking,
it almost like dilutes them and they can't stay in that
field. Like maybe for the non-speakers, being in that expanded farthest ring of consciousness
is preferred. And to come back into the language space, they would lose something of themselves
or lose some of their access. I do wonder that. And now to bring us back to spelling.
And now to bring us back to spelling.
Parents, you know, they get gaslit all the time.
Parents often say they are facing a war on many fronts.
One front is against Asha and the outdated misnomer that spellers aren't speaking for themselves. But they're also fighting a war against their own, the gatekeepers in the spelling community,
who are trying to shut down any mention of telepathy and
other spiritual gifts. What happens online on Facebook or even at conferences, parents will
ask, is anyone else having this experience of feeling like their kid is reading their mind?
And they get shut down immediately. We get shushed a lot. Every time someone posts something about telepathy or this podcast, it's removed. They think that
this information about telepathy getting out to the wrong people could hurt our spellers.
And they've just decided to take it upon themselves to remove any information about
the truth.
In our first few episodes, you heard this mentioned.
Sometimes our greatest allies and supporters
and people that have advocated can also be acting as gatekeepers.
And this goes back to the very beginning.
Mainstream proponents of facilitated communication were so opposed to telepathy,
they did what they could to suppress it.
And they were successful in doing so.
They were concerned that if we got into this type of thing,
that people wouldn't consider it to be scientific and they wouldn't do it.
Meet Arthur Golden, a retired lawyer who has
spent the last 30 years documenting the journey of spelling in the education system. Arthur is
like an encyclopedia on the battles surrounding spelling and telepathy, with an incredible memory
for names, dates, locations, and details. Now retired, he lives in Israel with his family,
immersed in a conservative part of the Jewish community. What you would call ultra-Orthodox, my son Ben, he chose to come here, leaving the modern,
sophisticated Boston, Massachusetts area, and to become part of a community that was
very traditional and spiritual, and not modern Western civilization.
Ben is not only telepathic with his father and other Don speakers,
but he seems to channel thousands of spiritual messages. They fully accept what he's doing. They were actually printing 80,000 copies every
week of his messages distributed throughout Israel. And now, by the way, any
of the messages he's writing, which are now in Hebrew, well-versed rabbis, which
I'm not, that know the Jewish law, says that everything Ben
says is consistent with the strict Jewish laws and Jewish viewpoints, everything.
And it's critical to note here that his dad, Arthur,
lived most of his life in America and thus didn't speak Hebrew very well.
Hebrew is not so good.
So, Arthur, when did you become aware that Ben could read your mind?
I became aware, at least, of telepathy with him in April 1994. There were some times when he was
younger that I would think something that I needed without saying it, and Ben would be
immediately responsive to it. He somehow developed an alternative channel. That alternative channel
is something that we would call telepathy,
although my son says, and I can't prove it, that it's not a psychic ability, but it's a
spiritual ability. It's a gift from God. The first time I met Arthur a few years ago,
I told him about the Hill. They're not the only group that does that. Ben basically has his group
here and they communicate that way. And you have the group in Arizona that does the same thing,
even though they're hundreds of miles apart. I asked for more specifics about the hill
that Ben visits. He intentionally just restricts himself to the Jewish people.
In terms of his knowledge of things and so forth, it goes beyond telepathy.
In the last episode, I shared a story about Asher,
who could put a hand on a book and receive all information or give the information to someone
else. And Arthur said Ben can do something sort of like this. The axis is the mind of somebody
who's read the book and then he knows all the contents of the book. And much like Kyle and
Caroline, Arthur and Ben can engage in two-way telepathy. I've had two-way telepathy with my
son from the beginning. Okay, so you've been able to receive his thoughts back this whole time?
Yeah, but I usually prefer not to.
I prefer to have him actually write it on a letter board.
When you've been tracking the war against spelling as long as Arthur has,
he knows how important it is to make sure the spellers type independently on the board
so their words can be legitimized by skeptics.
Arthur says the first murmurs of telepathy began when facilitated
communication was introduced to thousands of people in the 90s by a woman named
Marilyn Chadwick. She found among these thousands of students
that there were hundreds, maybe like 10 percent of them that were also reporting
having telepathy. And in the early years, parents were really eager to discuss what
was going on.
The Autism Society of America, along with Syracuse University, held an annual event in 1992.
The group of parents spoke to the people from Syracuse University and said,
could we discuss this telepathy and what's going on? And the response from the Syracuse University people or the Facilitated Communication Institute, they said, oh, no, there's no such thing. They felt that it would hurt the credibility of facilitated communication.
And by the spring of 1993, they had managed to completely suppress any talk about telepathy.
Like any good lawyer, Arthur has an incredible paper trail. He has saved articles, emails,
chatroom conversations, Facebook posts, and journal
entries that exemplify over and over again the number of teachers, parents, and administrators
who have been fired or intimidated into silence because they mentioned telepathy. He has sent me
a lot of this stuff, and it would honestly take an entire season to go through it. Tom Smith,
they made sure he got fired because he said there was telepathy involved. Anne Donnellan was considered one of the leading experts on autism in the world.
They basically threatened her and she lost a lot of her position because she mentioned the
possibility of telepathy. There was an email group called FCNet, which was run by Pat Edwards.
These were just classroom teachers and they found that there was telepathy involved.
What Arthur paints for me is a clear picture
of knowledge and gatekeeping that persists to this day.
And while facilitated communication has largely given way
to more independent forms of spelling,
the fear remains that discussing telepathy
will undermine the credibility of spelling.
These children who are still trapped, their parents need to know the truth. I understand
why early spelling groups aiming to prove spelling's credibility were concerned that
mentioning spiritual gifts might undermine their efforts. But after 30 years, keeping quiet has not
helped non-speakers. It's actually made things worse. If a skeptic were to test a speller,
which they have, they might find it surprising or even disqualifying that a trusted partner's presence must be in the room and it
helps them to communicate, even if they're not being touched at all, even if this partner is
10 feet away. Just having them there is necessary. That's hard to explain and justify unless someone
understands there is some sort of physical regulation or merging or something that is going on where the non-speaker needs another person's body to help them ground.
Part of this process is the regulation of one body.
Susie Miller notes that a trained spelling partner will know how to get their bodies ready for the communication that's about to happen.
They learn to clear things out.
They learn to be present in their bodies.
They're grounding.
And the minute that system is set like that,
the kids find it easier to communicate.
And Marianne Harrington,
who has been working with spellers for 30 years, says,
It is very hard to describe unless you've experienced it.
It is an energetic link.
There's joint attention going on.
They can see through my eyes.
And they've even said they can hear through my ears.
They're almost stepping into my neurology.
And here's Casey from Georgia.
I'm like a lightning rod.
Like I ground his energy.
We're merging our energy together,
our consciousness together,
our higher selves together.
I don't know what we're doing,
but that was the way they told me.
The reason they can't type with everyone is because their energy signature may not be compatible
with everyone. So they can't be in their body long enough to type. From what I've asked the kids
directly, sometimes they'll use the information fields that the parents have.
Marianne thinks it's essential for everyone to know about this telepathic and energetic link because
Influence can occur and that's dangerous not to tell everybody who's using the process.
Because if communication partners aren't aware of this telepathic link or the merging of consciousness or whatever you want to call it,
then they won't be able to clear their mind or shield their thoughts to ensure that the speller is only communicating
their thoughts.
The person can influence the other person, not knowingly, and be totally unaware of it.
The people who I've interviewed for this project, however, are aware of it and do a lot of creative
things to make sure the non-speakers are typing only their own thoughts.
I stand behind him when I facilitate with him so he can't see where I'm looking.
I first started singing,
you are my sunshine,
whenever he's doing his spelling.
Then I started tapping my foot
or just humming one consistent beat.
Anything to keep my mind completely clear.
Sometimes if I'm doing a lesson
and someone starts picking up my thoughts,
I'll stop and say, that was my thought. Tell me what you think. And I say pumpkin in my head over and over and over until they finish spelling. Nobody spelled pumpkin yet.
I try to be really careful of the influence that I can have over Amelia. I will even think of like the wrong answer if I'm doing homework with her.
of like the wrong answer if I'm doing homework with her.
Also, with hiding things in the house like candy,
I would sing a song in my head so that he couldn't hear where I was putting it.
I do not want them taking my word.
I want their word to be their word.
This is why the truth about telepathy needs to be shared and why spelling groups and ASHA need to stop censoring it.
Working with non-speakers requires people to totally clear
their minds. It is an enigma and we're really, really at the beginning stages of trying to
understand it. I don't think we necessarily can wait for science because they haven't jumped on
board, but I want them to, you know. There's another hurdle standing in the way of full
acceptance of spelling. And I think it has more to do with materialism than spelling itself.
of spelling. And I think it has more to do with materialism than spelling itself.
Having heard from tons of the kids, I know that spelling itself is not the issue. To accept the spiritual nature of spelling means we have to accept the spiritual messages
that they have to share with us. And that threatens the materialistic paradigm.
Spellers consistently challenge us to go beyond
what we've been taught. And this is exactly what happened to me. Once I validated that the spellers
were capable of telepathy and I got past the wonder of how they were communicating,
I turned to the wonder of what they were communicating. They care about love. They're
worried about our behavior. What they all will say is at the end of the day, we're all one.
We have to see that we're more than we perceive ourselves to be.
They're worried about our planet. They're worried about climate change.
They're worried about the effect emissions we put out in the atmosphere are having on other planets.
It's not just about us.
They're talking to me about new science, new medicine, new education, new forms of parenting.
This is a lot.
And in order for the non-speakers to help us to achieve our full potential,
we need to help them to achieve theirs.
And one gigantic step we can take is by legitimizing spelling,
despite the fact it means admitting our paradigm is wrong and telepathy is real.
Only then can the non-speakers help us to
usher in the future of medicine, technology, spirituality, and science. Yes, it's bigger than
all of us could ever have imagined, but we have to accept that that's the reality and maybe what
has to change is us. It's the only way we save these kids is by telling the whole world the truth.
The whole truth. Katie talks about this
a lot. Since I started this journey four years ago, I've watched truths that I once held about
the world unravel before me. Wading into this world has been like slowly walking into cold water,
allowing my body and worldview time to adjust with every step. And in two weeks, I'll take you
deeper. We'll meet Josiah,
a young non-speaker in Minnesota who heard the prayers of a complete stranger, Max, in Louisiana,
a profound connection his mother helped validate. And we'll contemplate the enduring strength of
love when a beloved non-speaker loses his life, but finds ways to comfort his family and friends from the other side.
Once again, there will be a two-week delay before we drop episode nine.
A very special thanks to my incredible collaborator and producer, Jen Merza,
who created all music and sound effects for this episode of The Telepathy Tapes.
Remember that you can review some of the tests and see some of the film recordings on our website, thetelepathytapes.com. Thank you so much for tuning in and join us next week as this world
expands and deepens. Whether you're in your running era, Pilates era, or yoga era,
dive into Peloton workouts that work with you.
From meditating at your kid's game to mastering a strength program,
they've got everything you need to keep knocking down your goals.
No pressure to be who you're not.
Just workouts and classes to strengthen who you are.
So no matter your era, make it your best with Peloton.
Find your push. Find your power.
Peloton. Visit Peloton at onepeloton.ca.