Auras
An
aura, according to New Age metaphysics, is a colored outline,
or set of contiguous outlines, allegedly emanating from the surface of an
object. Auras are not to be confused with the aureoles or halos of saints, which
are devices of Christian iconography used to depict the radiance of light
associated with divine infusion. In the New Age, even the lowly amoeba has an
aura, as does the mosquito and every lump of goat dung. The aura supposedly
reflects a supernatural energy field or life force that permeates all things.
Human auras allegedly emerge from the
chakras. Under ordinary circumstances, auras
are only visible to certain people with special psychic power. However, with a
little bit of training, or with a special set of Aura Goggles with "pinacyanole
bromide" filters (available at your local New Age Head Shop), anyone can see
auras. You may also use
Kirlian photography to capture auras on film.
At least that is what New Age spiritualists believe.
On
the other hand, you may also see auras if you have a
migraine, a certain form of
epilepsy, a visual system disorder or a brain disorder.
Most aura training exercises involve staring at an object placed against a white
background in a dimly lit room. What one sees is due to retinal fatigue and
other natural perceptual processes, not the unleashing of hidden psychic powers.
Something similar happens when you stare at certain
colored or black and white patterns. Vision
is not the verbatim recording of the outside world. When looking at a colored
object, for example, the eye does not transmit to the brain a continuous series
of duplicate impressions. The brain itself supplies much of the visual
perception. In short, even if auras are perceived, that is not good evidence
that there is an energy field in the physical or supernatural world
corresponding to the perceptions.
Some
psychics claim that the specific colors in auras have specific meanings.
Edgar Cayce, for example, not only gave a
meaning to each of seven colors, he also connected each color with a note on the
musical scale, a planet in the solar system, and possible health disorders.
Robert Bruce, an aura expert in his own mind,
objects to the notion that specific colors have specific meanings. In his view,
even colors have auras, so what color clothing you have on will affect the color
of your aura. According to Bruce,
The
human aura is both an energy field and a reflection of the subtle life energies
within the body. These energies make us what we are and in turn, are affected by
our surroundings and life style. The aura reflects our health, character, mental
activity and emotional state. It also shows disease - often long before the
onset of symptoms.
The
notion that auras reflect health is a common one among true believers. The
problem is, what color reflects what condition? There is no consensus on what
the colors mean, which makes it difficult if not impossible to devise an
empirical test to determine whether there is any correlation between specific
colors and specific diseases. In other words, reading auras is something like
reading
Rorschach tests with the added difficulty of
each psychic potentially seeing a different pattern.
For
every other object of color we have scientific devices which can measure any
energy emitted from the object, as well as the wavelengths of light reflected
from the object. Even though equipment exists capable of measuring extremely
minute energy levels, no one has ever detected an aura or the alleged energy
that gives rise to an aura using scientific equipment. Human tissue is about a
million times less sensitive than something like a PET scanner, yet we are
supposed to believe that some special people can "see" what cannot otherwise be
detected. Or, we are supposed to believe that we all have the power to see auras
but somehow we have repressed or never trained our psychic selves to unleash the
power within.
Furthermore, the best aura reader in the West was tested before a live
television audience and failed miserably. The Berkeley Psychic Institute (BPI)
sent their top aura reader for a chance to win $10,000 if she could prove her
powers. She agreed that the devised test was a fair and accurate. The test was
televised on a program hosted by Bill Bixby.
James Randi put up the $10,000. The psychic
was presented with about twenty people on stage and was asked if she could see
their auras. She said that she could see the auras, they all had one and they
emanated at least a foot or two above each person's head. The twenty
aura-wearing people then went offstage. A curtain was lifted, revealing a number
of partitions behind which only some of the twenty people were standing. Thus,
Bixby and the psychic were looking at twenty partitions but only several of them
had a person behind it. The psychic was asked if she could see any auras
creeping up above the partitions. She said she could. To get her ten grand all
she had to do was correctly identify each partition that had a person behind it.
She was to do this by seeing each person's aura above the partition. The
audience was given an aerial camera view of the proceeding. Well, the psychic
claimed that she saw an aura above all the partitions and that there was a
person behind each partition. The partitions were removed, revealing about 6
people behind the partitions. The psychic didn't even seem surprised. She might
console herself that 6 out of 20 is not bad in a hostile arena.
Of
course, the test only demonstrates the lack of aura reading power of one person,
not that there is no such thing as an aura or that auras are not indicative of
mental, emotional and physical health or sickness. However, Randi's offer is
still open to any psychic who wants to try it, except that now the prize is over
$1,000,000. Why is there not a line of psychics outside Randi's house? If what
the psychics say is true about auras and reading them, taking this money would
be easier than taking candy from a baby. Even if there are no poor psychics who
need the money, they might still demonstrate their powers and give the prize to
their favorite charity.
The
Berkeley Psychic Institute has a special place in my heart. One day a few years
ago, I noticed a poster from BPI on a bulletin board near my office at
Sacramento City College. In addition to information about BPI, the poster
exclaimed: You may not be psychotic, you may be psychic! I wrote a note
to our school psychologist who handled the "psychologically challenged" at the
time. I told her I was concerned about the poster. She wrote me back and asked
me how in the world did I know that she had attended BPI. (If I occasionally
express a bit of disdain for psychologists and therapists, please keep in mind
that I have had a traumatic adulthood, dotted with experiences such as this
one.)
I was
familiar with BPI from their work at an annual local affair. Every year in May
at the University of California at Davis there is a Whole Earth Festival
reminiscent of the sixties. For three days the campus is filled with tie-dyed
shirts, psychedelic music, incense burning, children with flowers in their hair,
marijuana smoking, gurus, massages with scented oils, handcrafts, the latest in
New Age healing and religion, karma patrol (for those who overdose on drugs),
etc. The Aura Reading Booth is run by BPI. For a few dollars, one sits in a
chair in the great outdoors with the music playing, the incense wafting, and
people swaying while someone from BPI reads your aura. Actually, the BPI psychic
uses colored crayons to fill in a piece of paper pre-printed with a series of
outlines in the vague shape of a person. Then the psychic tells you what your
aura reveals. They only charge a few dollars and for the longest time I
considered their activity a harmless parlor game. But now I feel I should put up
posters near their booth saying,
If you see auras, you may not be
psychic; you may have a brain or vision disorder.