eyes

Dear Mom, From Beyond

Jan 6, 2026

A grieving mother, identified as Jennifer, shares a deeply personal experience she has kept largely private:

a letter she believes was written by her son two years after his death, transcribed by a medium during a session of psychography. The letter contains no grand revelations, no cosmic secrets—only tenderness, memory, forgiveness, and reassurance. And yet, its impact on her life has been profound.

In this episode of Beyond Science, Dr. L explores one of the most intimate and controversial forms of alleged post-mortem communication: automatic writing.

Jennifer’s testimony opens a rigorous inquiry into the history and psychology of automatic writing, a practice documented across cultures and centuries and once taken seriously by leading scientists and intellectuals. From 19th-century séances to contemporary peer-reviewed studies conducted under controlled conditions, the episode examines how such phenomena can be investigated without surrendering either to credulity or to ridicule.

As Dr. L navigates competing explanations, fraud, suggestion, unconscious ideomotor processes, grief-driven meaning-making, the episode also confronts a quieter but equally unsettling question: when an experience brings measurable relief, emotional healing, and a restored sense of meaning, does its ultimate explanation matter?

"Dear mom, from beyond" is not an argument for belief in communication with the dead. It is an exploration of grief, consciousness, and the ethical limits of scientific skepticism where denying experience may cause as much harm as accepting it too easily.

This episode asks whether science can study such experiences seriously without dismissing the people who live through them and what is lost when it refuses to try.

References cited

Gomide M, Wainstock BC, Silva J, Mendes CG, Moreira-Almeida A. Controlled semi-naturalistic protocol to investigate anomalous information reception in mediumship: Description and preliminary findings. Explore (NY). 2021 Sep 23:S1550-8307(21)00184-1. doi: 10.1016/j.explore.2021.08.011. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 34602351.

Walsh E, Mehta MA, Oakley DA, Guilmette DN, Gabay A, Halligan PW, Deeley Q. Using suggestion to model different types of automatic writing. Conscious Cogn. 2014 May;26:24-36. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2014.02.008. Epub 2014 Mar 20. PMID: 24657632.

Beischel J, Schwartz GE. Anomalous information reception by research mediums demonstrated using a novel triple-blind protocol. Explore (NY). 2007 Jan-Feb;3(1):23-7. doi: 10.1016/j.explore.2006.10.004. PMID: 17234565.

© 2025 Beyond Science. All rights reserved.

© 2025 Beyond Science. All rights reserved.

© 2025 Beyond Science. All rights reserved.