Psychics
say their 'gift' drawing greater interest
By
Meera Pal, STAFF WRITER
PLEASANTON
IRMA
SLAGE was in her early 20s when she realized the people she had been communicating
with in her mind were actually dead.
"You
can go through your whole life without realizing you're hearing voices in your
mind ... and others are not," said Slage, a self-described psychic counselor
from Livermore.
Slage,
who hosted a seance at the Pleasanton Hotel last week, has been sharing her "gift"
with others for more than 30 years.
"I
like the idea that people can get a message from the other world," she said.
The
event, billed as a seance, was not what most imagine when they hear the word.
People were not sitting in a dimly lit room, holding hands and asking thespirits
to communicate with them.
Rather,
the group of about 100 people, gathered in the hotel's Victorian Room, sipped
wine and munched on cheese and crackers as Slage recounted her supernatural encounter
with the spirits living in the hotel and answered personal questions from the
audience.
With
the aid of photos showing what Slage called "orbs," or balls of light
energy, she spoke of the high level of spirit activity at the hotel, which was
built in 1864.
Paranormal
activity has been linked to the hotel's seedy past as a thriving brothel and has
lured other spiritual investigators, including Gloria Young, a Northern California
ghost hunter from the Ghost Trackers Paranormal Research Group who documented
psychic phenomena.
"The
room next to the bar that's
where
all the action was," Slage said. "I felt a man standing next to me.
He was grungy and his beard was full of stuff. I could smell him."
Slage
has been commissioned to use her ability to communicate with spirits to help the
police, as well as visit historic homes and grave sites.
Whether
one believes Slage can communicate with the dead is really not her concern, she
said.
"I
don't push it; you can believe whatever you want to believe," she said. "Just
sit with me for a while and we'll go over it."
To
any of the people among her core group of believers, however, Slage is beyond
reproach.
"Irma
is not God, but she's got a gift to help people," said Oakdale resident Jan
Rien, who said she has had several personal sessions with Slage since her father,
Robert Fuchs, died in June 2005.
Rien
and her family, who live in Livermore, located Slage through friends.
"We
wanted to go talk to her and see if our dad wanted to get a message to us,"
Rien said.
Rien,
her mother Mary Fuchs and her sisters have since developed a friendship with Slage,
whom they praise for her compassion.
For
the family, who said their father has passed on several messages from beyond,
the true reward is knowing their father is still with them.
"I
don't look at death like I used to," Rien said. "I feel like my dad
is in a spiritual realm. He is still with us."
The
idea of life after death has helped put mediums, and concepts like the spiritual
realm, more into the mainstream consciousness. For instance, there is John Edward,
the psychic medium who hosted the television show, "Crossing Over with John
Edward."
This
week, in East Contra Costa County, a group of paranormal investigators from Livescifi.tv
visited Union Cemetery, where vandals had knocked over 64 headstones. One psychic
from Pleasant Hill said she made contact with the spirits of a woman buried there
and the former caretaker, both of whom were upset about the vandalism.
Since
Livescifi.tv launched in May, the site has averaged 40,000 viewers per show.
And
nationally 1.6 million viewers tuned in for the Friday night finale of Lifetime
Television Network's "America's Psychic Challenge." The show pitted
16 self-proclaimed clairvoyants against one another to find the top psychic.
"More
people are realizing that something is missing in their lives. They're searching
for something spiritual," said Anne Pearce, a co-owner of Intuitive Way,
a Walnut Creek-based school teaching how to sense your own spiritual reality,
and how to read auras, heal and meditate.
"The
people who come to our center are people who would not normally seek out a psychic
... It's not the kind of thing that is public," Pearce said.
"I
think a lot more people are becoming more spiritual," Rein added. "Not
necessarily religious, but with some higher power."