From Monica Keeton

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Joe tackled various topics during his evening institute classes for Liverpool Education Committee back in the 1970s.  He never used notes.  He simply scribbled down his thoughts in advance and committed them to memory.  But once he arrived at his classroom in Holt Comprehensive school, Childwall, everything was spontaneous.  

But he did always kick off by making the following point:

‘The object of this course in extra-sensory perception is to take histories of  paranormal occurrences, present as many alternative explanations as can be found and allow each of you to choose what seems to be the most reasonable explanation.’

(Most of his observations on telepathy, Spiritualism and other so-called psychic phenomena are already covered in ‘The Power of the Mind’)

However, one evening in November 1974 when my own students had abandoned me, I crept along to Joe’s room, only to find it bursting at the seams. Finding myself a quiet little corner I sat down and began to take notes.  On that occasion, he was discussing whether telepathy could travel through time.  As you probably realise, Joe was blessed with very strong telepathic abilities.  My old shorthand notebook is dog-eared and yellow with age but I shall transcribe the notes verbatim, as follows:

Can telepathy travel through time?  Who knows?  But the following incident would appear to point in that direction.  It relates to a young woman called Pat, a member of my staff who lived in Birkenhead.

We were chatting together in my office on a pleasant June morning in 1970, when a clear vision of a clock appeared before me.

The fingers pointed to 13.02 on the following Monday, and I had an instinctive feeling that Pat needed to be warned about something.  Then a whole series of images came into my head.

‘At exactly two minutes past one next Monday,’ I told her.  ‘You’re going to walk out of your house with your small daughter.’

I described in detail the outfit Pat would be wearing, right down to the silver charm bracelet.  The coat was a powder blue with fur around the hem.  The bracelet had a new charm in the shape of a tiny Indian temple.

To say Pat was surprised is putting it mildly.  She had bought the coat three days before and not yet worn it.  Same with the bracelet.  Her mother had given it to her only the previous night.

I continued to describe several images entering my head in quick succession.

‘When you and your daughter come out of the house, you plan to turn left and walk down a hill.  ‘About half way down, there’s a house with net curtains and a pensioner sitting on the doorstep.  You always have a word with him.’

‘Yes, I do,’  said Pat, looking very surprised.

‘At the bottom of the hill, where the street joins the main road, there’s a shop, but I can’t see what it’s selling.  There doesn’t appear to be anything in the window.’

‘No, there’s nothing in it,’ she told me.  ‘The shop is closed.  It’s been turned into a house.’

‘Pat,’ I said, urgently.  ‘When you turn that corner round by the shop, I can see nothing at all.  Just blackness for you and your daughter.’

Goose pimples ran down her spine.  So far, everything I told her had been absolutely correct and she was amazed at having clothes and jewellery described in such detail when she knew I couldn’t possibly have seen them.

‘But I’m planning to go to London for my holidays on Monday.  The time you’ve mentioned is about the time I shall have to leave to catch the train.  So what am I to do?’

Not surprisingly, Pat feared both for the life of her eight-year-old daughter Susan and for herself.

‘Don’t walk down that hill,’ I urged her.  ‘Take a taxi from your home instead.  Get the driver to turn right and go up the other way so that you’ll approach the station from a different direction.  You’ll still be involved in an accident during the day, but neither of you will be hurt.’  And as if that weren’t enough to make her take the taxi, I found myself saying: ‘I don’t know where you’ll be this Friday afternoon, but you’ll be sitting behind a plate glass window.  You’ll look through it and see a pedestrian crossing and a lollipop man on the pavement.  A little girl will run from behind and a car will knock her over.’

Although I didn’t know it at the time, Pat had already made a hairdressing appointment for the Friday, but she chose not to tell me about it until much later.

It was a fortnight before I saw her again, when she returned from her holiday.  She recalled the sequence of events.

Yes, she had visited her hairdresser as arranged, on the Friday.  Sitting under the drier, she had looked through the plate glass window and seen a pedestrian crossing and a lollipop man on the pavement just as I had described.

But before she could do anything a small blonde, curly-haired girl – about the same age as her own daughter Susan –  had run from behind the lollipop man into the path of a car and been knocked down.  Thankfully, the child’s injuries were not serious.

No prizes for guessing that Pat wasn’t taking any chances after that!

On the following Monday, she and her daughter did take a taxi to the station as I had suggested.  Susan wondered why they were travelling in the ‘wrong’ direction, but her mother simply told her it was better that way.

Pat recalled what happened then:

‘The driver seemed to be travelling a bit too quickly for comfort and I felt anxious.  He must have sensed how I felt because I saw him look at his speedometer before slowing down.  Not long after that we were involved in a skid and landed up on the pavement.  Fortunately, no-one was hurt but if it had happened a few minutes – even a few seconds – earlier, we might all have been killed, because right in front of us was a big pile-up involving several vehicles.’

.   .  .

(A lively question and answer session followed with students raising issues about Spiritualism, telekinesis, astral projection, suspended animation and all sorts of other inexplicable phenomena.

Before continuing with his talk Joe always invited questions from his students. The topics under  discussion usually provided the basis of the following week’s study.)

. . .

And now let me, then, tell you about Bert (not his real name).

In November 1970 Bert was a guest at a dinner party I was attending in a friend’s home.    He was a complete stranger and I knew nothing of his background.

Suddenly, I asked him if he was planning a long road journey.

‘Yes,’ he said. ‘I’m driving to Southampton three days before Christmas to pick up my daughter.’

Then, without knowing why, I asked: ‘ Are your tyres all right? This is to do with skidding.’

‘As a matter of fact my tyres are very bad, but I want to make them last until the New Year because of all the expense attached to Christmas.’

A disturbing image began to form in my mind.

‘Right, then.  I’ll tell you what I see, though I have to make it clear that I’m not giving any advice.’

‘Go on,’ he encouraged.

‘I can see a long road disappearing into a mist and beside it a red warning triangle.  There’s a black Jaguar upside down and a dark saloon with registration letters DBE.  I can’t see the number, but the car is slewed right round.  And now… I see another light-coloured saloon.’

‘Go on,’ repeated Bert.

‘I see a door.  On it is a Christmas wreath, but it keeps changing to a funeral wreath.’

Bert’s wife looked shocked.  She reminded him of a friend who’d been killed when his black Jaguar skidded and overturned three years earlier.  The registration letters I’d just given them represented Lincolnshire.  Their friend had lived in that county.  His car had skidded on the A74 during a holiday in Scotland, they said.

As a result of what I had told him, Bert changed his mind about the trip.  And he changed his tyres.  He advised his daughter to travel home by train.

Again, as in Pat’s case that I’ve just told you about, this looks like a glimpse into the future – changed in this instance, because Bert didn’t make the trip.  But there is another, and possibly more logical, explanation.

Isn’t it possible that his subconscious mind had considered the facts: friend killed as the result of a skid, his own bad tyres, long car journey, icy roads.  All of these facts added up to just one thing.  Danger.

A false sense of economy had made his conscious mind suppress the warning signals, preventing them from passing through from the subconscious.  The result: mental conflict.  The increased strength of the signals made them easy to be picked up telepathically.

I merely handed them to Bert in such a way that he could no longer ignore them.  After all, everything I saw Bert must have already known.

An interesting case, this, because of the alternatives.

We have seen two possible explanations, but there is a third.

Spiritualists would interpret these phenomena as direct messages from the dead, as they do during seances.  But what Spiritualists tend to overlook is the fact that although the medium might not know the individuals with whom they appear to be making contact, someone else in the room does.

So, isn’t telepathy a simpler answer?

……

(Short break for refreshments in the school canteen, but Joe’s big mug of tea remained untouched because his students continued to buzz around him like bees around a honey pot.  Questions, questions, questions.  These enthusiasts never gave him a minute to himself.  Joe never complained.  He thrived on discussing topics in which he had a lifelong interest.) 

……

Thought waves do seem to have the ability to travel through time.

Let me give you a third example of why I think this may be possible.

Some years ago I was driving from Bolton, in Lancashire to Skegness in Lincolnshire.  Because the journey would cover several miles, I set off early on the Sunday morning, in order to return the same night.

Arriving at Little Lever on the outskirts of Bolton, I was just filling up with petrol when my attention was suddenly caught by a blue petrol can in the window of an accessory shop.

Without having any idea of why I felt the urge to do so, I bought the can, filled it and put it in the boot of my car.

Two weeks later, I had to make the same journey.  When I returned around two in the morning, it was raining hard.  At the beginning of the Doncaster bypass, I noticed a young soldier thumbing a lift.  I don’t normally give lifts but, remembering my own army days, I stopped and invited him into the car.  I took him to where the motorway rejoined the A1, which again broke from convention because normally I would turn off half way along to go through the town of Goldthorpe.

Dropping the soldier, all I had to do was take a right turn at the next island and return along the motorway.  Instead, I found myself driving down a narrow country road.  Strangely, I had no desire to turn round and retrace my steps.

After about half a mile, I noticed three people pushing a shooting brake and pulled up in front of them to ask if they had run out of petrol.

Amazed, they said that yes, they had.

So I took the can from the boot and handed it over.

‘I’m not going to thank you,’ said the woman. ‘I’m thanking God for sending you.  I’ve been praying for help.  We have a baby in the back of the car.  He’s cold and hungry.  Look.’

Sure enough, the baby was lying in a carry cot, crying.

After leaving the woman, her husband and teenage passenger, I drove on and just a few hundred yards ahead found the perfect place for turning the car.

Back home, I wondered what that family thought when they saw me turn back almost immediately after helping them.

And it set me wondering too…

Had the woman’s prayer for help come through to me because I was the nearest telepathic receiver?

But if that were the case, it raises an even bigger question.

What made me buy the petrol can three weeks before this incident?

The answer would appear to be that telepathy can indeed travel through time.

……

A guest speaker was booked for the following week.  She was to give a talk about psychometry.  A clairvoyant would be coming along later in that term.  

Two local authors were also lined up – Ramsey Campbell, the award-winning horror-fiction writer and Michael Hardcastle, who wrote children’s books about sport (mainly football).  Books by both of these authors are now international best-sellers.

Arthur O’Hara

I have fond memories of Joe’s regression sessions at our house in Hoylake in the mid 1970s. At the time I was something of an ambivalent teenager mostly wrapped up in my own world, but I was often roped in as the tea runner, providing hot drinks and biscuits for anything up to 20 people at a time, wandering in and out of sessions the like of which I’ve never seen before or since. It all seemed pretty ordinary back then, just Joe doing his thing, perhaps it’s only in hindsight that we’ve all come to realise how just special it really was.

Andrew Selby

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Andrew Selby writes:

Where to start? He was such a large and important part of our lives between 1980 and 2000 – an absolutely amazing man.

We first heard about him on an interview on Radio London, sometime in late 1979 – it was all very fascinating and at the end  of the programme, listeners were invited to write in if they were interested in getting involved in Hypnotic Regression. Marguerite, my wife did so and some weeks later we received a letter from Joe inviting us to set up a Regression Group giving us the names of a few other interested people around London. We did and the “group” went on for nearly 20 years (however I say “group” as it was like the proverbial workman who said he had had his broom for many years, but it had 6 new heads and 7 new handles!). There were however a number of people who came to the group for the majority of that time.

Anyway, my memories of Joe coming down to us so many times, fall into perhaps a number of categories, first as a friend, second as a hypnotic therapist, third  for his sessions on Regression and fourth, but not least, for exploring the unconscious minds of various members of the “group”. When he came, we typically had the Regression session on the Saturday, often going through most of he night and then on the Sunday, Joe would spend the day seeing people for hypnotherapy, often finishing just before we took him to the station for his train back to Liverpool.

We initially held the sessions either at our house in Harrow or at a friend’s (who was member of the “group”) or at my mother-in-laws house. But then in 1985, we moved to Kings Langley and we always held what he called the “London” sessions there. Typically he would come down monthly, but on occasions it would only be a fortnight or three weeks between the sessions.

During the Regression sessions, Joe would sometimes go straight into regressing an individual, but oftentimes would spend time (sometimes hours) clearing one or more mental blocks – typically a formed in their early life. He was very patient at doing this and the “group” became experienced in questioning the individual, when he was hitting a “road-block”, ie the person unconciously avoiding re-experiencing the issue – I was fortunate to have a number of blocks removed this way.

We had a variety of Regression characters, ranging from Ray Bryant (who sadly died some years ago) who regressed to “Wilfred” a coachman and also to a soldier, “Reuben Stafford” in the Crimean War (whose service record I found); to Joan Ffoulkes who regressed to “Alice”, a strong-willed youngster around the early 20th Century; to Marguerite (my wife) as  “Susan” a strong-willed lady in the 1920’s, who ended up being rusticated from Girton college after an “affair”.

I spent quite a fair time, particularly in the early years trying to track down a number of these and other Regression characters, but it was only Ray’s character “Reuben”, for whom I actually found any tangible evidence. The others eluded me and I could only find very general things out about the area they “lived” in, but nothing about them or anyone they mentioned (typically we would only get a first name). It is worth noting in particular that with Ray’s “characters”, Joe could never cause an anachronism, by suddenly dropping in question containing the details that we either had as evidence (ie “Reuben’s” record) or from what they had told us in a prior session, to one of his other characters (eg “Wilfred”). Joe tried this on a number of occasions, without warning, but the characters didn’t take the bate and fall into the deliberate trap. Joe also tried this out (again without warning) with other Regressees, but again they didn’t fall into the trap – typically they would not respond.

As I mentioned, during some sessions, Joe would spend some hours exploring the unconcious minds of one or more of us, which in many ways I found more intriguing than Historic Regression. In particular he would put the individual into a deep hypnotic state, so that he and others in the “group” could talk directly to that person’s unconcious. Now you might say, well how could you tell, but from the answers we invariably got there was a typical theme – the person’s unconcious ranged from stating that it had little time for it’s own concious mind, to all but being highly derogatory about it. This happened time and time again and really interestingly with new people who had not been before and absolutely didn’t know what was coming – perhaps this says much about the human condition!

In my own case, I had two main characters that Joe drew out: “Geoffrey” who was apparently quite seriously physically impaired and another “Tim” who was a young ditcher from Ware, Hertfordshire in the early 1900’s, who later ended up catching a bullet in the World War I trenches, but survived. I never “saw” anything during the sessions, but I responded to questionning and in particular experienced the physicality (in Geoffrey’s case) and emotions for both.

A strange feature with Regression, that occurred to at least two individuals in the “group” was that they would regress time and time again over years and then for some reason or other their unconcious mind stopped them being able to go back and bring out these characters – who knows why?

I have just given a flavour of what we experienced, much of it now growing dimmer as it was happening to us between 12 – 30 or so years ago. Those were really heady days, some sessions being extremely interesting, others much more mundane – but always fascinating.

I am really indebted to Joe and his memory is still so strong in my mind.

Writing Power of the Mind

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Simon Petherick writes:

I was first introduced to Joe by the publisher John Hale, who ran Robert Hale, in 1986. I was working then as a freelance writer and editor, and was asked whether I might like to collaborate with an interesting-sounding man who was a successful hypnotherapist. Apparently, Joe Keeton had a story to tell, and wanted a writer alongside to help him tell it. I was intrigued, and agreed to do it.

Joe had already assembled a lot of information and thoughts, both about his own theories behind the workings of hypnosis and hypnotic regression, and about the experiences of people who had undergone hypnotic regression with him. One of the first things that was very striking about him – apart from his physical presence, which we’ll come to – was his lack of dogma, his very open curiosity and his refusal to believe that he knew all the answers. He knew what effect he had on people, he had helped thousands of people by that stage to deal with personal demons or physical ailments through the process of hypnosis. But he didn’t dare to suggest that he knew how it worked.

Meeting Joe at one of the all-night regression sessions he held in Kings Langley was both formidable and comforting. Formidable, because he was a big man in every way: not just an imposing physical presence, but also one of those people who dominated the room when he came in. Comforting, because he had the ability to communicate very directly and immediately with you without any sense of discomfort or embarrassment.

It was fascinating to watch one person after the other sit in the chair and be guided into the hypnotic state by Joe. Those who had worked with him before could fall into that state in an instant by his use of a single trigger word; others who were new soon lost all sense of trepidation as he explained that hypnosis was really a self-induced state which enabled the person to access a way of being which modern man has forgotten to access.

I remember two particular things that night. Remember this was the mid 1980s, so the anti-smoking laws hadn’t been born yet. Joe was a big smoker, and I smoked then too, so the room was pretty filled with cigarette smoke and overflowing ashtrays by the time that dawn broke. But at one point – and I was deliberately staying quiet during the evening in order to watch and make observations – Joe came over to me and pointed at my chest, and said: ‘Do you ever get pains in your chest?’ As it happened, I had felt them a little over the previous few months. ‘I thought so,’ he said. ‘I could feel your chest pain a moment ago. Smoking’s not for everyone. I think you should give them up.’ He wasn’t saying that everyone should give up, just that, for some people, they weren’t a good thing. Soon after, I gave them up, and apart from the occasional relapse over the years, have taken his advice.

Then, towards the end of the night, he asked if I wanted to try and experience hypnosis.  I seem to remember there wasn’t too much time left, but I agreed, and he suggested we just try a simple test to demonstrate to me how the process worked. Not everyone was able to be hypnotised. Sometimes, he said, those who most wanted it found that they couldn’t be hypotised, while some of his best subjects turned out to be those who initially were most forceful in their doubts about it all. He relaxed me, and then suggested that when I came out of the relaxation I was in – which I don’t remember as being a specifically different state of mind, just a relaxed one – I wouldn’t be able to lift up my left hand. Hah, I thought, this is ridiculous. It will be embarrassing, but I will have to show him that of course I can lift up my left hand – what a shame that it will have to be me that punctures the evening with a bit of sense. So out of relaxation I came, and try as I might, I couldn’t lift my left hand off the arm of the chair. ‘You didn’t want that to happen, did you?’ he said, smiling; he could tell exactly what had been going through my mind.

After that small demonstration, Joe showed me, as he would show everyone who asked, how to self-hypnotise, a skill that 25 years later I can still use if I wish. At the moment, I am using it to try and encourage my slightly ageing body to repair some of the damage which too much sport and running over the years has done to my knees. I think it’s helping. I hope that on these pages we will be able to record other peoples’ experiences both of hypnosis under Joe and of the self-hypnosis he taught.

All I know is that my brief time with him taught me more about human potential than most books have been able to teach me since. He truly was a memorable and unique person.