Featured Image: McLauchlan Investigates Mediums Karen Docherty and David Francis in Dundee, Scotland
This is part one in a series of four accounts from Alistair A. McLauchlan, who attended four mediumship events in Scotland in 2019.
McLauchlan had written to me out of the blue saying that he had been following my work investigating and reporting back on psychic mediums and said that he used that as an inspiration for a writing class assignment when he was working on his master’s degree. In January 2020, he received his degree, but then COVID-19 struck, and life has been quite different. Thankfully, he was able to attend these events in the “before times” and give us these great accounts. Since then, I expect that these mediums have shifted to Zoom to be able to continue bringing in income.
I really enjoyed reading his accounts. They are detailed and yet include the color and flavor of the events. His thoughts interspersed throughout the writing are insightful. Scotland is one of Mark Edward and my favorite places; we were in Edinburgh and Glasgow in April 2019, right before these readings. We were invited to speak to the skeptic groups in the area and really enjoyed ourselves. Mark preformed two séances in Edinburgh in the creepy vaults at the Banshee Labyrinth. Those are great memories.
Note: McLauchlan was discouraged from taking photos. What is included here was taken surreptitiously. I’ve altered the images to remove faces, yet they still hold the mood of the event. At the conclusion of each of these accounts, I have added my closing thoughts. Enjoy! —Susan Gerbic
Alistair A. McLauchlan
I decided to try to witness conversing with spirits of the dead firsthand. Previously, I’d found Halloween séances to be farcical shows of amateur dramatics more suited to the superstitious Victorian age or bad horror movies. Similarly, Ouija board demonstrations were open to the manipulation and control of the performance creators. My only alternative was to attend a medium show where supposed psychic mediums communicate with spirits then relay their messages to relatives or loved ones in a gathered audience. Luckily for me, there seems to be a renaissance for this type of entertainment and a renewed popularity in Spiritualism that hasn’t been seen since the post–World War I years. Through a bit of careful planning and with little good fortune, I managed to book four separate medium events, all in Scotland and all around the month of June.
DUNDEE (FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2019)
I arrive at the Queens Hotel around 6.30 p.m. with an hour to spare, so I park up around the back. It’s a balmy night, and the concrete buildings and tar of the road are drying in the evening sun. Pedestrians and commuters file up and down the streets, making their way home or into the few bars in the area. I leave my car and check it’s locked three times, then I turn to recognize tonight’s main medium, Karen Docherty, step out of the back of a five-year-old Toyota Yaris (a small, boxy run-around favored by old people and city dwellers). I’m surprised by the unostentatious choice of transport. I expected her to be transported in a new BMW or top-of-the-range 4×4. Her basic website and social media channels detail frequent tours of the United States and United Kingdom, and fans leave gushing testimonials giving the impression of accomplishment in her trade.
The hotel lobby is clean and spacious with an art deco design. A plaque on the wall tells you that “Winston S Churchill stayed in this hotel on many occasions between 1908–1922,” a historical piece of trivia that probably means nothing to most of its clientele. I order a pint of coke, take a seat in the bar, and scan the room for an indication on possible show attendees. Strangely, there’s no music playing and the TVs are off, so I can easily eavesdrop into the surrounding conversations. A pair of Irish women are cheerily discussing their upcoming travel plans in the corner, and there are groups of office workers gossiping over their drinks near the bar. A couple of single men stare into their phones and sip at pints, while an older couple picks at their plates of fish. I try to interpret if the bar patrons are attending tonight’s show, but every time I decide they are, they rise, leave the bar, and pour into the street. At 7:15, I decide to go up to the events room upstairs. I stop in the toilet and click on my audio recorder and slot it into the chest pocket of my jacket. On every step up the wide, carpeted stairway, the nerves jangle in my stomach. I’m not sure what to expect or if I’ll be welcome as an outsider. I’d heard that some mediums and their devotees can be overly protective of their faith in Spiritualism. There’s a long line for the foyer bar, so I walk straight into an adjacent room that’s buzzing with chatting people. I realize that by switching my phone off, I’ve hidden my e-ticket from use, so I have to hang around the reception table until a seated man ushers me into “any seat,” which means any seat up at the back because the room is already three-quarters full. The room’s walls are covered by plain, cream wallpaper, and a trio of large chandeliers hang from the white ceiling. On two sides of the room are large Victorian windows that invite the evening sun into the room. It’s a big room—elegant and well-maintained. It’s perfect for a large meeting but not grand enough for a wedding. There are six rows of around twenty comfortable chairs. These are facing two further chairs and a table that form a makeshift stage. The first five rows are already crammed full of middle-aged, round women who natter like birds and sip on their drinks. I feel like I’ve walked into an aviary. The remaining chairs are quickly filled, so extra chairs are pulled from next door and positioned in any available space. I count around 200 people sitting with me tonight. Around ten are men, and half of them seem to have been brought against their will.
A pair of excited women sit beside me and chatter like chipmunks. I overhear mentions of previous visits to Docherty’s shows. When one of the women leaves, I turn to her friend.
“Excuse me. Do you go to many of these things?,” I ask.
“Oh aye. I’ve been to see Karen five or six times. She’s very good; has a good way with the audience,” she answers.
“This is my first time to any psychic event. I’m not sure what to expect.”
The woman mistakes my inquisitive question for apprehension and says, “Ach, it’s not that bad.”
She then turns to her pal, who’s returned.
“This is this guy’s first time,” she says with a chuckle.
Before I can ask another question, Karen Docherty rises from her chair and addresses the audience through a microphone. This hushes the many nattering conversations to silence. Docherty is around forty-five and is small and chunky. She has shoulder-length dirty blonde hair and is wearing a simple black blouse and pair of plain black trousers. She doesn’t look like a psychic but more like your typical Scottish mum or aunty. I immediately consider that she must be confident to stand up in front of 200 people and hold court. She welcomes everybody with a simple “Hello” then pauses to let all the stragglers return from the bar. Then she says: “We were supposed to be welcoming another medium from Denmark tonight, but unfortunately we just found out she has an illness, which means she couldn’t fly. So instead we have David Francis, a fantastic medium from Ireland who’s based in Glasgow.”
Her local accent intrigues me, because I’ve only ever heard the American or English accents of TV psychics. Foreigners would likely categorize her accent as broad, while Scots would instantly recognize the Dundonian drawl. Docherty asks everybody to switch off their phones, which ignites a chain reaction of rustling, murmuring, and many beeps of handsets powering off. She then asks if this is anybody’s first time to a medium show. I reply by raising my hand, and I scan the room to see very few doing the same.
“What you’re here for …” she stops to acknowledge the noise of a busker outside whose rendition of “Wonderwall” is seeping through the gap of an open window. She jokes that the wailing isn’t the sound of the spirits, but she would be delighted if it were. The audience laughs as she silences the intrusion by closing the window.
“It doesn’t matter if it’s your first time; doesn’t matter if you’re not sure. It doesn’t really matter if you decide this is not for you. Whatever happens, the spirits are here because they love you,” she says.
“Obviously, by the time you leave we have given you something to think about. If you’re on the fence about it, enjoy the experience. The spirits don’t want to come in and make us sad or upset. They don’t want to embarrass you. Don’t be sacred to talk back. Don’t be like a rabbit in the headlights. Nothing you don’t want mentioned in public will be said. As a medium, I speak from the spirit world to you. They know you’re coming before you know you’re coming. It’s them that have brought you here. Keep an open mind no matter what. Some people are dragged long and get frightened; don’t be. If any chairs start floating about—if people start levitating, don’t be jealous.”
I’m comforted by her local accent. It’s like listening to a local nurse or primary school teacher. She holds the microphone with her right hand but is very expressive with the left, and she seems to be aware of the importance of hand and body gestures.
“I’m going to get started now. I can feel the spirit world building up. When I come and talk to you, please talk back and take the microphone. Don’t just hold the microphone like an ice cream; it’s important that you answer back in loud, clear voice. The spirits know your mind and your thoughts,” she says.
Then she jumps right in.
“Okay. I have an older lady and feel this lady had a bleed on the brain or injury to the head or a brain tumor. I feel the symptoms. She was not elderly. Fifty. Too young to pass into the spirit world, maybe a bit younger than that. Over this side, not entirely sure, I’m getting a three of a family connected to her or a three. Anyone up the back?” she asks.
An older woman sitting five seats away from me raises her hand.
“Does that mean someone to you?” asks Docherty.
“My sister, and her mother,” answers the older woman, while motioning to a younger woman sitting next to her.
“So, brain tumor and three? She had symptoms, not instantaneous? Did I get the age correct?,” asks the psychic.
The woman next to me also puts up her hand and identifies a brain tumor and mother, but she is ignored in favor of the pair of women.
“Okay. Can we get the microphone along?,” orders Docherty to the man from the reception table. The microphone is passed hand to hand like an athlete’s baton along our row.
“Sometimes we get people with similar stories. Now, you would understand she wasn’t worrying about things, but she kept some things to herself. Not make a big fuss or deal. Does that make sense?,” asks Docherty.
The woman now holding the microphone nods.
“She was quiet, private lady. With a great personality?,” asks Docherty.
“Yes,” answers the woman.
I’m torn between watching Docherty and the reactions of the woman.
“I feel that she’s very strong, and she wants to boost you up. Very strong, confident. It’s okay if you disagree,” says Docherty.
“She was, but she was also quite shy at times,” answers the older woman.
“I am getting that she is confident, very strong but whether she’s giving you that to give you peace of mind. I mentioned there’s three of a family, but there’s a boy she was really close to, one boy?,” asks Docherty.
“No,” answers the woman.
“But you’re saying there’s no three or there’s no boys? There are no boys, no grandchildren?,” presses the medium.
“No. Oh yes. There’s a boy, a grandson,” answers the woman.
“I just feel she has to talk about a boy, and there’s three of a family? She wants to be around her family, but she feels she hadn’t done everything she could have while she was alive. Do you understand?”
“Yes, yes,” answers the woman.
Docherty then directs her attention to the nervy looking woman next to the older woman, so the microphone is passed on. I quickly evaluate the situation: the spirit that Docherty is channeling is both the older woman’s sister and this younger woman’s mother, so these two women are aunty and niece. Before I can bathe in my outstanding method of deduction, I’m back into the spirit world.
“Now she definitely wants to acknowledge you’re here. She didn’t say things or do things that she should’ve. I’m not saying that because she’s ashamed but feels she should say that just. Do you understand this?,” asks the medium.
“Yes,” croaks the younger woman.
“I also understand there’s alcohol connected to her. Do you understand?”
“Yes, yes.”
“I can smell the alcohol now. Now she’s saying she is comfortable to talk about the alcohol now as a part of healing. She’s bringing an apology. She’s well aware that you’ve been very strong, and that you’ve been keeping the family together.”
The daughter nods her head in reply.
“I know you have a couple bits of her jewelry. She’s also mentioning a butterfly and Christmas, or some birthday around Christmas?”
The daughter acknowledges the remarks, although she is not assured.
“She wishes things could’ve been better or she had been better. Don’t worry if I’m wrong. I’m getting a Christmas that was not good, and she wishes things hadn’t gone so wrong.”
The daughter converses with her aunty, then says, “Could’ve been just before she passed.”
“She has really come through tonight to provide healing. She sees her child name linked. She sees that child?”
“Yes.”
“This isn’t about what she brought in. She is in peace where she is now. Did you miss her passing? Don’t worry about that. That last five minutes means nothing.”
Suddenly Docherty raises her voice and calls out, “I’m getting Jemma or Jenna or Jem or Jen. Does that mean anything?’
“No, nothing,” replies the daughter.
“Okay, let me hold it. Okay, I think the lady’s gone, but I leave you with her love,” says Docherty.
The daughter squeaks a thank you while sniveling back some tears. The audience senses an ending to the spirit connection, and enthusiastic applause fills the room.
The massive “Jemma or Jenna or Jem or Jen” guess has just fallen flat, like a boxer’s haymaker that misses completely and leaves the boxer clawing the air before tumbling to the ring canvas. Docherty, however, has expertly dodged any embarrassment by ignoring the miss and continuing forward. I’m also struck by the number of questions that come from the medium. It’s not so much inquisitorial as cross-examination by a relentless bombardment of questions. After each inquiry there’s an acknowledgement of a positive or negative answer and then a related question straight after. The audience member doesn’t have much time to think and must answer on the spot. This pressure must be multiplied tenfold when in front of a crowded room of 200 people who are watching intently and hanging on every word.
Docherty intimates that a new spirit is attempting to connect, then crosses over to the other side of the room to involve that side of the audience.
“I have a new man, a road traffic accident. A motorbike. And I still have John or Jem. He seems like quite a cheeky chap and impatient. He’s a younger man that has passed to the spirit world. Not a car but feels more like a bike, but if you don’t recognize a John or Jem. don’t worry about that part,” says Docherty to the room.
A woman at the far part of the room puts up her hand and acknowledges all the details. The microphone is passed along.
“Has there been an anniversary or birthday recently? He feels people have been talking about him recently. He is bringing in a lady related to you. It wasn’t a sudden passing. Somebody maternal but not necessarily your mother. Do you understand this, sweetheart? The lady is well missed. She is talking about two children or two grandchildren. Problems in the abdomen? If it’s no, I’m fine with that.”
“No,” answers the new audience member.
“I’m sensing a link down south. She is listening to this conversation. I think that there is a link to a man with body problems,” says Docherty.
“No, not really,” answers the woman.
The conversation peters out with a selection of missed queries until Docherty offers: “Okay, I’ll leave you with this lady’s love,” which is the trigger for applause and the end of the connection.
I’m baffled by this last conversation and scan the room to gauge other people’s reactions. Everybody is transfixed by the medium’s display and staring at her captivated. Before I can properly process the scene, Docherty quickly moves on to another spirit and possible connection with a waiting audience member. There are several of these types of conversations: questions to the room that are answered by the flimsiest of associations. Any weak link is seized upon by the medium and relayed back to the audience member until the conversation peters out to nothing.
“I don’t know. I’m getting a grandad or dad. I feel a strong sense of using hands. A mechanic or fixing engines or cars. John or James?,” asks Docherty to the audience.
I think to myself that my grandad and was a mechanic who loved his cars, and my dad’s middle name is John, although he is alive.
“Anybody?,” asks Docherty to the room.
About twenty people put their hands up, which brings a ripple of laughter around the audience. It’s not surprising that many recognize this plea, because many people’s male relatives work with their hands and more specifically with cars. Psychologists call this The Barnum Effect, which “is a common psychological phenomenon whereby individuals give high accuracy ratings to descriptions of their personality that supposedly are tailored specifically to them, that are in fact vague and general enough to apply to a wide range of people.” Docherty picks a young man at the back of the room. He seems overdressed for tonight with gray suit and purple tie, and he is sporting a black cockatiel style quiff. There’s a tattoo crawling up his neck and many studs and rings in his facial features. He looks like a pirate going to an office job interview. Docherty waits until the microphone is passed along the room like a church collection basket.
“You were close to your grandad, weren’t you? He was like a father?,” she asks.
“Yes,” replies the man.
“Your grandad didn’t like being in hospital but had a great sense of humor. He says he knew what he had, but it kept coming back, is that right?”
“Yeah.”
“Who was James?”
The young man pauses to think then answers, “He was my grandad’s best friend.”
“And has he passed onto the spirit world?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Oh, okay. Well, we won’t send him there.” (A joke is made to cover a big miss, and the audience responds with a choral chortle.) “He says he left some sort of writing. Also, I feel like he was the man that has shown you through life?”
“Yes.”
“He wants you to do all the things you want and to do the things he didn’t get to do. He was worldly wise. Are you married? Are you getting married?”
“No.”
“He is talking about someone getting married.”
“My sister was going to get married.”
“Not anymore?”
“I hope not,” answers the man, sparking another burst of collective laughter.
“Now, I can sense someone in the family is having a baby?,” asks Docherty.
“I don’t think so,” answers the man.
“Anne?”
“Ehhm. Oh yes. My friend’s wife.”
“I don’t know. I think it’s somebody closer.”
“I was trying for a baby.”
The audience lets out a collective “Awww,” as if a big, furry kitten has entered the room.
“Your grandad knows all this. He is a funny man and a good man, and he is right by your side.” With that, Docherty accepts the room’s applause and hands her microphone to the next medium.
David Francis is a small man of about thirty and is nattily dressed in a three-piece suit with a tweed waistcoat. He had been sitting on a chair out front, cross legged, watching the audience intently until being introduced.
“Good evening, everybody,” says Francis in a thick Irish accent, which he jokes about.
“I’ve got a lot of images tonight. In my mind’s eye, I’m getting an older lady, maybe sixty or seventy?”
There’s little response to this initial spirit connection, so he jumps ages and gender.
“And also, I’m feeling a connection to a young man. A man overwhelmed by life. He was brought down the wrong path by others. He is fully responsibly for his actions bringing his death. He damaged his physical body but had a beautiful soul. Taking his life by his own hand. Does anybody understand this?”
A middle-aged woman with long, blond hair in the front row raises her hand and claims recognition.
“He was in his low twenties when he passed, and an older woman has brought this young man tonight. A lost child?,” asks the Irishman.
“Yes,” replies the woman while accepting the microphone.
“I’m getting a patchwork blanket. He is a very loving guy who is sorry for the last years of his life. He wasn’t connected to his family in these last years?”
“Yes, yeah,” replies the woman.
“Now, he had a temper and would lose the rag easier than others?”
“Sometimes, but not very often,” replies the woman.
“I’m also a getting dark haired man. Not a track-suited lad but wearing jeans and t-shirt. I’m getting problems with depression and anxiety. I don’t mean to be personal, but he’s showing me these memories, mirroring them. Would you understand? I see a connection to divorce. Lifestyle habits led him to be the way he was. Interaction with the police. Do understand this?,” asks the medium.
The medium seems to be confusing the woman with his bizarre statements and relentless questioning. The conversation stumbles into an awkward finish, but before anyone in the room can digest the strangeness of this connection, he immediately jumps on to another dead person in the spirit world. There’s no applause from audience. I trace the room and see many bemused and unimpressed faces. Francis is beginning to take the form of a man who’s walked into a swamp. While he may only be waist height in the mire, he’s sinking fast with every awry pronouncement. He’s less skilled in judging the audience and lures audience members in before destroying the connection with needlessly personal and negative statements. I also get the feeling that he doesn’t appreciate that many of his negative, personal assertions reflect badly not only upon the dead person but also relatives. The audience has become more hesitant and distrustful as a result.
“Now I’ll open up the room,” says Francis, while making a screwed-up face of concentration. “I’m starting to see a hospital or red cross. Normally this means a nurse or carer. Also, a problem in the torso?”
Francis seems to identify the ailments of the spirits by physically feeling them himself. This psychosomatic diagnosis is referred to as clairsentinence, or clear feeling, and is as scientifically verifiable as the tooth fairy. He rubs his chest and stomach in a circular motion to highlight the area of pain, pinpointing every single vital human organ in the process.
“It could be a nurse or a carer or somebody who was in hospital? I don’t want to say cancer outright. Margaret or Mary. Anybody?,” asks the medium to the crowd.
There’s no response at all. It’s a big miss and quite startling considering he’s targeted a massive chunk of Scotland’s population in one singular sentence. People start exchanging bewildered looks and shakes of the head. A woman volunteers that her mother was a nurse, but the link soon dissolves into the wallpaper. He continues in this same way, criss-crossing the audience with general statements that everyone in the room can possibly identify with. However, there’s a no rapport, no humor. When a connection is made, Francis gives little opportunity for audience members to interact properly. Unlike Docherty, he has no information to work on. He is saying too much. Sensing that he is struggling, Docherty jumps in to give a half time break. She informs us that there is raffle at the desk at £5 a ticket, which wins a personal reading from her as the sole prize. It seems like an extortionate piece of business, yet there is a long line to buy the tickets within seconds.
Everybody rises from their chairs and either begin to file out to the toilets, slope to the bar, or crawl downstairs for a smoke.
“What do you think, so far?,” asks the woman sitting next to me.
“Yeah, it’s quite interesting. Not as weird as I’d thought. I think she was better than the Irish guy,” I answer.
“Oh, yeah. He’s terrible, isn’t he? We’re not impressed by him at all.”
After twenty minutes, everyone has settled back into their seats with fresh drinks, and the second half of tonight’s show begins with Francis again, who wastes no time in working the room.
“Now, I’m drawn to a lady over here,” says Francis, while pointing toward a group of four women sitting in the middle of the second row.
“Now, I’m getting a strong person, authoritative. In the forces, may I say the RAF?”
“Yes, yes. That was my brother,” answers a woman in a thick, Texan accent. She is quite large, in her sixties, and has a streak of dark purple running through a short, gray haircut.
“I’m getting an airplane and maybe an ejector seat. He’s a very strong person, an energetic person but very stern. Do you understand being mean or stern?”
“Well, not really,” answers the woman.
“Okay, but he was in the RAF and he gives me the impression that he saw action. He wasn’t just flying over mountains?”
“Yes. He was a rear gunner.”
“Well, he’s very concerned about you, and he knows you will be going on a long journey very soon.” (If she had turned around and asked me, I could have also predicted this and probably even the airport she was flying into.)
The medium then scours the room for his next target until an older woman in front of me claims recognition of her mother.
“I feel like this lady was lonely before she passed over. Had she recently lost someone close and felt alone, very alone?,” asks Francis.
The woman is offended by his guess and immediately cuts him off with a terse “No. Nope. Not her.” Francis tries to rescue the faltering connection, but to her credit this woman is having none of it and waves off the conversation with an outstretched palm and shake of her head. It takes all my willpower not to roar in laughter. The Irishman has pushed his luck and annoyed someone with his brash, unrefined style and is now floundering again.
“Now, I’m going to the back of the room and somebody in line with where I’m standing,” says Francis.
Francis stands directly in front of me, only five rows down. I like to think of myself as unremarkable, but at 6’4” and over 250 pounds, in this crowd I’m about as inconspicuous as Tony the Tiger at a panda party.
“I’m getting an old man with facial hair, and I’m trying to be polite, but he has a receding hair line, not completely bald but short, short hair. I’m seeing a figure like this in my mind’s eye. A father or grandfather figure. I’m drawn to somebody that looks likes this man. A big man who’s a bit overweight,” says the medium.
He is describing me: a big lump who’s long lost a battle to retain his once curly locks. Naturally, he’s assumed that I look like my long dead grandad or my very much alive father and tried his luck. I refuse to make eye contact or respond to his advances, because I do not want to be badgered in front of a room full of strangers. Luckily, there’s one of the few men of the audience sitting directly in front of me, and he accepts the connection as his father.
“Now, do you recognize the description of this man?,” asks Francis.
“Yes. Although my father was always clean shaven,” answers the man.
“Okay. Now, did he have heart problems near the end?”
“Well, not really. He died of an aneurism.”
“Well, maybe I’m getting mixed messages from the spirits.”
The swamp water is now up to the medium’s nostrils, so he grasps for help and returns to the quartet of eager participants in the second row. He’s on safe ground with one of this crew.
“Now, I’m getting drawn back to this part of the room, and I’m getting an older woman coming through,” says the medium while motioning to the four women in the second row. Every time either of tonight’s mediums have linked with a spirit, at least one of this quartet has shot up her hand like a teacher’s pet. The woman who accepts the microphone is smaller than her chunkier pals, with graying black hair. She appears timid and mousey. She squeaks an affirmative answer back to the Irish medium’s relentless questioning. The audience watches with a mix of deep fascination and creeping embarrassment as the medium goes about emotionally dismantling the woman.
“Yes,” replies the woman whimpering.
“She is trying to highlight the things that are bothering you. Your mind is at a million miles per hour, and you have hundreds of thoughts. Take a step back and stop worrying about others. You have no idea how you are affecting others. The lady is reiterating that. Be selfish,” says the Irishman.
“I cannot be selfish,” squeaks the woman.
“Take time for you.”
Her final humiliation is complete with the wail, “Why didn’t she tell me that she loved me when she was alive?”
“That’s unfortunately something I can’t answer,” replies Francis. “However, I do believe this lady has seen the ripple effect of her actions. I assure you of that. We have a beautiful journey to take in crossing over, but she realizes how she acted. She has a hell of a lot of love in her heart,” continues the Irishman.
The wailing woman appears broken and is weeping into her hands. The audience, however, bursts into a round of applause in joyful appreciation of the medium’s public evisceration of the woman. This is what they’ve come to see. Francis has just dragged himself out of the quagmire at the very point of drowning and now takes his leave amid rapturous applause. I half expect him to take a bow before he takes his seat. Karen Docherty meanwhile has been sitting stony-faced throughout Francis’s performance. Probably feeling upstaged by his finale, she decides to jump back in and round up the night.
“Now, I’m still getting the names or Jem, Jen, or Jemma coming through but also Ellen or Helen. I’d like to offer this up to the whole room,” says Docherty.
Another middle-aged woman at the far end of the room raises her hand, and the microphone is passed along again.
“Do these names mean anything to you?,” asks Docherty.
“My best friend’s aunty was called Helen, but she was like a grandmother to me,” replies the woman, providing yet another tenuous link.
Probably sensing that she cannot top Francis’s performance ending, she rounds up the night with advice on how to book her personal readings and then thanks everybody for attending.
As I get up to the leave the room, the woman beside me asks me, “Well, what did you think?”
“Aye, it was quite good, and he pulled it out of the bag in the end,” I answer while trying to hide my disappointment.
It always takes me a day or two to process an event, and I’m never able to properly evaluate something as it happens. Fortunately, as a gardener I’m afforded the opportunity of deep reflection, especially during June when I’m trawling up and down lush lawns every day. Overall, I was underwhelmed by my first medium show. The mediums appear little more than event hosts who coax and cajole their audience into believing that their general suppositions have more profound meaning. I was prepared to be astounded and expected much more than the disappointing exhibition of fluky conjecture combined with an audience’s eager desire to link details and please the medium. I hoped to witness some sort of compelling evidence for spiritualism or mediumship but saw nothing. Despite this, apart from Francis’s cruel exposure of the emotionally vulnerable woman, the event is also not as malign or malevolent as I’d previously assumed. By and large, the audience members are enthusiastic participants and willing to be used as part of the performance. Also given they are only spending £20 on each ticket, there doesn’t seem to be much greedy deception on display (apart from the raffle). I hoped to witness some devious examples of underhand tactics or audience subterfuge, but the reality is far more banal and unsupernatural. However, with a bit of research, I was able to untangle some of the methods and sly tricks used by the mediums to deceive the impressionable.
COLD READING
Cold Reading is the ability to gather information from an audience member without that individual realizing that they are providing the information themselves. It is referred to as “cold” because the medium needs no previous knowledge of the audience member. By carefully observing an audience member’s characteristics and behavior through a series of deductive or general guesses together with the general “Barnum statements,” a medium can give the impression of having supernatural abilities. Everybody uses cold reading in their daily life, sometimes to build understanding and often to create prejudice. We judge people by their choice of clothing, the newspapers they read, cars they drive, and even their race, sex, or age. Mediums finetune this ability to a science, enabling them to identify characteristics and psychological hang ups from a few choice questions and reactions.
James Underdown, executive director of the Center for Inquiry West and CFI Investigations Group, says, “In the context of a studio audience full of people, cold reading is not very impressive,” and explains cold reading from a mathematical perspective. “A typical audience [like from the Docherty event] consists of about 200 people, and a conservative estimate assumes each attendee knows around 150 people” (Wikipedia 2019). So, when Karen Docherty suddenly asks, “Who’s Jenna or Jemma?,” she is hoping there is a Jenna or Jemma related to the chosen audience member. However, when she reoffers this to the room, the chances are multiplied by the 200 people in the audience and the 150 people known to them, creating a pool of 30,000. Would it be surprising for there to be a dozen Jennas or Jemmas in such a large sample, especially both being common names? The only surprise to me was nobody took the bait.
One of the most crucial elements of a convincing cold reading is a subject eager to make connections or reinterpret vague statements in any way that will help the reader appear to make specific predictions or intuitions. While the reader will do most of the talking, it is the subject who provides the meaning.
SHOTGUNNING
Shotgunning is one of most-used cold reading techniques and is named after the way a shotgun fires a wide spread of small missiles so that there is a better chance of finding a target. Docherty and Francis both depended on this ploy in choosing the general subject of health. Health can be expanded to mean hospitals or pharmacies and all the professions therein (the NHS, for example, is Scotland’s and the United Kingdom’s biggest workforce at over 1,500,000 people). Everybody has either worked for the NHS or is related to or knows someone who is or has worked in the NHS or health industry. Also, this subject could also be expanded to a hospital or doctor visit, treatment received in a hospital, or even an illness someone has suffered or even perished from. You’d be hard-pressed to find somebody who does not connect in some way to the universal subject of health. It’s neither supernatural nor scientific, more common sense and simple math.
PIGGYBACKING
When a psychic makes a pronouncement to an audience member and it’s a miss, they will sometimes claim the information was meant for someone else in the crowd and that the spirit messages are being muddled. This technique allows the medium/psychic to fish the rest of the audience for a match. So, when Docherty insisted that she was still receiving messages from or about a “Jenna or Jemma” near the end of show, she is not only saving face from the previous miss but reinstating her apparent psychic abilities to the audience. You could say that she is feeling her way to the truth or even hedging her bets, but in truth it’s straightforward cheating and about as supernatural as predicting the football pools two hours after the game has finished.
That was quite an adventure. McLauchlan makes you feel like you are right there. I do remember the “before times” when 200 people could sit next to each other in an enclosed room without masks. Aw, the good ol’ days. One thing I noticed as I reread this account is how McLauchlan describes the event as a performance and the audience as a unit. The ladies sitting next to McLauchlan say about Francis “We’re not impressed by him at all,” and I’m given the impression that the “we” isn’t just the two women but the room of people.
This was McLauchlan’s very first mediumship event, and it was led by quite a pair. He saw Karen Docherty, who seemed much more practiced and personable than the brash David Francis.
We are going to continue learning more about McLauchlan’s adventures in three more articles. I think you will find as we go that his impressions and how he contrasts and compares the various mediums changes. —Susan Gerbic