It’s Not the Time for Your Religion

There’s a character in my book, Awoken, who has the ability to heal. Whitney. Many cultures have people with this intuitive ability and they call them different things or attribute the power to something specific. Anyway, here’s a post from my old blog. I thought it was fitting since it’s about healing using mental powers…or whatever you want to call it.

 

On Sunday nights, Anne, my sister, loved to watch the TV movie of the week. This particular Sunday she was especially excited because the movie was about a girl who faked a pregnancy so that her boyfriend would stay with her. The girl cut out circular shapes of a quilted blanket and positioned it just right so as to form her pregnant tummy. Anne was very much looking forward to this movie. However, she was exhausted from talking all day on the telephone and therefore decided to take a nap. She left me with instructions to wake her up at the start of the movie. Like any soldier with orders, I took my job seriously, and watched the clock carefully, not wanting to disappoint my big sister. When eight o’clock rolled around I went to our bedroom, turned on the light, and went to shake my sister awake so that we could spend the next two hours glued to the television screen.

I’d done this countless times and on this particular occasion something seemed to be different: Anne wasn’t waking up. I shook and shook and still she didn’t emerge from sleep. Her face dripped with sweat and she’d soaked her sheets and comforter already. I realized straight away that something was out of sorts and therefore relied on strategy two. “Anne! Wake up! Anne!” I screamed in her ear. She remained limber and pliable under my hands as I shook her shoulders and yelled in her ear. This was when I decided it was time to go to strategy three which I’d advise for any and all scenarios: go and find someone more qualified to deal with the situation.

My mother toddled behind me as I led her back to Anne’s bed. I showed her the situation by jerking my sister’s shoulders back and forth and shouting into her ear. “See, she doesn’t wake up,” I said. Mother looked perplexed and I believe we both realized the complexity of the situation. The weight started to fill up my head and I thought about a world in which my sister never woke up and I’d be one of those traumatized children that lost a sibling to scarlet fever or some other disease I’d witnessed on one of the TV movies of the week.

Once my mother checked over the scene she seemed to know exactly what to do. She ran off to her room and returned later with her hymnal and a knowing look. This is probably at the point that I should explain that we were as my mother would classify us: Christian Scientist. To those of you unfamiliar with this religion, it means that you rely on your connection to spirit to heal all things instead of medical science. This involves spending countless hours reading work by a lady named Mary Baker Eddy and truly believing. The thing is that any shadow of a doubt will cause the magic not to work and that was the chief reason for not using medical science. If you admit you need help then you give power to evil and then you’ve given up your own power thereby losing the battle between good and evil. This is just a rough explanation and I sincerely apologize to those that practice this religion and take offense at my explanation of the craft.

When mother came back with the hymnal I knew exactly what she had in mind, but I was completely resistant. In my opinion this was not a time to stand by your religion and follow its principles. Rather I felt it was the time to rely on medical science and rush to the nearest hospital fouty-five minutes away. However, my mother explained that it was precisely the time to trust our faith and that under no circumstances could we give power to evil.

We prayed. Anne slept. We prayed. Anne sweated profusely. Mother read from the hymnal. Anne tossed and tangled herself in her bed sheets. I tried to keep the faith. Anne just lied there. By morning I was completely exhausted and fell asleep somewhere between Anne and the floor. My mother, realizing the full extent of this particular challenge, not to mention the legal ramifications, prayed diligently and studied the “lesson.”

When the sun fully peaked its head up over the horizon I was fast asleep in my own dream world where pregnant teenagers were healing third world countries and the homeless were offering nuggets of wisdom in exchange for a warm place to sleep. Somehow I ended up in my own bed, which was strange to me since the last thing I recall was having my face pressed against the railing of Anne’s bed and thinking over and over again, she’s a child of God. She’s a child of God. She’s a child of God.

I remember bolting straight up upon waking, completely rigid with fear. Looking straight ahead I made a mental note that when I turned my head sideways I should prepare myself to be looking at the dead body of my sister, laying lifeless in puddles of sweat from the night before. I’m sure my mother had fallen asleep by now and truthfully I’m not sure that I saw her for that entire day. She had truly drained every last fiber of her body through the ritual she’d practiced so assiduously the night before.

The stirring shook my attention first. When I turned my head and saw Anne rolling coherently towards the light of the window I realized that maybe there was hope under my levels of skepticism. However, later I would conclude that all the hope in all the world is not what saved my sister. Honestly, I’m more prone to believe that my sister’s survival from whatever strange ailment that had stolen her consciousness was more related to stubbornness. I’m pretty sure the reason my sister is still alive to this day has less to do with religion and more to do with her own persistence and tenacity. This judgment is loosely based on the very first thing she said to me upon waking on that faithful morning. Sluggishly she sat up in her bed, her face red with heat and under a furrowed brow she hollered, “Damn-it Sarah, you forgot to wake me up!”

Feb 9, 2015 | Posted by in Uncategorized | Comments Off on It’s Not the Time for Your Religion

Author Spotlight

author
Heads up! I’ll be doing an /r/books Author Spotlight over on reddit today starting at 10:30am PT. Come by and say “Hi” and ask me any questions.
http://www.reddit.com/r/books/comments/2os0zu/hey_reddit_my_name_is_sarah_noffke_im/v
I’ll update with a direct link once the event starts.
Dec 9, 2014 | Posted by in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Author Spotlight

Sick Sense

harv12

So I mentioned in an earlier blog post that I used to have a memoir blog under a pseudonym. In it I shared crazy stories from my childhood. Here’s one that relates to our blog topic here: paranormal abilities. And it gives you some silly insights into my child-like brain. I’m not sure I’ve matured much there.

 

            There’s something I wanted so badly as a child but never had: an imaginary friend. I was absolutely fascinated with the idea of having this friend named Laurel, who spoke with an Irish accent, and made balloon animals. All over Saturday morning television there were shows portraying children and their imaginary friends. They always seemed to have so much fun together and I longed to know what that friendship felt like.

             I also always wanted a psychic ability. I felt that if only I could tell the future or read minds or even palms then I’d be truly happy. I began focusing the attention once dedicated to inventing an imaginary friend into cultivating this talent. However, I proved to be a failure at reading minds.

              Since my options for living a weird life were running short, I decided that I’d go into the field of mind control. My very first opportunity to hone this skill came when our Nintendo malfunctioned. All of my brother’s usual tactics of pulling out the cartridge and blowing on it didn’t work. Frustrated, David reverted to hitting the side of the TV to make Mario Brothers pop up on the screen. I had been sitting quietly on the sofa waiting the hour and half before my turn to play the game. My brother had apparently played the game so long that he’d overheated the system thereby rendering it useless. This would not do at all. As David proceeded to bang on the side of the TV, I closed my eyes and focused. The Nintendo works. The Nintendo works. The Nintendo works. I kept repeating those words in my mind, while simultaneously seeing the game actually working in my mind’s eye.

“Finally!” David shouted as the game chimed signaling that it was working once again.

My eyes flew open and a smile burst across my face. I extended my hand. “Give me the controller. It’s my turn.”

“Nah, give me five more minutes.”

            That wouldn’t do at all. He’d been asking for five more minutes for half an hour. I closed my eyes and started the chant in reverse. The Nintendo doesn’t work. The Nintendo doesn’t work. The Nintendo doesn’t work. A minute later I skipped gleefully out the front door to play outside while David resumed banging on the television.

         One day we were headed home on a frigid February day and our Toyota station wagon stalled at the light in town. My mother instructed my brother and sister to get out of the car and start pushing while she steered the car into a parking lot. She rolled down the window so that she could give them orders and the piercing winds flew back to where I was ducking down in the back seat.

“Why doesn’t Sarah have to help?” Anne yelled as she pushed alongside David.

“Why do you think? She’s not necessarily a large and strong kid. Push harder!” Mom commanded from the front seat.

              Feeling glad to be young and little, I shot a smirk through the back window at my sister who was freezing her ass off pushing the car. Fifteen minutes later my siblings managed to push the car off the road and into the parking lot of the Western Wear Store. Everyone piled back into the car, shivering and red faced. Mom turned the key in the ignition and pushed on the gas. The car reared and reared, but didn’t turn over. “Come on!” mother coerced the car.

She tried again and then again and then again.

“You’re gonna flood the engine,” David hollered from the passenger seat. “And can you roll up the window? It’s freezing in here!” he exclaimed.

Giving him a dirty look, mother shook her head. “I know that. And no I can’t roll up the window. I’m smoking.”

“Well stop!”

“Be quiet, I’m trying to think!” our mother shouted as she flicked a cigarette ash out the window.

              Closing my eyes, I began a chant in my head: The car works. The car works. The car works. Simultaneously I imagined the engine starting successfully.

Then all of a sudden there was the very real sound of an engine turning over. I opened my eyes to see my mom throw her hands up in the air. “Hooray! It worked.” She patted the dash board lovingly. “That’s a good car.”

I figured this was probably my moment to come clean and get my due credit. “Ummm, that was me,” I said.

“What was you?” Anne asked beside me.

“I fixed the car. With my mind.”

David and Anne doubled over laughing as our mother pulled the little station wagon out onto the road.

“Don’t laugh,” I said. “I have a sick sense. I can make things happen with my mind.”

“You’re sick, that’s for sure,” David said.

Mom extinguished her cigarette and then gave me a look over her shoulder. “You don’t have a sick sense.”

Oh great, now my own mother didn’t believe in me, I thought.

“It’s sixth. Sixth sense,” she explained.

“And you don’t have that either, Sarah,” Anne said.

If I couldn’t be psychic or have mind control then at least I could be weird. “I don’t care if you don’t believe me.” I fired another evil smirk at my sister. “Laurel believes me and that’s all that counts!”  

Dec 2, 2014 | Posted by in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Sick Sense