0231 - Clocks
Cas: On a pu lire dans le livre : Autour de la Mort, qu'à Bischheim, en 1913, à l'heure de la mort d'une aïeule, sa montre suspendue dans sa chambre s'est arrêtée, que personne n'a pu arriver à la faire marcher et qu'elle s'est remise en marche d'elle-même quelques années plus tard, le jour de la mort du fils de cette femme.
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Cas: Le pasteur Luc Mathey, du Jura Bernois, m'a signalé l'arrêt d'un réveille-matin au moment d'une mort, fait très spécialement constaté par lui (lettre 4833, 21 février 1922). Nous invoquons le hasard ; mais ces exemples sont relativement fréquents, et en général les pendules ne s'arrêtent pas toutes seules en cours de marche.
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Cas: M. Duquesne, à Orsay, m'a rapporté, le 25 juin 1922, l'incident de l'arrêt d'une pendule à la mort d'une personne qu'il avait placée à la Salpêtrière et qui lui avait fait cadeau de cette pendule.
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Cas: M. Lucien Jacquin, à Paris, m'a communiqué (lettre du 1er octobre 1922) que le jour de la mort de son aïeul, la pendule de cet aïeul s'était arrêtée, au grand étonnement de toute la famille.
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Ces singulières manifestations, dis-je, ne sont pas aussi rarissimes qu'on le croit. M'en étant entretenu récemment avec mon célèbre ami l'historien Arthur-Lévy, auteur de Napoléon intime, de Napoléon et la paix, et d'autres ouvrages historiques très appréciés, j'ai reçu la lettre suivante à la date du 11 juin 1923 :
« Mon cher grand ami,
« Voici une petite contribution à votre enquête sur les phénomènes psychiques, laquelle éveille dans le monde entier des souvenirs endormis depuis plus ou moins longtemps. Ce que je vais vous dire remonte à des dates que je ne saurais préciser aujourd'hui : toutefois, ils se placent sûrement entre 1856 et 1860.
« C'était chez mes parents, à Epinal. Il y avait sous globe, sur la cheminée, une pendule. Toute la famille était autour de la table, dans l'éclairage d'une lampe suspendue. Mon père et ma mère jouaient au bézigue ; les enfants faisaient leurs devoirs d'école. Seul, le tic-tac du balancier de la pendule rompait le silence qui régnait dans la demi-obscurité de la pièce. Un soir, vers 9 heures, se fit entendre soudain dans la pendule un roulement sonore et bref qui fit lever toutes les têtes. « Bon ! dit mon père à ma mère, voilà la pendule qui se détraque ! » Puis, plus rien, la pendule continue de marcher. Alors, quoi ? On décide de faire venir l'horloger le lendemain. Il constata qu'il n'y avait rien d'anormal, que le mécanisme était parfaitement en ordre. Il ne trouvait aucune explication à la bizarrerie du bruit qui s'était produit.
« Le jour suivant — on n'abusait pas du télégraphe à cette époque — on apprit le décès de mon grand-père maternel qui était mort dans la soirée, peut-être à l'heure même où le roulement sinistre s'était fait entendre... Coïncidence curieuse dont on parla, mais sans y attacher d'importance...
« Cependant l'hiver suivant nouveau roulement dans la pendule... Ce fut alors l'effroi chez mes parents. Allait-on encore apprendre un nouveau deuil ? Cela arriva, en effet ; la mort d'un frère de ma mère avait eu lieu à l'heure du bruit dans la pendule.
« Celle-ci, depuis ce moment, devint positivement un objet d'angoisse dans la famille. A la moindre rumeur indistincte, les yeux effarés se portaient sur la pendule...
« Tels sont, mon cher grand ami, des faits observés dans un milieu où on ne se souciait nullement des problèmes psychiques : une famille nombreuse était occupée à des spéculations plus matérielles.
« De ce que je viens de relater, je vous garantis l'exactitude absolue. Mes souvenirs sont très précis. Et d'ailleurs croyez que je considérerais comme un sacrilège de mêler la mémoire de mes parents à un récit dont la certitude ne serait pas entière chez moi.
« Arthur-Lévy. »
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Non seulement des horloges s'arrêtent au moment d'un trépas, mais d'autres, arrêtées depuis longtemps, se mettent en marche. Voici, par exemple, une horloge rouillée qui s'est mise à marcher sans qu'on y eût touché. La lettre suivante m'a été adressée de Paris le 5 janvier 1923 :
« Monsieur et cher Maître,
« Etudiant à Paris, j'ai le très grand honneur de venir solliciter de votre haute bienveillance un jugement sur un fait dont je reste profondément intrigué.
« Le 19 décembre dernier, j'ai eu l'immense douleur de perdre ma mère, à l'âge de quarante-neuf ans.
« Dans la nuit qui suivit celle du décès, alors que nous étions trois personnes dans la pièce voisine de la chambre mortuaire, une vieille horloge silencieuse depuis plusieurs années s'est soudainement animée, et la sonnerie, de son timbre le plus clair, a égrené les douze coups de minuit, malgré que ses aiguilles fussent au repos sur 11 h 20.
« Quelle est la force mystérieuse qui a animé cette pendule au mécanisme rouillé ?
« A vous, cher Maître, qui avez analysé l'âme humaine, je pose cette troublante question, en vous assurant de toute ma reconnaissance pour le grand honneur que vous me ferez d'une réponse.
« E. Imbert, 23, rue Saint-André-des-Arts, à Paris. »
La seule réponse à donner, dans l'état actuel de la science, est que nous possédons un grand nombre d'exemples analogues, prouvant leur réalité, et ne permettant pas d'attribuer ces coïncidences au hasard. Ils sont inexplicables, et leur étude comparative seule pourra nous conduire à des conclusions. L'âme de la morte n'est-elle pas en jeu ici ?
Pouvons-nous essayer d'interpréter ces coïncidences ? Ne seraient-elles pas symboliques ?
Qu'est-ce qu'une horloge, une pendule, une montre ? C'est un appareil qui mesure le temps. Or, le Temps est l'élément essentiel de la vie et conduit à la mort.
Dans la force psychique universelle qui régit tout, il y a un principe intellectuel inconnu, associé à tous les événements, grands et petits, à l'évolution d'un monde, à l'instinct d'un oiseau, d'un insecte.
L'arrêt d'un appareil qui mesure le temps ne correspondrait-il pas à l'arrêt de la vie ? et n'aurait-il pas un sens, une signification, au lieu d'être un effet quelconque d'une cause inconnue ?
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Chutes répétées avec grand fracas, d'un service à café
Il y a longtemps déjà, j'ai publié une relation
racontant la chute, avec grand fracas, d'un service à café, coïncidant avec l'heure à laquelle le fils de la maison mourait en Afrique. Il y avait dans cette même lettre du 4 mai 1899, un autre incident que je n'ai pas rapporté. Le voici :
« Mes grands-parents avaient renoncé à la campagne et étaient allés habiter La Rochelle.
« Un nouveau service à café avait été placé en garniture de cheminée comme précédemment. Or, six ans plus lard, en 1841, mes grands-parents entendirent même fracas dans leur chambre d'amis. Ils montèrent aussi vite qu'ils purent. La porte était fermée, les fenêtres aussi : donc pas plus de courant d'air que la première fois.
« En entrant, mes grands-parents demeurèrent consternés à la vue du même phénomène qui s'était manifesté au moment de la mort de leur fils : le service gisait brisé en un monceau de débris.
« Une profonde angoisse les étreignit... Quel nouveau deuil allaient-ils apprendre ? Quelques jours plus tard, ils étaient informés de la mort de leur gendre, emporté par une épidémie le matin même où était brisée pour la seconde fois la garniture de cheminée.
« Mon grand-père, peu enclin aux superstitions, plutôt sceptique au sujet des choses d'imagination, confirma ces faits à mon père et ensuite à ma mère ; je les tiens d'eux. Le sérieux du caractère des personnes en cause et leur stricte droiture ne me laissent aucun doute sur leur authenticité.
[Lettre 549.]
« Mlle Meyer.
« A Niort (Deux-Sèvres). »
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Chutes de tableaux
Je connais quelques douzaines d'exemples de chutes de tableaux sans cause connue, coïncidant avec des morts, et plus d'une centaine de cas de sonneries également inexpliquées. Nous reviendrons sur ce sujet.
Il n'est pas très rare qu'un portrait tombe à l'heure du décès de celui qui y est représenté. On a pu lire au tome III de La Mort et son Mystère le récit fait par Alexandre Dumas de la chute d'un beau pastel coïncidant avec un décès, et celle d'un autre portrait en peinture tombé dans une circonstance identique, etc. Or, tout récemment, un fait analogue s'est passé non loin de moi. Dans le cours de l'hiver de 1920-1921, pendant mon séjour à Monte-Carlo, on m'apprit qu'un incident du même ordre était arrivé à l'évêché de Monaco. J'ai pu faire une enquête directe sur les lieux et en connaître tous les détails par les témoins eux-mêmes, qui ont eu la parfaite obligeance de me les communiquer. Voici cette curieuse histoire :
« Mgr Béguinot, évêque de Nîmes, est mort le 3 février 1921, à 6 heures du matin. Il avait été très lié avec Mgr de Curel, évêque de Monaco, mort le 5 juin 1915, et lui avait autrefois donné son portrait, comme souvenir amical. C'était une belle gravure encadrée, que l'évêque de Monaco avait placée dans le grand salon de l'évêché, en face de son propre portrait. Après le décès de Mgr de Curel, l'évêché de Monaco a été occupé par Mgr Vie (16 août 1916-10 juillet 1918). Le 3 février 1921, le palais épiscopal était vacant, et gardé par M. le chanoine Perruchot, alors seul à l’évêché. Or, en traversant le salon, le matin de ce jour-là, il vit le portrait par terre, avec le verre cassé, et eut aussitôt l'impression que cette chute inexplicable (la corde et le clou n'en étant pas la cause) pouvait correspondre avec un malheur. Ce même jour, M. l'abbé Foccart, aumônier de l'hôpital, passant là, recueillit les débris du cadre, reconstitua le tableau, et le remit à la place d'où il était tombé.
« (Le nouvel évoque de Monaco l'a enlevé depuis, pour le remplacer par le sien.)
« On apprit, le même jour, que l'évêque de Nîmes était mort ce matin-là.
« Mgr Béguinot était venu souvent voir son ami Mgr de Curel, était en relation affectueuse avec lui, et l'avait même institué son légataire universel. »
Ces faits m'ont été personnellement affirmés par Mgr Perruchot et par M. l'abbé Foccart et je me fais un devoir de les en remercier. (Cet abbé est le frère du savant voyageur auquel nous devons une étude pittoresque sur le Lac Flammarion de la Guadeloupe.)
Nous pouvons nous demander comment l'âme, au moment de la mort, peut produire des accidents physiques de ce genre. Quelle qu'en soit l'explication, nous constatons qu'il y avait un rapport sympathique ici, entre les deux évêchés. La distance entre Nîmes et Monaco est de 233 kilomètres ; mais nous savons qu'en télépathie l'espace ne compte pas : l'esprit du mort pouvait être à Monaco comme à Nîmes.
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Je remarquerai, en passant, que ma collection d'observations documentées contient plusieurs correspondances du même ordre. La suivante, signalant un cadre retourné après une mort, m'a été communiquée dans la relation que voici, textuellement transcrite ici :
« Mérignac (Gironde), le 10 novembre 1922.
« Monsieur et honoré Maître.
« Je prends la liberté de vous signaler le fait étrange qui, à la date du 5 octobre dernier, s'est inopinément produit à mon domicile.
« Mme Lafargue, médium guérisseur, rue de Lescure, à Bordeaux, est décédée le 4 octobre, à 11 heures du soir. Le lendemain matin, entre 9 et 10 heures, une personne de son entourage est venue nous prévenir de sa mort. J'étais absent. Ma femme reçut la messagère et l'introduisit quelques instants dans notre chambre, où elle lui montra, à distance, le portrait en pied de notre unique enfant, mort pour la France, en septembre 1918. Puis elle la reconduisit, après avoir fermé la porte de cet appartement.
« Il faut vous dire qu'à droite et à gauche de ce portrait, se trouvent, eux aussi encadrés et accrochés au mur, les divers titres universitaires de notre fils : d'un côté, son diplôme de docteur en médecine, de l'autre, son baccalauréat et son P.C.N.
« Chacun des cadres est, au moyen d'un double fil de laiton, assujetti à un clou, en forme de crochet, fixé dans le mur.
« Quelques minutes après le départ de la visiteuse, ma femme revint dans sa chambre, où personne n'avait pu pénétrer durant sa courte absence. En rentrant dans cette pièce, elle éprouva un ardent désir de reposer son regard sur l'image de notre fils bien-aimé. A son extrême surprise, elle constata que le cadre dans lequel est inséré le diplôme de docteur, était complètement retourné contre la muraille. J'ajouterai, qu'expérience faite, cette rotation du tableau ne peut avoir lieu qu'à condition (la seule) de soulever quelque peu, au-dessus du clou, l'attache métallique servant à le suspendre. A défaut de cette précaution préalable, le cadre n'opère qu'une demi-rotation et se place ainsi perpendiculairement au mur. Toute pression entraînerait l'arrachement du clou.
« Tel est le fait bizarre. Monsieur et honoré Maître, que je crois bon de vous faire connaître. Vous en tirerez, sans doute, la conclusion qu'il convient utile au but humanitaire que vous poursuivez de découvrir les facultés multiples de l'âme humaine.
« Veuillez agréer. » etc.
« F. Monlinet., Retraité de l'Enseignement primaire, officier de l'Instruction publique.
« P.-S. — Feu Mme Lafargue, connaissant la grande affliction de ma femme, la plaignait sincèrement de son incrédulité en ce qui a trait à la survivance humaine. Aurait-elle, dix ou onze heures après sa mort, voulu lui en donner la preuve tangible par une telle manifestation ? Je ne serais pas éloigné de le croire.
« Je connais nombre de faits au moins aussi troublants (et d'une égale authenticité) que celui dont je viens de vous entretenir. »
Ces phénomènes, comme on le voit, sont constatés dans tous les pays, par toutes les classes sociales. Nous n'y comprenons rien : c'est entendu. En général on les traite de coïncidences fortuites et on les dédaigne. Ils méritent mieux.
Que des actes matériels, tels que chutes de tableaux, portraits brisés, arrêts ou marche d'horloges, se produisent en correspondance avec certains décès, les observations en sont trop nombreuses pour ne pas être admises, et nous sommes autorisés à éliminer l'hypothèse des coïncidences fortuites.
A church clock maintained by a devoted doctor for almost thirty years stopped at the very same moment he passed away.
Dr John Farrer climbed the narrow stone spiraled stairs of the St James' Church clock tower in Clapham, North Yorkshire, every week for three decades. He died at his home aged 92 surrounded by family on New Year's Day. The man's son, also Dr John Farrer, glanced at his watch as his father slipped away - and later realised the church clock also stopped at the exact same time. Dr Farrer said: 'The clock stopped literally to the minute of dad's death. As a family doctor I'm used to looking at my watch because sometimes it can be critical for the death certificate.
The clock on the tower of St James' Church in Clapham, Yorkshire, stopped at the very moment, 8.15am, Dr John Farrer (pictured with his wife Joan, right) passed away
The doctor, pictured as a young man, continued working as a medic until he was 70
'It was just habit that I did it as we knew he was going to die. He was having palliative treatment, but I realised he had stopped breathing and I read the time on my watch as 8.15am.
'It was only later when I spoke to two different people in the village that we realised the clock had stopped at the same time.'
Dr Farrer's death came just a few weeks after the 60th anniversary of his arrival in the village to take over the 10,000-acre Ingleborough family estate, which he had inherited.
Although St James' Church is not part of the estate, it was rebuilt around 150 years ago using the Farrer's family money.
'Something strange was certainly going on,' said Dr Farrer. 'But it's quite a nice touch when we think of all the time my father devoted to it.
'He had maintained it for 30 years but it eventually became too much for him and he reluctantly had to hand over the responsibility.
'It's the focus of the village and because the village is small enough to hear the clock chime it's a real time keeper. It was very close to my dad's heart.'
The clock was restarted following Dr Farrer's funeral, where he was remembered for his dedication for the village as well as his medical career.
Born in Sydney, Australia in 1921, his family later moved to Melbourne and he was educated at Geelong Grammar, one of Australia's oldest public schools. Later he went to medical school and trained as a doctor. While at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne, he met Joan, an operating theatre nurse and they were married in 1947.
In the early 50s, a telegram arrived to say that his uncle Roland Farrer had died in England and the doctor was faced with the choice of taking over the Yorkshire estate that had been in the family since the 1700s. He and his family took up residence in November 1953 where he worked until he retired. The doctor became ill in November 2013 and after a period in hospital, returned to his home of 60 years when it became clear that he was not going to recover.There will be a celebration of Dr Farrar's life at St James' Church, Clapham, North Yorks on February 18, at 2pm.
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A clock tended by a churchwarden for more than 50 years stopped at the exact minute that he died.
John Farrer was a GP in the village of Clapham, North Yorkshire, and twice a week for more than half a century he had climbed the tower of the parish church of St James to wind its clock.
When he died, aged 92, at 8.13 a.m. on New Year's Day, the hands of the Victorian timepiece froze at the same moment. "It was a remarkable coincidence," the Vicar of St James's, Canon Ian Greenhalgh, said on Sunday. The event recalls the parlour song "My Grandfather's Clock", which, as the refrain says, "stopped short, never to go again, when the old man died".
"Some people thought it was a little bit spooky, but these things happen in life," Canon Greenhalgh said. "I just thought it was a nice farewell to this man who has been a faithful servant. It was as if the clock was endorsing that. . .
"The clock is a feature of the village; it's always been there. It was just amazing that it would stop at that precise moment. We think it was some debris which had blown in with all the winds we've had lately."
Canon Greenhalgh is to hold a memorial service next Tuesday for "Dr F", as Dr Farrer was known locally. He moved to Clapham from Australia with his wife, Joan, and young family in 1953, after two of his uncles died in quick succession, leaving him to inherit the family estate of Ingleborough, which includes the village.
"When he arrived, the estate was in debt," Canon Greenhalgh said. "He worked as a doctor while running the estate. It is in pretty good health, now."
He expects several hundred people at the memorial service.
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Last Friday, my great-grandad passed away in hospital; my whole family was there at the time as we knew he was very unwell. Then, yesterday we got a message in our family groupchat from my gran who had been at his house, showing that both of the clocks in his house had stopped at his exact time of death. I spoke to my boyfriend about this who suggested that the batteries could have been changed at the same time, but that still wouldn't explain it, because it's still a crazy coincidence that they'd run out at the exact same time. The owl clock is also significantly newer (only 1-2 years old) than the other clock (been there for as long as I can remember - I'm 20).
My great-grandma passed only 12 weeks before him, so it's as though now they're both gone, the clocks have gone too - as if they were the life force of the house. In a way, it's comforted me a lot to have experienced a 'sign' from them, as I miss them a lot.
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I found this thread because I was searching Google for other instances of what we have just experienced. My mother passed away suddenly last week and was buried two days ago. Since then, my siblings and I have been organising some of her things before we get back to our own families. Over the two days,we found three of her watches in different places. Each one was stopped at the time of her passing, to the minute.
We don't think they stopped when she passed as she wouldn't have worn them in years, so they may have been stopped quite a while, but they were all stopped on the minute of what turned out to be the time of her passing.
We were nicely surprised when we discovered the first one, in disbelief when we found the second, and beside ourselves when we saw the third.
We don't have any explanation for it, but it feels like we were being reassured that it was her time to leave us.
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But another example case from Rhine's collection, which is particularly notable for the number of clocks involved, had reportedly taken place during the Thanksgiving holiday, according to the woman in Florida who reported it:
''We had a pendulum clock (which we wound every Sunday) in our room. We also had a musical clock which we wound every evening, and we had my husband's pocket watch. On the evening before Thanksgiving day, 1913, we talked a minute and said good night to each other. All three clocks stopped at once. My husband got up, gave the weights a shove, shook the little musical clock and his pocket watch; and they ran again. In two weeks we received word that my husband's father in Austria had died the same day and hour. [1, pp. 109 - 110]''
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I found this thread because I was searching Google for other instances of what we have just experienced. My mother passed away suddenly last week and was buried two days ago. Since then, my siblings and I have been organising some of her things before we get back to our own families. Over the two days,we found three of her watches in different places. Each one was stopped at the time of her passing, to the minute. We don't think they stopped when she passed as she wouldn't have worn them in years, so they may have been stopped quite a while, but they were all stopped on the minute of what turned out to be the time of her passing.
We were nicely surprised when we discovered the first one, in disbelief when we found the second, and beside ourselves when we saw the third. We don't have any explanation for it, but it feels like we were being reassured that it was her time to leave us.
Source:link
J'ai cru comprendre qu'il n'y avait pas de mesure du temps dans l'au-delà. Néanmoins, ayant perdu mon papa l'année dernière, à l'heure de sa mort (10h10) l'horloge du salon s'est arrêté à cette heure-ci. Nous avons essayé de la règler à plusieurs reprises mais elle s'arrête exactement à la même heure, même minutes!
Une autre montre s'est également arrêté à 10h10 ainsi que celle qu'il portait généralement au poignet (mais pas ce jour là). De même pour la montre qui se trouvait dans son atelier de travail.
Le même jour, l'horloge de ma tante (donc la soeur de mon papa) s'est remise soudainement à carilloner après 20 ans de non fonctionnement à cette heure précise.
Le jour de la mort de mon grand-père, la montre de l'église fut aussi stoppé. D'après ce que l'on m'a dit, il avait pour habitude de règler sa montre de poche sur l'heure de l'église.
J'ai entendu plusieurs histoires de ce genre dans la famille et certains donne l'explication de: clin d'oeil du défunt. Auriez-vous une explication à cela ou peut-être vous est-il arrivé une chose similaire ?
On a Seemingly Anomalous Physical Effect Reported Around the Time of Death
A number of tales exist in folklore of moments in which people have noticed clocks mysteriously stopping around the time that a loved one has died. Seemingly real-life accounts of these apparent "death coincidences" have occasionally turned up in case collections of spontaneous psychic experiences, including the extensive collection compiled by the late Louisa Rhine. [1,2] An illustrative example case comes from a young girl in New England, which appeared in Chapter 14 of Rhine's classic 1961 book Hidden Channels of the Mind: I never could explain this. When my father died, the clock was found to have stopped just at the same time. Later when I took it to the jeweler, because it would not run, he said it was beyond repair. It was a Swiss clock and had been a wedding gift to my parents; Dad had always kept it going, but we never got it to run again. [3, p. 214]
It seems that cases like these are still occasionally reported in more recent times, as indicated by a survey study conducted by British psychiatrist Peter Fenwick and his colleagues [4], which found that around one-third of the nurses, doctors, and caregivers they had interviewed at two hospices and a nursing home reported similar incidents with clocks (and other objects). Among them were the two following accounts:
"One person told me her watch had stopped at the moment her husband died and she never got it repaired. I saw her six months later at the service and I said to her: 'Have you still got the watch?' and she laughed; she said, 'Yes, I bought a new one. I'm not going to have it repaired. It hasn't gone [i.e., worked] since."
"A friend of mine, her twin sister died and they were just so close, I'm sure she could have told you far more but I do remember about the clock stopping at the time of Maggie's death. This was the surviving sister, in her house, and they were living separately but only just around the corner from each other." [4, p. 176]
For cases like the ones above, involving a single clock, one might figure that the stopping was simply due to the clock having broken down (perhaps from age or defective workings), its battery power having run out, or it having not been properly wound up. But another example case from Rhine's collection, which is particularly notable for the number of clocks involved, had reportedly taken place during the Thanksgiving holiday, according to the woman in Florida who reported it:
''We had a pendulum clock (which we wound every Sunday) in our room. We also had a musical clock which we wound every evening, and we had my husband's pocket watch. On the evening before Thanksgiving day, 1913, we talked a minute and said good night to each other. All three clocks stopped at once. My husband got up, gave the weights a shove, shook the little musical clock and his pocket watch; and they ran again. In two weeks we received word that my husband's father in Austria had died the same day and hour. [1, pp. 109 - 110]''
If this event had indeed taken place just as the woman recounted it, and the three clocks in this case hadn't simply wound down at the exact same moment purely by chance, then the coincidence of three separate clocks stopping at roughly the same time would seem to be rather intriguing. As notable as it is, though, one must keep in mind that a case like this cannot really be taken as evidential, since it isn't possible for one to assess (from the account alone) any other conventional factors which might've subtly played a role in the stopping of the clocks.
There may, however, be a bit of leeway for considering the possible involvement of a parapsychological factor in cases like these when one takes into account the number of other cases like them that have been reported. In surveying her collection, Louisa Rhine found 95 reports of anomalous physical effects that reportedly occurred around the time of someone's death, 39% of which involved clocks that seemed to suddenly stop at the time of death. [1] The remainder consisted of other kinds of seemingly mysterious physical effects such as pictures and other objects falling from a wall, mantle, or shelf; objects seeming to suddenly break or explode, doors seeming to open or close of their own accord, and lights turning on or off with no one touching them. A later survey made by parapsychologist Carlos Alvarado [2] of cases collected by the French astronomer Camille Flammarion, as well as researchers in Italy, had found similar effects being reported, as shown in the following table. Ostensibly Anomalous Physical Effects Reported Around the Time of Death
Table based on data compiled and reported by Alvarado [2] As Rhine had observed, these physical effects are often witnessed by a close relative or friend of the person that died, and they are traditionally taken as being "signs" or "messages" of that person's death (which the dying person is presumed to have caused through a form of psychokinesis - PK, or "mind over matter"). While that might be one possibility, Rhine pointed out that one should also consider the alternate possibility that the relative or friend who witnessed the occurrence could've brought it about themselves through PK, as well, perhaps as a kind of unconscious psychic "reaction" of sorts to the dying person's crisis situation. [1] This alternate possibility might seem plausible based on several factors:
There are various experimental tests of PK that have been conducted over the past eight decades which have produced results to suggest that the human mind may be capable of subtly affecting physical objects such as rolling dice or the number sequences being produced by electronic random number generators (RNGs) to degrees significantly beyond pure chance alone. [5-10; for general overviews, see 11-13]
As Rhine pointed out, similar kinds of anomalous physical effects have also been reported in cases where there was no apparent "death coincidence" involved. [1]
The idea that the effect might be triggered by PK on the part of the relative or friend who witnessed it (perhaps as a psychic "reaction" to the dying person's crisis) might initially seem plausible based on the observation made by the late William Roll [14] that in several of the cases in Rhine's collection, the witnesses seemed to feel brief surges of emotion or unusual feelings that apparently came on quite suddenly, either during or just before the physical effect took place. For instance, one witness said that at the time a book seemed to mysterious fall from a shelf, "I don't when my mind has ever been so stirred and perhaps that is why it [i.e., the book falling] happened" [1, p. 96]. Another witness stated that just before a picture fell from the wall, he "...felt a surge of blood racing through my veins" [1, p. 99]. A third witness reported experiencing "the queerest feeling, and a chill passed over my body," while a fourth reported that she began to cry all of a sudden, for no clear reason [1, p. 112]. Roll pointed out that this is very similar to the situation found in cases of recurrent spontaneous psychokinesis (RSPK, or "poltergeist" phenomena), where the suspected poltergeist agent may often be in a state of emotional tension, usually in response to the unsettled psychological situation that the agent finds him or herself in [15-16]. There is also some preliminary empirical evidence to suggest that there may be a correlation between emotional expression and PK, as well. [17-19]
This alternate possibility would suggest that the friend or relative who witnessed the clock stopping might not be just a passive observer - rather, they might actually play a more active role in "death coincidences" than one might initially think. Thus, the question of "who's doing it?" may not be so straightforward in this case. One should recognize that the same kind of situation arises when considering objects that seem to mysteriously move on occasion in haunting cases - who's doing it: a ghost, or a living person? This is one of the things which currently makes it hard to build a strong case for spirit existence, but perhaps with additional research findings, this question - which remains open for the moment - can be more fully addressed and resolved. The PRF would like to wish everyone a pleasant Thanksgiving holiday!
References:
[1] Rhine, L. E. (1963). Spontaneous physical effects and the psi process. Journal of Parapsychology, 27, 84 - 122.
[2] Alvarado, C. S. (2006). Neglected near-death phenomena. Journal of Near-Death Studies, 24, 131 - 151.
[3] Rhine, L. E. (1961). Hidden Channels of the Mind. New York: William Morrow & Company, Inc.
[4] Fenwick, P., Lovelace, H., & Brayne, S. (2010). Comfort for the dying: Five year retrospective and one year prospective studies of end of life experiences. Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, 51, 173 - 179.
[5] Radin, D. I., & Ferrari, D. C. (1991). Effects of consciousness on the fall of dice: A meta-analysis. Journal of Scientific Exploration, 5, 61 - 83.
[6] Radin, D. I., & Nelson, R. D. (1989). Evidence for consciousness-related anomalies in random physical systems. Foundations of Physics, 19, 1499 – 1514.
[7] Radin, D. I., & Nelson, R. D. (2003). A meta-analysis of mind-matter interaction experiments from 1959 to 2000. In W. B. Jonas & C. C. Crawford (Eds.) Healing, Intention, and Energy Medicine: Science, Research Methods and Clinical Implications (pp. 39 – 48). Edinburgh, UK: Churchill Livingstone.
[8] Bösch, H., Steinkamp, F., & Boller, E. (2006). Examining psychokinesis: The interaction of human intention with random number generators - A meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin, 132, 497 - 523.
[9] Jahn, R. G., Dunne, B. J., Nelson, R. D., Dobyns, Y. H., & Bradish, G. J. (1997). Correlations of random binary sequences with pre-stated operator intention: A review of a 12-year program. Journal of Scientific Exploration, 11, 345 - 367.
[10] Dobyns, Y. H. (2015). The PEAR Laboratory: Explorations and observations. In D. Broderick & B. Goertzel (Eds.) Evidence for Psi: Thirteen Empirical Research Reports (pp. 213 - 236). Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc.
[11] Rhine, L. E. (1970). Mind Over Matter: Psychokinesis. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
[12] Auerbach, L. (1996). Mind Over Matter. New York: Kensington Books.
[13] Heath, P. R. (2011). Mind-Matter Interaction: Historical Reports, Research and First-Hand Accounts. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc.
[14] Roll, W. G. (1983). Recurrent and nonrecurrent psi effects. Journal of Parapsychology, 47, 341 - 346.
[15] Roll, W. G. (1972/2004). The Poltergeist. Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday, Inc. (Reprinted by Paraview Special Editions)
[16] Rogo, D. S. (1986). On the Track of the Poltergeist. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
[17] Blasband, R. A. (2000). The ordering of random events by emotional expression. Journal of Scientific Exploration, 14, 195 - 216.
[18] Lumsden-Cook, J. (2005). Mind-matter and emotion. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, 69, 1 - 17.
[19] Lumsden-Cook, J. (2005). Affect and random events: Examining the effects of induced emotion upon mind-matter interactions. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, 69, 128 - 142.
Source:link
Deanna Mottershead, 73, a retired hotel services manager, lives in Llandudno, North Wales, with her husband, Alan, 83, a retired sales manager. She says:
In January 1962, my fiancé Tony had a scooter crash and lay in hospital, unconscious, for a week.
It was devastating and I sat constantly by his bedside willing him to recover. Then, one day, he squeezed my hand as I talked to him.
I left the hospital convinced he would recover and headed straight for his parents’ house.
There, a large, wind-up clock sat on the mantelpiece. At 3.15pm, the phone suddenly rang. It was the hospital. Tony had died a quarter of an hour earlier.
His parents and I sobbed and clung to each other, shocked to our core. Only later did we look at the clock, which had been wound, as usual, the night before. It had stopped at the exact time of Tony’s death — 3pm.
Deanna Mottershead, 72, says clocks have stopped at the moment a relative has died. She says she cannot explain why they stopped but that it comforts her
At the time, it was too much to comprehend. But years later I realised it couldn’t have just been by chance. Even so, nothing could have prepared us for what happened when my 62-year-old father, Richard, had a heart attack in August 1975. He was rushed to hospital but, when his condition stabilised that evening, my mother and I were sent home.
At 1.45am, a neighbour woke us by knocking on the door. The hospital had called her — we didn’t have a phone at home then — with the news that Dad had died at 1.20am. Hours later, after the shock had worn off, I stumbled up to bed and saw that my reliable little travel alarm clock had stopped — at exactly 1.20pm. While I was still grief-stricken, I took a tiny piece of comfort from seeing that clock, frozen in time. Somehow, in a strange way, I felt I was still close to Dad and it helped me through those awful hours. This wasn’t the last time a clock marked the end of the life of someone close to me.
One evening in 2002, when my husband and I were out, we received a phone call to say that Mum, 87, had died in a nursing home. I couldn’t help but say to my husband: ‘I wonder if anything has happened to the clock at home?’ When we arrived home, to our amazement, we found our battery-operated clock had literally exploded. The time it stopped? 6pm — the exact time of Mum’s death. I can never explain three deaths, three clocks and those three moments in time. But it comforts me and I feel in some way they are still connected to me. I miss them — but I haven’t lost them entirely.
Source: Link
About 15 years ago, my grandmother lay in the hospital in intensive care. One of her heart valves had ruptured, and she was in bad shape. My family stayed with her, but I was very sick at the time, so I stayed a while then went home and waited for word if I should go back to the hospital if things got worse. I stayed up into the evening, and looked at the clock now and then to check the time.
After several hours passed, I realized the kitchen clock had stopped. I thought nothing of it till I checked the time again about a half hour later. The kitchen clock was still stopped. I thought maybe its battery had run down, so I checked the microwave clock. It also had stopped at the same time, about 9:15 p.m. I realized that it might not have been a coincidence that two different types of clocks, a battery powered clock and an AC powered clock, had stopped at the same time, without any interruptions to the house's electricity.
After a while, it occurred to me that maybe my grandmother had died, and her spirit had come to the house to let me know she'd died. Anyway, soon after the clocks stopped, my family called me from the hospital to tell me that my grandmother had indeed died, then they came home and told me more, but in the hubbub, I forgot about the clock happenings.
It took me a couple days to question my mother about my grandmother's exact time of death, and I realized then that the clocks had stopped about the time or several minutes after my grandmother had died. Interestingly enough, by the morning after my grandmother's death, the clocks had all "fixed" themselves and were displaying the proper time (as checked against the TV). Only recently did I think to check and see if other people had ever experienced the phenomenon of clocks stopping when someone died. Of course, I was not surprised to find that it does happen, because it happened to me. I hope this helps.
One evening in 2002, when my husband and I were out, we received a phone call to say that Mum, 87, had died in a nursing home. I couldn’t help but say to my husband: ‘I wonder if anything has happened to the clock at home?’
When we arrived home, to our amazement, we found our battery-operated clock had literally exploded. The time it stopped? 6pm — the exact time of Mum’s death.
I can never explain three deaths, three clocks and those three moments in time. But it comforts me and I feel in some way they are still connected to me.
I miss them — but I haven’t lost them entirely.
My father passed away last week and and we have noticed 3 clocks in our home have are all 'stopped' within 4 minutes of eachother and all the clocks have stopped at the time be was passing and when he took his last breath.... 2.40pm 2.42pm 2.44pm The clocks were in the 2 dining rooms where he loved to spend time with family during a meal and the third clock is in his shed where he spend countless hours.... I was with him in his final moments which were truely spectacular and when he took his last breath.
I remember looking at the clock at the hospice and saw it was a little before 2.45 pm??? The moments leading up to the last breath were quite unusual...certainly things were changing which I saw with my own eyes, it was almost like his eyes showed he recovered from his illness, but he must have seen something pretty special. it was very peaceful. Of all the possible combinations of time a clock could possibly stop at...to have 3 in the one home stop within minutes of his passing time is too much of a coincidence in my opinion. I am interested in hearing other peoples experiences.
When my Mam died twenty years ago we knew she would die soon but when my dad rang to tell me she had passed away he rang me at six a.m I went to his house , she died in hospital, I noticed the clock that she loved a grandmother clock she had bought a few years before her illness, had stopped at a quarter past three I mentioned this to my dad over the course of that day and he replied "I rang you at six a.m because I couldnt see any point in waking you any earlier however your mam died around a quarter past three" I still have the clock and it has never worked properly since my mam died young and i do believe when someone dies before their time a energy is left behind,just my thoughts of course
My father was a stage-4 cancer patient. We talked from time to time over the past few months on life after death and the like. We discussed that he would try and give us a sign from the other side when he passed. I said "sure . . . as long as you are allowed to do so". He had been largely unresponsive the last few days. The last night, his last night, he began mumbling something. He started telling us all that he loved us. he began with my mother . . . then down the line. We told him that she would be alright. That we all would be alright and that it was OK for him to go now. He took a couple last breaths and died.
I had left to take my mother home and my sister, brother and niece stayed to wait for the military to perform their services. My sister said that the nurse had come in and discovered the clock had stopped. They didn't think a whole lot of it but when the nurse came again and looked for the time the clock had started operating again. The clock had stopped for approximately twenty minutes.
I am not sure if this was coincidence and/or wishful thinking. But nevertheless the timing is intriguing as the clock had been watched and listened to for a few days with no issue (watched like a hawk for meds and such). I just thought I would share the experience and see if any others had had similar things happen.
It was November 2016, I went to my parents house and found my Dad had died during the night. Paramedics came and checked him. They placed the time of death at 8:45 - the time they checked him. When I came back home later that day, the clock on the wall over my home office desk had stopped at exactly 8:45. It was working fine in the morning before I found my Dad. It gave me comfort and it still does to this day. In my opinion, my Dad sent me a sign. We were very close.
Similar experience for me. My dad's body was shutting down. Bedridden for 2 years. He fell and broke his hip. The hospital operated, but he had a major stroke, and got pneumonia. He died 5 days at Hospice. I was talking to my mom later that day and she said it had been raining, and lightning all afternoon, and lost electric. The digital clock in my dads den was stuck on 12:08 and you couldn't change the time. That was the EXACT time of death. I wonder if it was a coincidence, or my dad's way of saying goodbye.
My husband died at home from esophageal cancer. I nursed him till the end. My husband died at ten to 7 as I was there with him and looked at my watch on my wrist. Half an hour later I happened to look at the clock on the wall in the lounge where he had died and the clock which run by batteries had stopped at ten to 7. A year later and I have still kept the clock on the wall showing that time.
“I HAVE never believed in the supernatural. But three years ago in this very room something very mysterious happened. You see the old clock over there on the wall. It was grandpa’s. He bought it while he was overseas as a young sailor. He was always so proud of it and liked to tell everybody how reliable it was. As you can see it is stopped now. Grandpa died in the hospital a few miles from here, and at the same instant the clock stopped after having ticked for seventy years! Grandpa himself must have stopped it, mustn’t he?”
A farmer in Sweden told this experience to one of Jehovah’s Witnesses. Many people have had similar mysterious experiences in connection with the death of a close relative or friend. They often ask: Why? What force is responsible? Isn’t this proof of human immortality?
When discussing such questions it is good to refer to God’s Word, the Bible. It is the only reliable source of information regarding what happens to man when he dies, what forces are active in the invisible world, and what natural circumstances may lie behind such experiences. Would you like to know what the Bible teaches about the question raised by the stopping of grandpa’s clock?
Did Grandpa Stop It?
According to the Bible it could not have been grandpa himself who stopped it. Do you recall what the Bible says happens when people die? God told Adam and Eve what death would mean for them: “You will eat bread until you return to the ground, for out of it you were taken. For dust you are and to dust you will return.” God said nothing about their continuing to live in a spirit world.—Genesis 3:19; 2:17.
Furthermore, God’s Word says about the dead: “As for the dead, they are conscious of nothing at all.” (Ecclesiastes 9:5) Can they plan and carry out mysterious things like the stopping of clocks? The Bible answers: “There is no work nor devising nor knowledge nor wisdom in Sheol [Hebrew word for the grave, the place to which the dead go].” (Ecclesiastes 9:10) Confirming this, the Bible also says that man “goes back to his ground; in that day his thoughts do perish.”—Psalm 146:4; 115:17.
Consequently the Bible often likens death to a state of sleep. Acts 13:36 says that when King David died he “fell asleep.” First Thessalonians 4:13, 14 refers to Christians who had died as “those who are sleeping.” Jesus spoke of his friend Lazarus as sleeping when He went to resurrect him from death, saying: “I am journeying there to awaken him from sleep.”—John 11:11-14; see also Daniel 12:13.
Thus, God’s Word shows that the dead are incapable of communicating with the living. They are inactive until the great awakening of them when they are resurrected into God’s future new order. (John 5:28, 29) Therefore the Bible’s answer is clear: It was not grandpa who stopped the clock. Then what or who else could have done it?
Is There a Spirit World?
Yes, the Bible definitely shows that a spirit world exists. Who inhabit it? Besides the Almighty Spirit, Jehovah God, with his Son, Jesus Christ, and his faithful angels, there are God’s adversary, Satan, and his host of unfaithful angels, also called demons.
Did God, his Son, or any of his angels stop grandpa’s clock? If so, the question arises: Why? For what purpose? To give a sign that could help that farmer believe in God? Hardly, because if God wanted to promote belief in his existence by means of mysterious supernatural signs, why does he not give such signs to everyone? Why do signs of that kind occur so seldom? Why are they often subtle and frightening? No. The Creator has more exact and comprehensive means for helping people to believe in him.
Could anyone else from the spirit world have stopped grandpa’s clock? Could God’s adversary and his demons? What does the Bible say?
“Wicked Spirit Forces” Suspected
The Bible clearly shows that there are “wicked spirit forces” who deceive and frighten man. In Ephesians 6:12 the apostle Paul describes them as “wicked spirit forces in the heavenly places,” against whom man has to shield himself. Such powerful wicked angels can easily perform tricky things, or even masquerade as the dead. Satan tried to deceive the first human pair about death, saying that they would not die. This masquerade is a clever way for him to support his false teaching of man’s immortality.—Genesis 3:4; John 8:44.
It is evident that these “wicked spirit forces” sometimes use the time of a person’s death to upset and frighten relatives with unpleasant experiences. A lady in Stockholm, Sweden, says: “After my husband’s death I was repeatedly awakened at night by sharp bangs on the floor of my bedroom. It was as if somebody were throwing steel balls. You can see the round splintered dents there on the parquet flooring. The TV-set was also bombarded in the same way. One night I was awakened by some loud cracks in the air above my bed. I was extremely frightened.”
Others have had pleasant experiences, however. For example, a woman described how her recently deceased husband appeared to her at night and talked to her. She said he looked very nice and wore beautiful clothes.
A similar experience was told by another woman: “Soon after my husband’s death he appeared in front of me in a room. One half of the room was dark and the other half was bright. Seeing him there in the bright half of the room playing the guitar convinced me that he was now living in a bright and pleasant place.”
A man told this experience: “I lived alone with my mother for many years. She used to take care of the home and the cooking. One day after her death when I was resting on a sofa, I heard her call from the kitchen: “Come and eat! The meal is ready!” First I thought I had dreamed, but there was a warm, well-prepared meal right on the table.”
The question arises: Can wicked agents of Satan engage in such pleasant activities? God inspired the apostle Paul to give a very simple answer, saying: “There is nothing surprising about that; Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light. It is therefore a simple thing for his agents to masquerade as agents of good.” (2 Corinthians 11:14, 15, New English Bible) To deceive and mislead people, the demons often appear to be nice and helpful.—1 Timothy 4:1.
Freedom From ‘Wicked Forces’
Anyone with similar experiences who wants to be free from the influence of ‘wicked forces’ should turn to Jehovah God for help. Jesus Christ taught his followers to pray to God: “Deliver us from the wicked one.” (Matthew 6:13) God hears prayers that come from a pure heart. “The eyes of Jehovah are upon the righteous ones, and his ears are toward their supplication.”—1 Peter 3:12; Proverbs 15:29.
Knowledge from God’s Word, the Bible, also helps. A careful study of it reveals the true condition of the dead. It establishes firm hope in the future resurrection of the dead. It also reveals the identity of the ‘wicked forces’ in the spirit realm and shows how to avoid being deceived and harassed by them.
A lady who knew what the Bible teaches about these matters reported: “Shortly after my husband’s death I saw the back of a man who was sitting in front of the stove ready to light a fire. He acted exactly as my husband used to do in that situation. Immediately, out loud I asked Jehovah God for help. I then commanded the person: ‘I know who you are, get out of here!’ In that very moment he faded away. I have never seen him since.”
Natural Explanations
Not every experience of the kind discussed here has supernatural explanations. A balanced investigation of what actually has taken place can often lead to a simple, natural explanation.
Some mysterious experiences can be explained by what the Bible calls “time and unforeseen occurrence.” (Ecclesiastes 9:11) Timewise, things may coincide almost unbelievably. For instance, millions of clocks throughout the world do not stop when their owners die. However, the laws of probability testify that somewhere, some time, a clock will stop for mechanical reasons at the exact time of its owner’s death. Similarly, other unforeseen occurrences may coincide with someone’s death.
Also, strange visual or audible occurrences after someone’s death may have natural explanations. A long life together with a person may have left such a deep impression in the mind of the surviving partner that moments may suddenly occur when this one seemingly experiences the presence of the deceased one.
Interestingly, scientists have found that some persons possess what is called an eidetic imagery, that is, the ability to see mental images as if they are suspended outside the head. The Encyclopædia Britannica says under “eidetic image”: “An eidetic person not only can imagine an absent object but behaves as if he really can see it.”
So whatever or whoever is behind a mysterious occurrence in connection with someone’s death, it is not the dead person himself in any form or shape. It was not dead grandpa who stopped his clock.
The German family, who declare that this story is true, told it to one, who told it to me, twenty years ago.
The watch was then in their possession, and was a heavy, old-fashioned object, in a curiously engraved, double gold case. It had then recently been brought from Frankfort, and was worn by the oldest son of the gentleman of whom the incidents below are related.
This person, a physician of high standing and benevolent disposition, having discovered, in the poorest quarter of the town, an aged and well-educated old man, suffering from a disease that was inevitably mortal, caused him to be brought to his home, and there had him nursed and cared for as though he had been his own father.
The invalid was very grateful, and before he died, said to the physician: “When I am gone, I want you to keep and wear my watch; it is more valuable than it appears. It will stop with my last breath, and should it begin to tick again, you will know that I have once more begun to breathe. Watch it, therefore, for some space of time, that I may not be interred prematurely.
“When it has been silent for a month, put it into your own pocket. In a few hours it will begin to go again. From that moment no other must wear it. It will be a sort of guardian angel to you. While it ticks regularly, you need fear nothing. When it begins to tick very rapidly, danger threatens you. If you are about to take a journey, and are thus warned, remain at home; if while you are in the street, remain where you are until the sound is normal, or return home. Never take it to a watch-maker; it needs no regulation. It will not stop until your breath does.
“I cannot tell you why, but it has been so, and it will be so, and you will soon believe it.”
The physician naturally believed that there was nothing in all this. The superstition that a man’s watch often stops when he dies, without any perceptible reason, was familiar to him; but he listened gravely, promised to do as the invalid asked, and thanked him for the bequest.
However, the man lived many months longer, and died very quietly at last. He was found lying as though asleep, and the watch in the pocket of his night-robe had certainly stopped, though it had not run down.
The physician was, at least, sufficiently startled to respect the old gentleman’s wishes in regard to the watch; but it remained silent, and at the end of the month he placed it in his own pocket. Exactly as the donor had said, he had not worn it twenty-four hours before it began to tick again. From that moment it continued to keep perfect time.
About three years from the day on which he first became its owner, it had given three manifestations of its peculiar power.
I do not know the particulars, save that by stopping in the street while the wild ticking of the watch continued, the doctor was saved from passing an old wall which fell just at the time when he would have been beneath it had he continued his walk; that the same wild ticking caused him to return home in time to save the life of one of his family, who needed instant attention; and that, obeying its warning, he did not enter a railway train, in which, an hour after, many passengers met a fearful fate.
But, by this time, not even the original possessor of the watch felt a greater confidence in it as a sort of mechanical guardian angel. The doctor’s wife also believed in it implicitly, and would not, on any account, have allowed him to leave the house without it, had she been aware of the fact.
One day, however, the hasty change of a waistcoat caused this to happen. The fact was discovered by the lady, and shortly, to her horror, she heard the watch begin to tick madly; then, to stop suddenly, with a sort of crash. The terror that this caused her was so great that she was prepared for anything, and was not astonished when her husband was shortly after brought home unconscious—his horse having taken fright at something and overturned the carriage. He did not rally, and finally the physicians pronounced him dead.
The usual solemn preparations were made ; the funeral took place, and all seemed over, when, in the middle of the night, the seeming widow, who lay awake, with her eyes fixed upon the watch, which she had placed upon her pillow, heard it begin to tick again, and that with astonishing rapidity.
On the instant she felt sure that her husband was not dead, and, rising, summoned those who could aid her, proceeded to the burial place, unlocked the vault, where the coffin lay on a stone slab, and had the lid lifted.
The first glance showed a gleam of color in the doctor’s face.
Wrapped in blankets, which his wife had provided, he was borne home and laid upon his bed. There he was restored to full consciousness, regained his health and lived to extreme old age.
Certainly, if this was a coincidence—as is, of course, possible—it was a most fortunate one, and no one could blame those who saw all this happen for regarding the watch with reverence and affection, and believing all that its original possessor had told them to be solemnly true, forever afterward.
The Freed Spirit: or Glimpses Beyond the Border, Mary Kyle Dallas, 1894
Mrs Daffodil’s Aide-memoire: There is, of course, much folk-lore about clocks and watches stopping at the death of their owners–hence the old song, “My Grandfather’s Clock,” about the clock stopping short, never to go again, “when the old man died…” Clocks are also said to start up or chime mysteriously as an omen of death. Unlike such a “death watch,” this watch proves a very helpful life-saver indeed.
Source: https://mrsdaffodildigresses.wordpress.com/tag/clock-stops-at-death/
Miss Emma Hafscher of Corning, N.Y., aged 24, daughter of Frederick Hafscher, died recently from a lingering bronchial trouble. A clock which had been purchased as present by the young man to whom she was engaged to be married was in the room near the bed and had been running regularly until the moment the young lady died, when the clock stopped at the minute she drew her last breath. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Jackson [MI] Citizen Patriot 12 October 1895: p. 8
There is a 1906 story in The Ghost Wore Black about a young lady who apparently died. When her sister went to stop the clock in the death-bed room, as was appropriate in a house of mourning, it would not stop. Nor did the clock, which required to be wound every 24 hours, stop when it should have run down. The young lady’s sister, “half crazy with grief and superstitious fear,” over the clock’s behaviour, refused to have her sister buried. The clock ticked on for three days until the “corpse” revived. When she was out of danger, the clock stopped and never ran again.
Source: https://mrsdaffodildigresses.wordpress.com/tag/clock-stops-at-death/
New Castle Town Timepiece Stood Still After Old Attendant Died
New Castle, Del., Sept. 18. The town clock located in the tower of Immanuel P.E. Church has stopped. The man who has been the caretaker of the clock for the past fifteen years, James G. Bridgewater, died on Friday and within a few hours the clock came to a standstill.
An attempt has been made to start it, but it has refused to work. A son of the deceased will now care for it. Philadelphia [PA] Inquirer 19 September 1904: p. 1
Source: https://mrsdaffodildigresses.wordpress.com/tag/clock-stops-at-death/
De notre correspondant en Suède
“Je n'ai jamais cru au surnaturel, mais, il y a trois ans de cela, dans cette pièce même, il s’est produit quelque chose de mystérieux. Vous voyez cette vieille pendule accrochée au mur. Elle appartenait à mon grand-père. Il l’avait achetée à l’étranger quand il était jeune marin. Il en avait toujours été très fier et il aimait dire à tout le monde qu’elle était très précise. Comme vous pouvez le voir, elle est arrêtée maintenant. Lorsque grand-père est mort à l’hôpital à quelques kilomètres d’ici, au même instant, cette pendule qui fonctionnait depuis soixante-dix ans s’est arrêtée. Ça doit être grand-père qui l’a arrêtée, non?”
Voilà l’histoire telle que l’a racontée un paysan suédois à un Témoin de Jéhovah. De nombreuses personnes ont fait l’expérience de phénomènes aussi mystérieux lors de la mort d’un parent proche ou d’un ami et elles se posent souvent ces questions: Pourquoi? Quelle force en est à l’origine? Est-ce une preuve de l’immortalité de l’homme?
Quand on discute de tels problèmes, il est bon de se référer à la Parole de Dieu, la Bible. C’est la seule source d’information à laquelle on puisse faire confiance pour savoir ce qui arrive à l’homme après la mort, quelles forces sont en activité dans le monde invisible et quelles explications naturelles on peut donner de ces faits. Aimeriez-vous savoir ce que la Bible enseigne à propos de la question soulevée par l’arrêt de la pendule du grand-père?
Est-ce le grand-père qui l’a arrêtée?
Selon la Bible, il est impossible que ce soit le grand-père qui ait arrêté la pendule après sa mort. Vous souvenez-vous de ce que la Bible dit à propos de ce qui arrive aux gens lorsqu’ils meurent? Dieu expliqua à Adam et Ève ce que signifierait la mort pour eux: “Tu mangeras du pain, jusqu’à ce que tu retournes au sol, car c’est de lui que tu as été pris. Car tu es poussière et tu retourneras à la poussière.” Dieu n’a pas du tout dit qu’ils continueraient à vivre dans un monde spirituel. — Genèse 3:19; 2:17.
De plus, la Parole de Dieu dit au sujet des morts: “Quant aux morts, ils ne se rendent compte de rien du tout.” (Ecclésiaste 9:5). Peuvent-ils projeter et mener à bien des actions mystérieuses comme arrêter les pendules? La Bible répond en disant: “Il n’y a ni œuvre, ni combinaison, ni connaissance, ni sagesse dans le Schéol [mot hébreu qui désigne la tombe, l’endroit où vont les morts].” (Ecclésiaste 9:10). Confirmant cela, la Bible dit aussi que l’homme “retourne à son sol; en ce jour-là périssent ses pensées”. — Psaumes 146:4; 115:17.
En conséquence, la Bible compare souvent la mort au sommeil. Actes 13:36 dit que, lorsque le roi David mourut, il “s’est endormi”. La première lettre aux Thessaloniciens (4:13, 14) parle des chrétiens qui sont morts comme de “ceux qui dorment”. Jésus, alors qu’il allait ressusciter son ami Lazare, dit qu’il dormait. Il déclara: “Je vais là-bas pour le tirer du sommeil.” — Jean 11:11-14; voir également Daniel 12:13.
Ainsi, la Parole de Dieu montre que les morts sont incapables de communiquer avec les vivants. Ils sont dans un état d’inactivité jusqu’au jour où ils seront réveillés lors de leur résurrection dans le nouvel ordre de Dieu maintenant proche (Jean 5:28, 29). Par conséquent, la réponse de la Bible est claire: Ce n’est pas le grand-père qui a arrêté la pendule. Alors, qui ou quoi d’autre a pu le faire?
Existe-t-il un monde spirituel?
Oui, la Bible dit nettement qu’il existe un monde spirituel. Qui l’habite? En dehors de l’Esprit tout-puissant, Jéhovah Dieu, de son Fils, Jésus Christ, et des anges fidèles, il y a l’adversaire de Dieu, Satan, et son armée d’anges infidèles que l’on appelle des démons.
Est-ce Dieu, son Fils ou l’un de ses anges qui ont arrêté la pendule du grand-père? Si c’est le cas, une question se pose: Dans quel but? Pour donner un signe qui aiderait ce paysan à croire en Dieu? Certainement pas, car si Dieu voulait faire croire à son existence en donnant des signes surnaturels mystérieux, pourquoi ne les montrerait-il pas à tout le monde? Pourquoi des signes de ce genre se produisent-ils aussi rarement? Pourquoi sont-ils souvent mystérieux et effrayants? Non, le Créateur donne des signes plus précis et plus compréhensibles pour aider les gens à croire en lui.
Quelqu’un d’autre vivant dans le monde spirituel a-t-il pu arrêter la pendule du grand-père? Se pourrait-il que ce soient l’adversaire de Dieu et ses démons? Que dit la Bible?
Les soupçons portent sur “les forces spirituelles méchantes”
La Bible montre clairement qu’il existe des “forces spirituelles méchantes” qui trompent et effraient l’homme. En Éphésiens 6:12, l’apôtre Paul les décrit comme “les forces spirituelles méchantes qui sont dans les lieux célestes”, contre lesquelles l’homme doit se protéger. Ces anges méchants et puissants peuvent facilement être à l’origine de phénomènes bizarres ou même se faire passer pour des morts. Satan a essayé de tromper le premier couple humain à propos de la mort en lui disant qu’ils ne mourraient pas. En prenant l’apparence de personnes décédées, il a trouvé là un moyen astucieux de faire croire à la véracité de son faux enseignement sur l’immortalité de l’homme. — Genèse 3:4; Jean 8:44.
Il est évident que ces “forces spirituelles méchantes” profitent parfois de la mort d’une personne pour contrarier et effrayer sa famille en lui faisant vivre des expériences désagréables. Une dame de Stockholm, en Suède, déclara: “Après la mort de mon mari, j’ai été réveillée plusieurs fois dans la nuit par des coups secs frappés sur le sol de ma chambre. C’était comme si quelqu’un jetait des billes d’acier. Vous pouvez voir les creux ronds sur le plancher. Le poste de télévision a été lui aussi bombardé. Une nuit, j’ai été réveillée par de grands craquements au-dessus de mon lit. J’ai eu très peur.”
D’autres personnes, par contre, ont vécu des expériences agréables. Par exemple, une femme expliqua comment son mari qui était mort récemment lui apparaissait la nuit et lui parlait. Elle déclara qu’il avait belle apparence et qu’il portait de beaux vêtements.
Une autre femme raconta une histoire semblable: “Peu après la mort de mon mari, il est apparu devant moi dans la pièce. La moitié de la chambre était sombre et l’autre moitié éclairée. En le voyant là dans la moitié éclairée de la pièce en train de jouer de la guitare, cela m’a convaincue qu’il vivait maintenant dans un endroit lumineux et agréable.”
Un homme parla de ce qui lui était arrivé en ces termes: “J’ai vécu seul avec ma mère pendant des années. Elle tenait la maison et faisait la cuisine. Le lendemain de sa mort, alors que je me reposais sur le canapé, je l’ai entendue m’appeler de la cuisine: ‘Viens manger. Le repas est prêt.’ Tout d’abord, j’ai pensé que j’avais rêvé, mais il y avait un repas chaud et bien préparé sur la table.”
Une question se pose: Les agents méchants de Satan peuvent-ils se lancer dans des activités agréables de ce genre? Dieu a inspiré l’apôtre Paul pour qu’il donne cette très simple réponse: “Cela n’a rien d’étonnant: leur maître lui-même, Satan, ne se déguise-t-il pas en ange de lumière? Il n’est donc pas surprenant que ses agents se prétendent des serviteurs du Dieu juste.” (II Corinthiens 11:14, 15, Nouveau Testament, A. Kuen). Pour tromper et duper les gens, les démons semblent souvent être aimables et serviables. — I Timothée 4:1.
Délivrés des ‘forces méchantes’
Toute personne qui a vécu des expériences semblables et qui veut être libérée de l’influence des ‘forces méchantes’ devrait se tourner vers Jéhovah Dieu pour trouver de l’aide. Jésus Christ enseigna à ses disciples à prier Dieu ainsi: “Délivre-nous du méchant.” (Matthieu 6:13). Dieu écoute les prières qui viennent d’un cœur pur. — I Pierre 3:12; Proverbes 15:29.
La connaissance de la Parole de Dieu, la Bible, apporte aussi de l’aide. Une étude consciencieuse de ce livre révèle la vraie condition des morts. Elle donne un ferme espoir dans leur résurrection future. Elle révèle l’identité des ‘forces méchantes’ et montre comment éviter d’être trompé et tourmenté par elles.
Une dame qui connaissait ces enseignements bibliques raconta ceci: “Peu après la mort de mon mari, j’ai vu un homme de dos, assis devant le poêle et se préparant à allumer le feu. Il agissait exactement comme mon mari le faisait dans cette situation. Immédiatement, j’ai demandé à haute voix de l’aide à Jéhovah Dieu. Ensuite, j’ai ordonné à cette personne: ‘Je sais qui vous êtes, sortez d’ici!’ Aussitôt il s’est évanoui. Je ne l’ai jamais revu depuis.”
Les explications naturelles
Les phénomènes dont nous avons discuté n’ont pas tous des explications surnaturelles. Des recherches objectives sur ce qui s’est réellement passé peuvent souvent mener à une explication simple et naturelle.
Des expériences mystérieuses peuvent être expliquées par ce que la Bible qualifie de “temps et événements imprévus”. (Ecclésiaste 9:11.) En ce qui concerne le temps, il peut y avoir des coïncidences presque incroyables. Par exemple, des millions de pendules dans le monde ne s’arrêtent pas quand leurs propriétaires meurent. Cependant, les lois des probabilités montrent qu’à un certain endroit, à un certain moment, une pendule s’arrêtera pour des raisons mécaniques exactement à l’instant où son propriétaire mourra. De même, d’autres événements imprévus peuvent coïncider avec la mort de quelqu’un.
De plus, de bizarres phénomènes visuels ou auditifs après la mort de quelqu’un peuvent avoir des causes naturelles. Une longue vie en compagnie d’une personne laisse parfois une impression tellement profonde sur l’esprit du conjoint survivant que, par moments, ce dernier peut avoir l’impression que la personne décédée est présente.
Il est intéressant de noter que des hommes de science ont découvert que certaines personnes voient une image eidétique, c’est-à-dire qu’elles peuvent voir des images mentales comme si elles étaient extérieures à leur cerveau. Sous le titre “Image eidétique”, l’Encyclopédie britannique écrit: “Un eidétique peut non seulement imaginer un objet absent, mais se conduire comme s’il le voyait réellement.”
Ainsi, que ce soit quelqu’un ou quelque chose qui soit à l’origine d’un événement mystérieux en rapport avec la mort d’une personne, le mort lui-même n’y est pour rien, en aucun cas. Ce n’est donc pas le grand-père qui a arrêté la pendule.
Unfortunately my wonderful Grandfather passed away yesterday at 15.27. I’ve been to visit my grandmother again today and their clock has stopped working during the night/early morning at 03.27am. I know it’s not the exact time but strange it’s the time on the clock.
I’m sure it’s just a strange and huge coincidence but has anyone else had an experience like this?
This picture was taken from a video I took which shows the clock not ticking.
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When I was back home visiting, the large clock in the dining room fell off the wall after being hung there for 25+ years. Stopped working at 9.13. The next day a family friend called to cancel a coffee date as her mother (terminally ill) had died the previous day. Months later we met up as I was back in town, on the subject of her mother she mentioned she died in the morning. When I asked what time... it was 9.13
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It's funny you mentioned this because on the night that my grandma passed away back in April 2020, she had one of those old bird chirping clocks that a bunch of old folks have that has a bunch of birds on it that would chirp every hour. It's been hanging on the wall for probably 15-20 years in that exact same spot.
As my mom was sitting with my grandma waiting for her to pass at my aunt's house next door, I was sitting outside on the porch at my grandma's house. when my grandma took her last breath about 30 seconds before my mom finally texted me "She's gone" the clock fell off the wall and I never got it to work again. So I knew about 30 seconds before my mom had texted me that my grandma was already dead before she sent me the message
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No, but I had a family clock that had been "broken" for years start bonging when we carried the deceased owner out of the house. Freaked me out.
L'une des manifestations de morts les plus démonstratives que je connaisse est celle qui a été rapportée par un positiviste sincèrement matérialiste, le Dr Caltagirone, de Palerme, comme ayant été observée par lui-même. Écoutons la version personnelle qu'il en a donnée. Le fait s'est passé il n'y a pas longtemps, en décembre 1910.
« J'étais, écrit-il, l'ami de Benjamin Sirchia ; j'étais même son médecin. Sirchia, très connu à Palerme, était un vieux patriote, très populaire. Il avait des qualités morales et civiques excellentes ; c'était, comme moi, un incrédule, dans le sens le plus large du mot.
Un jour, au mois de mai de l'année 1910, il nous arriva de discuter sur les phénomènes psychiques. Je répondis à ses questions en lui assurant qu'il résultait de ma propre expérience que certains de ces phénomènes étaient réels, mais que les interprétations en étaient contestables. Dans cette conversation, il me dit sur un ton de badinage :
– Ecoutez, Docteur, si je meurs avant vous, comme il est probable, puisque je suis vieux et que vous êtes jeune encore, fort et robuste, je vous donne ma parole que je viendrai vous apporter la preuve de ma survivance, si j'existe encore. Moi riant, et sur le même ton de plaisanterie, je répliquai : – Alors, vous viendrez vous manifester en cassant quelque chose dans cette chambre, par exemple cette suspension, au-dessus de la table... Et pour être poli j'ajoutai : – Je m'engage aussi, si je meurs avant vous, à venir vous donner quelque signe du même genre dans votre maison !
Je le répète, tout cela fut dit plutôt par plaisanterie que sérieusement. Nous nous séparâmes, et il partit quelques jours après pour Licata, province de Girgenti, où il allait s'installer. Depuis ce jour, je n'avais eu aucune nouvelle de lui, ni directement, ni indirectement. Cette conversation avait eu lieu en mai 1910.
Au mois de décembre suivant (le 1er ou le 2), vers 6 heures du soir, j'étais assis à table avec ma sœur, l'unique personne avec laquelle je vis, lorsque notre attention fut appelée par plusieurs petits coups, appliqués tant sur l'abat-jour de l'appareil suspendu au plafond de la salle à manger, que sur la clochette de porcelaine mobile du fumivore se trouvant au-dessus du verre tubulaire de cristal. Au commencement, nous attribuâmes ces petits coups à des éclats produits par la chaleur de la flamme, que j'essayai d'atténuer. Mais les coups gagnèrent en force et se continuèrent avec une sorte de bruit rythmique. Je grimpai alors sur une chaise pour examiner plus soigneusement ce qui se passait, et je constatai que le phénomène ne pouvait être attribué à la chaleur de la flamme, qui fonctionnait avec une pression très normale. Du reste, il ne s'agissait pas de petits éclats, comme ceux qui se produisent à la suite d'une chaleur extrême, mais de coups secs d'un timbre spécial, rappelant ceux que l'on peut frapper par les jointures des doigts ou par une petite baguette avec laquelle on aurait tapé intentionnellement sur un objet de porcelaine. Je cherchai à découvrir la cause de ces coups étranges. Rien. En attendant, le dîner s'acheva, et le phénomène s'arrêta.
Le soir suivant, le même tintement se répéta, et il en fut ainsi pendant quatre ou cinq jours consécutifs, ce qui excita toujours davantage notre grande curiosité.
Mais le dernier soir, un coup fort et sec fit casser en deux la clochette mobile, qui demeura en cet état suspendue au crochet du contre-poids métallique. C'est ce que je pus vérifier en montant debout sur la table pour observer de près l'effet du dernier coup. Je me rappelle même, et ma sœur également, avec précision, que bien que nous eussions éteint la lumière centrale autour de laquelle se produisait le phénomène et qu'on eût allumé une autre branche du lustre, les coups continuèrent toujours à frapper avec une égale intensité.
Je dois également déclarer et affirmer sur ma foi d'honnête homme qu'au cours de ces cinq ou six jours d'observation du fait étrange que je ne pouvais m'expliquer, je ne pensai jamais à mon ami Benjamin Sirchia, et moins encore à la conversation du mois de mai précédent, que j'avais entièrement oubliée.
Le lendemain du dernier soir où, comme je l'ai dit, la clochette de porcelaine avait éclaté, vers 8 heures du matin, j'étais dans mon cabinet ; ma sœur s'était mise au balcon pour regarder je ne sais quoi dans la rue ; la domestique était sortie ; lorsqu'on entendit dans la salle à manger un coup formidable, comme si un violent coup de massue avait été frappé sur la table.
Ma sœur le perçut du balcon, et moi de mon cabinet : nous accourûmes tous deux pour voir ce qui était arrivé.
C'est étrange, mais quelque fantastique que soit ce fait, j'en garantis la vérité : sur la table, et comme si elle eût été posée par une main humaine, on trouva une moitié de la clochette mobile, tandis que l'autre moitié était restée suspendue à sa place.
Evidemment, le coup si violent était disproportionné avec l'incident. Ce fut le dernier phénomène couronnant les faits étranges qui s'étaient répétés durant cinq ou six jours, et ce dernier en plein jour, et sans l'action de la chaleur.
La chute de cette demi-clochette de porcelaine ne pouvait s'être produite perpendiculairement à la table, car devant passer par le centre de l'abat-jour, elle aurait dû rencontrer le tube de l'appareil, avec son manchon, qui se seraient brisés sous le choc, pour laisser passer librement la demi-clochette du fumivore ; or, ces deux objets étaient parfaitement intacts et l'espace vide était insuffisant pour le passage. Si elle était tombée obliquement sur l'abat-jour en porcelaine, assez grand, la demi-clochette en question se serait cassée ou aurait brisé l'abat-jour ; ou en admettant qu'elle ait glissé sans casse, elle aurait dû tomber en rebondissant à un point éloigné du centre de la table, et non perpendiculairement à l'axe de l'appareil.
Conséquences : le bruit fut un avertissement du phénomène accompli, et le morceau de clochette placé de telle façon que l'on devait conclure que le fait n'était pas dû à un accident, lequel aurait d'ailleurs été en opposition avec les lois de la chute des corps.
Je dois avouer une fois encore que j'avais absolument oublié Sirchia et le pacte que nous avions conclu au mois de mai précédent.
Deux jours après, rencontrant le professeur Rusci, celui-ci me dit : – Savez-vous que le pauvre Benjamin Sirchia est mort ? – Quand ? demandai-je anxieusement... – Dans les derniers jours de novembre, le 27 ou le 28. – Les derniers jours de novembre ? Etrange ! pensai-je alors. Les phénomènes qui se sont passés chez moi se rattacheraient-ils à sa mort ?3 Ils ont commencé le 1er ou le 2 décembre et ont continué pendant cinq ou six jours. La tentative de casser quelque chose de l'appareil à gaz de la salle à manger, avait été convenue entre nous, au mois de mai, et cette manifestation ne s'est arrêtée qu'à l'exécution finale de la convention... Chose tout aussi étrange, lorsque le pacte fut ainsi exécuté, presque pour le marquer, un coup formidable en donna l'avis ! Le transport voulu de la clochette à un endroit où elle ne pouvait tomber normalement d'elle-même, et excluant le hasard, complète cette étrange manifestation.
Voilà mon observation personnelle.
Ma sœur et moi, nous avons voulu conserver, comme un souvenir de ce phénomène inexpliqué, les deux morceaux de la clochette parmi les choses qui nous sont précieuses et chères. »
Dr VICENZO CALTAGIRONE
The psychologist Carl Gustav Jung cites this type of event as an example of synchronicity (principle that explains the non-causal explanation of events, the “explanatory coincidence” of two or more facts). In his book "Man and his symbols" he says the following:
"I should note, however, that symbols do not just occur in dreams; appear in all kinds of psychic manifestations. There are symbolic thoughts and feelings, symbolic situations and acts. It even seems that, often, inanimate objects cooperate with the unconscious creating symbolic forms. There are numerous true stories of clocks that stop at the moment their owner dies, such as the pendulum clock in the palace of Frederick the Great in Sanssouci, which stopped at the moment of the king's death. Another common example is a mirror that breaks or a painting that falls when someone dies."