Two Sides to Every Story: An Encounter with a Spirit-Part I
Living and writing in a different culture gives you the chance to experience the world from a different perspective. Of course, it's what you do with that perspective that matters. Either you try to understand it, learn from it, or you dismiss it entirely. Two nights ago, my wife took her mother, a Bidayuh, home after visiting us for most of the day. Before they even arrived home my wife suspected something was wrong because her mother, who was riding in the backseat, didn't respond to a couple of questions.
Then when they reached her village in Quop, her mother, who was clutching one of her hands, had no sense of balance; it was as if she had suddenly gone limp. While helping her out of the car, which she never had to do before, they both fell. She was also speaking gibberish; my wife couldn't understand anything that she was saying. With the help of her brother-in-law they took to the hospital where they conducted several tests, including ct scans, cardiovascular tests, ex-rays, and blood samples. After several hours she finally could speak normally again. The doctors concluded she had a mild stroke, but it wasn't severe enough to admit her.
The following evening my wife was chatting online to her cousin in Kapit; her cousin's mother was on the phone talking to my wife's mother at that very moment. My wife's mother was telling her cousin's mother that she had been attacked by a spirit. She said her hand suddenly started to hit her so she had to clutch it tightly to prevent it from hurting her. She was also trying to speak but the spirit wasn't allowing her to speak.
Now before you start rolling your eyes, I asked my wife, where did her mother feel this 'spirit' came from, since she had been at our place. Our place, as far as I know, doesn't have any spirits. I hope not. As it turned out, late that afternoon, they had visited a sprawling nursery that sells flowers and plants. The owner was telling my wife's mother how she hurt herself. She said she was out back when a spirit shoved her from behind. She said no one else was around. She insisted she didn't slip or fall; she was shoved, and when she landed, she broke her wrist.
After buying some plants, some they left in the trunk to take back to Quop, they came back to our place, had dinner, and my wife drove her home. By then, she was not looking herself, as if she had been wiped out. I just assumed that she was tired since she's in her late 60's. Did this spirit follow her from the nursery? Did it enter her body? Then before they even reached her place, just a few kilometers away, she had this "stroke".
Was it a stoke or did a spirit disturb her? Again, this is all about your perspective on a different culture. My wife's cousin's mother, by the way, does have some experience in this area. She has a son who was found trying to strangle himself by a huge split boulder not far from my wife's family home, close to St James church, the oldest Anglican church in Southeast Asia, and the adjacent graveyard. Spirits have been sighted by that split boulder; people still go there to seek four-digit numbers. Her son was taken to a bomoh, a witch doctor/healer, before he was taken to a doctor. The family and relatives concluded he had been possessed. Why else would he try to strangle himself? The doctors, called it a seizure. After that incident, he has never been the same, in and out of trouble.
Whether you believe in spirits or not is not the point. If you are familiar with the Bible, and you take that as the word of God or as the truth, well there is ample evidence in the Bible where demons and spirits were driven out of people in order to heal them. The Chinese here celebrate the Month of the Hungry Ghosts. There are two sides to every story; even doctors don't always agree. Again, it's a matter of perspective from a different culture. Learn from it, or dismiss it. As a writer, as a person who has common sense, it's your choice.
As a follow up to this, while I gather more facts/opinions by interviewing her mother when she has fully recovered, I'll relate my own personal encounter with a spirit in her mother's house that took place 14 years ago. Up until then, I had off-handedly dismissed such stories. You can be the judge. Again, I live in Borneo and many people have been violently killed here, on headhunting raids. 150 years ago Quop was nearly wiped out in one such raid by the Saribas and Skrang Ibans.
Then when they reached her village in Quop, her mother, who was clutching one of her hands, had no sense of balance; it was as if she had suddenly gone limp. While helping her out of the car, which she never had to do before, they both fell. She was also speaking gibberish; my wife couldn't understand anything that she was saying. With the help of her brother-in-law they took to the hospital where they conducted several tests, including ct scans, cardiovascular tests, ex-rays, and blood samples. After several hours she finally could speak normally again. The doctors concluded she had a mild stroke, but it wasn't severe enough to admit her.
The following evening my wife was chatting online to her cousin in Kapit; her cousin's mother was on the phone talking to my wife's mother at that very moment. My wife's mother was telling her cousin's mother that she had been attacked by a spirit. She said her hand suddenly started to hit her so she had to clutch it tightly to prevent it from hurting her. She was also trying to speak but the spirit wasn't allowing her to speak.
Now before you start rolling your eyes, I asked my wife, where did her mother feel this 'spirit' came from, since she had been at our place. Our place, as far as I know, doesn't have any spirits. I hope not. As it turned out, late that afternoon, they had visited a sprawling nursery that sells flowers and plants. The owner was telling my wife's mother how she hurt herself. She said she was out back when a spirit shoved her from behind. She said no one else was around. She insisted she didn't slip or fall; she was shoved, and when she landed, she broke her wrist.
After buying some plants, some they left in the trunk to take back to Quop, they came back to our place, had dinner, and my wife drove her home. By then, she was not looking herself, as if she had been wiped out. I just assumed that she was tired since she's in her late 60's. Did this spirit follow her from the nursery? Did it enter her body? Then before they even reached her place, just a few kilometers away, she had this "stroke".
Was it a stoke or did a spirit disturb her? Again, this is all about your perspective on a different culture. My wife's cousin's mother, by the way, does have some experience in this area. She has a son who was found trying to strangle himself by a huge split boulder not far from my wife's family home, close to St James church, the oldest Anglican church in Southeast Asia, and the adjacent graveyard. Spirits have been sighted by that split boulder; people still go there to seek four-digit numbers. Her son was taken to a bomoh, a witch doctor/healer, before he was taken to a doctor. The family and relatives concluded he had been possessed. Why else would he try to strangle himself? The doctors, called it a seizure. After that incident, he has never been the same, in and out of trouble.
Whether you believe in spirits or not is not the point. If you are familiar with the Bible, and you take that as the word of God or as the truth, well there is ample evidence in the Bible where demons and spirits were driven out of people in order to heal them. The Chinese here celebrate the Month of the Hungry Ghosts. There are two sides to every story; even doctors don't always agree. Again, it's a matter of perspective from a different culture. Learn from it, or dismiss it. As a writer, as a person who has common sense, it's your choice.
As a follow up to this, while I gather more facts/opinions by interviewing her mother when she has fully recovered, I'll relate my own personal encounter with a spirit in her mother's house that took place 14 years ago. Up until then, I had off-handedly dismissed such stories. You can be the judge. Again, I live in Borneo and many people have been violently killed here, on headhunting raids. 150 years ago Quop was nearly wiped out in one such raid by the Saribas and Skrang Ibans.
Published on February 17, 2011 15:26
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