0210 - Stewart Alexander
An Extraordinary Journey: The Memoirs of a Physical Medium
In the little known and controversial world of physical mediumship, Stewart Alexander is probably the least controversial and most respected among his peers and skeptics alike. His abilities - including extraordinary physical phenomena, evidence from loved ones, and book tests - have been experienced and put to the test by countless people for more than forty years.
What started out as a curiosity through reading and study more than fifty years ago became his life's work - a life of patience, perseverance and service to the living and to the Spirit world, as he gradually overcame his own doubt and developed the ability to join the two worlds together.
An Extraordinary Journey is personal and moving - yet it's more than a memoir - it's a spiritual guide, a history of Spiritualism that includes a plethora of sitter's first hand experiences - often wondrous, sometimes deeply emotional, but never dull.
Through Stewart's mediumship, the bereaved are connected with their deceased loved ones, which demonstrates the likelihood that consciousness survives physical death.
Stewart Alexander is a physical medium who has been an active spiritualist for over a half century. He is the author of An Extraordinary Journey: The Memoir of a Physical Medium. His work has also been described in Leslie Kean's award-winning book, Surviving Death. Here he shares some of the awe-inspiring moments he has experienced in his half-century career in spiritualism. They include levitations and materializations, healings, and direct voice communication. He explains the role of ectoplasm in these manifestations. He emphasizes the important role of a sincere and dedicated home circle. He describes how he has kept his mediumship activities separate from his work and family life.
Chapter 25 - My Astonishing Second “Personal Experiment”
We now move into the present. Physical mediumship is not a lost art that belongs only to an earlier time. The traditions have been carried on, even though many mediums now work outside of the public eye.
I first encountered British physical medium Stewart Alexander in the fall of 2014 through his 2010 memoir, An Extraordinary Journey, which includes accounts by many sitters of the phenomena that have repeatedly manifested in his séance room for decades. In reading his life story, I was deeply impressed by Stewart’s integrity and modesty, and had no doubt that he was “the real deal.” He had an honest, uncluttered clarity and sincerity that impressed me, a purity of character, and an integrated, natural quality of spirituality that had no dogma or self-consciousness attached. His core belief is that the purpose of his mediumship is to allow “spirit people” to enter our world and demonstrate that we survive death. For close to fifty years, Stewart has given his life to this task. In addition, he is a scholar regarding the history of physical mediumship, with a home library full of historic papers and books, and he has interviewed countless people who sat with Alec Harris, Minnie Harrison, Helen Duncan, Hunter Selkirk, and other great mediums.
Chapter 26 - A Life in Two Worlds
I have always welcomed the many reasonable questions about my physical mediumship that naturally arise. To begin with, I am often asked how I can be sure that the Spirit People who allegedly communicate through me are not simply aspects of my own unconscious mind, each as a unique, developed personality. The fact is that I cannot be sure. That is a truthful answer. However, my many years working as a medium (private and public) in which countless people have interacted with these Spirit “controls” suggests forcefully to me that they are exactly who they claim to be: denizens from the next world. Whilst I am not in any way religious, I will quote the Bible in saying, “By their fruits ye shall know them.” I shall explain.
My longtime guide White Feather was the first to make himself known to me. I had been sitting for months with a small group, and nothing at all had happened. On one such occasion I was with only my brother and sister-in-law, and we sat with our hands on the table in front of us with a dim red light, as always. After our hour together had almost passed, my thoughts were beginning to turn to the cup of tea and the biscuits that always awaited us afterward. That was the highlight of those sittings at that point!
Direct assessment of the reality of the phenomena by Leslie Kean
Levitated
Healing through one Communicator
Ectoplasm
Grandmother Manifestation at Leslie Flint Séance
Shared secret event at deathbed revealed
Grandmother was unconscious
Direct Voices
White Feather First Communicator
Came at at Leslie Flint Séance
Confirmed Deformity
Left Hand Deformity
2 Trumpets levitated
Materialization
Hands
Communicator (Dr Barnett)
Moved freely in the séance room
The Ectoplasmic Hand
Carolyn Molnar's Testimony
After my last psychic development class, one of my students joked that, after working as a medium in Canada for 28 years, there was surely nothing under the sun that truly amazed me.
“Not true,” I told her. In the first place, life itself is a miracle and when you’re into the flow of the joy of living, you notice amazing things all the time. I mean, finding out that Sears was having a 33 percent off sale on refrigerators the very day my refrigerator died – while it doesn’t compare to, say, the miraculous parting of the Red Seas – is worth celebrating!
But in terms of sheer wonder, one of the most astounding things I’ve ever witnessed was in a séance led by English physical medium Stewart Alexander. Not only was I able to see a hand made of ectoplasm grow from Stewart’s chest – but it touched me.
Ectoplasm is a cobweb-like white substance that a medium releases, which is then used by spirit to assume a physical form. Think of breath on a cold night. The Lily Dale Museum, in Lily Dale, New York – the largest Spiritualist community in the world – has several wonderful pictures of physical mediums releasing ectoplasm. Others have described the matter as looking like “cheese cloth” and smelling like ozone.
Last October, at a spiritual retreat at Cober Hill, England, Stewart demonstrated the art of physical trance mediumship. I looked forward to the séance for several reasons: Stewart’s skilful evenings are always a treat, and one of his controls is a spirit named Walter, who was a Canadian – one of my fellow countrymen. I’d met the charming Walter at a previous séance, and he was delighted to meet another Canuck from across the pond.
At Cober Hill, none of the 60 or so people in attendance were disappointed. Trumpets danced across the ceiling, and Spirit made their presence known through sounds and other phenomena. But the highpoint of the evening was when Walter called “Carolyn, ma’m” and two others from the audience to come forward and sit with Stewart around a small table that was in front of “the cabinet”, a small square area lined by four curtains, where Stewart sat to conduct his séance. The front curtain is able to open and close. The table was lit from below by a soft red light.
Stewart sat within the cabinet, but his hands joined ours to form a circle on the table. As we sat quietly in the total darkness, a mist – a concentrated, thick fog – appeared to leak from Stewart’s solar plexus area. Oh, my God, I thought, staring intently at the glowing haze as it slowly coalesced into a mass, then evolved into a hand with webbed fingers and finally into a fully male hand, right before my eyes!
I heard gasps of surprise from those sitting nearby. I’d heard stories about ectoplasmic manifestations – my grandmother was the hairdresser for the psychic of former Prime Minister McKenzie King, and she often grumbled about how difficult it was like to clean the ectoplasm off the dining room chair cushions after a séance.
“Hold still, ma’m,” Walter said and with that, this ectoplasmic hand moved across the lit table and gently tapped the top of my hand. The hand was large and well defined. “Not bad for a man who passed a hundred years ago, eh?” Walter quipped.
I felt lightheaded, a little fearful and apprehensive, being “touched” by the spirit realm. It felt so… otherworldly, is the best way I can put it. The “skin” was warm – warmer than my own hand. Then a sensation of warmth flowed into my hand, up my arm and into my heart. I felt giddy, happy. I began to weep. I had an urge to grasp the hand more firmly, and really experience the connection to Spirit, but I resisted. After all, the ectoplasm was coming from Stewart and any firmness could hurt him.
The next few minutes passed in a blur. Slowly, the hand began to withdraw back into Stewart’s cabinet; I was sorry to see it go. One of Stewart’s aides helped me back to my seat, and the séance continued. Walter withdrew and Freda, another of Stewart’s controls, took over the evening. The rest of the evening was spent connecting some audience members to their loved ones who had crossed over.
I was still in a daze and, later, was too excited to sleep. The experience of physical mediumship had been profound… and a little sad, as I realized physical mediumship is a disappearing art. So few mediums seemed to be practicing it these days. Besides Stewart, I can think of Steven Upton, a trance healer in England (http://www.s-upton.com/) and, in the States, Anne Gehman, and I’m sure there are others elsewhere. But Stewart is starting to pull back on his appearances, and that will be a shame for those of us who have come to know him not just as one of the most reputable physical trance mediums around, but a good and honest soul – a true friend.
If you’d like to find out more about Stewart Alexander, go to http://www.thepsychictimes.com/illustration.htm. And I’d love to hear from anyone else who has experienced physical mediumship. Write me at carolyn @ carolynmolnar.com, and please visit me again!
We don’t hear much about physical mediumship these days, but apparently it still exists here and there. Stewart Alexander, whose 2010 book, An Extraordinary Journey, has been revised and republished by White Crow Books, must certainly be one of the best physical mediums living. However, we don’t hear much about him, because he has come to understand that the nature of such mediumship is beyond science and human comprehension and will always result in cynicism and contempt by those blind to any evidence suggesting spirits and survival. “Having studied extensively the history of physical mediumship over the past forty years, I am very aware that almost without exception those mediums who cooperated with the researchers, in the hope of establishing their mediumship on a scientific level, invariably failed and were forever surrounded in bitter dispute and allegations of fraud,” Alexander explains, adding that even when tests were inconclusive (the usual case) more tests were demanded. He sees it as a “no-win” situation.
In effect, Alexander has concluded that no amount of evidence will convince those who quite simply refuse to believe that two plus two does not always equal four. This ‘will to disbelieve’ plus the risk of serious injury if some ‘doubting Thomas’ decides to flip a light switch on while ectoplasm is being exuded from his body, prompted Alexander to give up public demonstrations in late 2008, limiting himself to mostly small home circles among friends.
Although Alexander is the author of the book, there are plenty of testimonials and quoted reports in the book to lend credibility to his mediumship. The late Dr. David Fontana, a professor of psychology and former president of the Society for Psychical Research, expressed high praise for Alexander in the Foreword of the book. “Those of us who know and admire Stewart and his mediumship, and all those who have been fortunate enough to have had sittings with him, will be delighted to see this book in print,” Fontana wrote. “It provides us with an exceptionally clear, well-written and convincing account of what it is to be a physical medium, and of what it means to act as a channel between one level of reality and another.”
In the 2020 edition of the book, journalist Leslie Kean provides an Epilogue in which she states that the 2010 edition changed her life. “It opened the door to a wondrous and unexplored new world,” she writes, going on to explain that she had not encountered anything like it before. She made contact with Alexander, attended a 2015 seminar he gave, and then had two sittings with him, which she describes in her popular 2017 book, Surviving Death: A Journalist Investigates Evidence of an Afterlife.
Jon Beecher, the owner of White Crow Books, recalls attending an Alexander séance in 2017. He met a man whose wife had passed away a few years earlier, leaving him with five children to raise. During the séance, Alexander’s voice changed to a more feminine one and became tearful with joy. The voice, apparently that of the widow of the man Beecher had been talking with, communicated with that man and mentioned three of his children by name. After the séance, Beecher again chatted with the man, who said he was mystified as to how “Alexander” could have known the names of his children.
Chapter 11 of the current book sets forth a report from the July 2009 issue of the Journal of the Society for Psychical Research by investigator Lew Sutton, a retired engineer whose career involved research into the atmosphere for designing the parameters of future satellite communication systems. Sutton notes the strict controls taken before the start of each séance, including Alexander being secured to his chair by straps that had to be cut by pliers at the end of the séance. After an opening prayer and music, a spirit control known as White Feather speaks through Alexander, who is apparently in trance, and gives an opening greeting. White Feather is followed by spirit communicators known as Christopher, Freda Johnson, and Walter Stinson, the latter the primary control of his (Stinson’s) sister, Mina Crandon, aka “Margery,” many years earlier. Freda would introduce loved ones who wished to communicate with sitters and would act as a go-between when the loved ones couldn’t directly communicate.
Sutton also describes the appearance of a materialized hand. “After a few moments a blob or what is announced to be ectoplasm is seen to appear on the illuminated translucent table top on the edge nearest the medium. Slowly it forms into a large hand – which Walter claims is his. It is certainly larger than Stewart’s hand. The materialized hand moves toward the sitter’s hand and then strokes and/or grasps it before withdrawing and melting away. The hand is invariably reported as feeling normal and warm.”
A common observation, according to Sutton, is that of the table levitating about 30 cm (approximate one foot) above the floor. Also, the aluminum trumpets though which the voices came had luminous tabs and could be seen by all sitters moving from the floor to airborne positions, then floating around the room. “Occasionally, the trumpet will shoot towards someone and stop dead millimetres from their face and then sometimes caress their head or gently traverse around them,” Sutton explains. “They have also been known to land on people’s hands. All these actions indicate a controlling intelligence with a great spatial awareness in total darkness.” He notes that the trumpets will often touch the ceiling, a height of over four meters, (over 12 feet). He further notes that Alexander has been seen to levitate (or to be levitated by the spirits) up to 90 cm (about three feet) above the floor. Although it is dark, luminous tabs are attached to his knees.
The voices coming through the trumpets usually begin as a soft whisper and then become louder so that everyone can hear what is being said. Dr. Franklin Barnett, said to be a nineteenth century Scottish physician who also worked through medium George Valiantine during the 1920s, frequently speaks as does Walter Stinson. Sutton says that two hands were touching his head while his wife experienced the same sensation as Barnett spoke to her through a trumpet. At the same time, a voice was coming through the other trumpet on the other side of the room.
Dr. Barnett apparently does some healing as well. Sutton reports that his wife had a medically incurable problem that was leading to a loss of sight in one eye. She could not make out the lettering on an eye chart before Barnett’s healing, but had excellent eyesight in the three years after that healing to the time of his report.
While the physical phenomena do not in themselves prove survival, Sutton records that there was much audible evidence in the form of personal communication from loved ones who had passed on, by both trumpet and by trance voice (from the medium’s vocal cords). “Sometimes this evidence is outstanding,” Sutton writes, mentioning a case when a father discussed a particularly unfortunate and sad event that occurred at his funeral.
At the end of the many seances observed by Sutton over a four-year period, the sitters could confirm that Alexander was still tightly secured to his chair as he slowly returned to normal consciousness.
Journalist Kean observed much the same thing as Sutton during her sittings with Alexander in 2015. She refers to the “straps” binding Alexander to the chair as thick cable ties and she confirms that they were tightly binding him. She describes seeing the two trumpets “come alive” and “dance” around the room, one of them tapping her face gently before a male voice, mostly unintelligible, came through. At a later sitting, Dr. Barnett spoke clearly, as did Walter. She observed a grayish-black foggy cloud (ectoplasm) come toward her over the table and witnessed it take on the shape of a hand, which formed a fist and banged three times on the table to demonstrate its solidity. “From the gaseous ectoplasmic energy, a solid living hand had emerged,” she writes, going on to tell of another hand materialization, said to be Walter’s, form in front of her from a cloud. Walter explained to her how he did it, but you’ll have to check her book for that information as well as the other phenomena she witnessed.
Kean also reports on several intriguing book tests. In one, during 2016, a man named Kevin Kussow, whose father had died two days earlier, was told to go to his father’s bookcase, to the second shelf and take the second or third book from the left, open to page 84, and near the top he would find a sentence mentioning animals or an animal. Further down would be the names “George” and “Smith.” Kevin followed the instructions, found the second book to be a thin paper pamphlet, but the third was entitled Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee. He opened to page 84 and found reference to “Little Raven” and on the next line to “hunting buffalo.” Farther down the page there was reference to Smith, a post trader and a “half-breed” named George.
The debunker would likely say that Alexander had a very clever confederate involved in everything recorded by Sutton, Kean, Fontana, and many others. The debunker would have every one dwell on that possibility and ignore the veridical information coming from the voices, the healings, and the actual observations that must certainly go beyond countless group hallucinations, mass hypnotisms, or wills to believe. But how does one prove that a sly confederate was not the case, beyond suggesting that so many people could not have been duped so many times over so many years under such controlled conditions?
One might also ask why his friends in the home circle continue with such “nonsense” to this day? After more than a quarter of a century, wouldn’t they be on to his “tricks” by this time? What is the motivation for it all? “If people attend a physical séance looking for ‘loopholes’ they will find them,” Alexander laments. “If none are to be bound then they will create them. In finding them or in creating them the accusers will refuse to face the facts which fail utterly to fit neatly into their own conclusions.”
Is it any wonder that Alexander has thrown in the towel on being tested by more researchers and that he is content to keep his mediumship low-key? “At best,” he ends his book, “it would be seen that paranormal action was a reality but it would doubtlessly be explained away as an abnormal physiological function possessed by and unconsciously directed by the medium.”
Michael Tymn is the author of The Afterlife Revealed: What Happens After We Die, Resurrecting Leonora Piper: How Science Discovered the Afterlife, and Dead Men Talking: Afterlife Communication from World War I.
His forthcoming book, No One Really Dies: 25 Reasons to Believe in an Afterlife is due in February 2021.
Source: https://whitecrowbooks.com/michaeltymn/entry/amazing_physical_mediumship_still_exists_but_