Secret Friends: Tapping Into The Power Of Imagination
As a kid, Megan Lincoln had a secret: she heard the voice of Cher in her head.
"It was her voice. It was her recognizable Cher voice," she says. "She was as real to me as my friend next to me. I couldn't see her, I could just hear her. And it was real," she says.
Megan had dyslexia, and "Cher" offered encouragement when she struggled to read in school.
"The one thing I always remembered her saying to me is, 'If you think you are dumb, then you think I am dumb, and I am not dumb.' And then she would tell me to 'go back to reading' or 'go back to trying to write something.'"
Psychologists sometimes refer to such emotional connections as parasocial relationships —one-way relationships. In some ways, they are akin to the imaginary friends that many children have. As we grow up, we're told to set such relationships aside. Clinging to imaginary companions can suggest that you are lonely or maladjusted.
But what if there is more to these relationships than we realize?
This week, we look at the human capacity for imagination, and meet people who have trained themselves to experience the invisible as real.
Additional Resources:
"'Lord, Teach Us to Pray': Prayer Practice Affects Cognitive Processing," by T.M. Luhrmann, Howard Nusbaum and Ronald Thisted in Journal of Cognition and Culture, 2013
When God Talks Back: Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship with God, by T.M. Luhrmann, 2012
Persuasions of the Witches' Craft: Ritual Magic in Contemporary England, by T.M. Luhrmann, 1991
Experience of the Inner Worlds, by Gareth Knight, 1975 [Copyright 2020 NPR]