A few months ago the sleepy town of Northampton ,
England was
disrupted by sightings of a strange figure walking the streets dressed as a
clown. The entity would sometimes approach people and issue the words: "beep
beep!" This is the catchphrase of the supernatural clown Pennywise in
Stephen King's horror story It. The
being was seen by many people standing on street corners with balloons in its
hands. Some witnesses laughed at it; others were afraid, suffering from
"coulrophobia", the fear of clowns. More of these strange clowns
appeared in several other places and before long Facebook pages about them were
started. A few weeks later the mystery was apparently solved when the Daily Mirror published an article
claiming to have unmasked the Northampton Clown, see: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/northampton-clown-unmasked-alex-powell-2366915.
I wonder if this is true; the accused individual, student Alex Powell,
previously denied all knowledge of being the long sought-after mysterious
clown. Sightings of the clowns are still emerging at the time of writing.
A clown is a comic performer, usually male, wearing grotesque
and colourful clothing, also distinctive makeup which exaggerate the facial
features. They're usually associated with the circus and perform slapstick
comedy acts. Psychologists theorize that clowns represent something very deep
in our subconscious collective minds. Clowns can sometimes be malevolent adversaries
as well as humourous protagonists; good examples of evil clowns are the
aforementioned Pennywise as well as the Joker in the Batman stories and Mr Jelly from the TV sitcom Psychoville. They go much further back in history than I thought;
they can be found in the ancient world, in fact their origins are shrouded in
mystery. In Jungian psychology clowns might represent an archetype, maybe that
of the "trickster". What is fascinating is that people experiencing
altered states of consciousness sometimes encounter beings that look and behave
like clowns. Dr Rick Strassman is a research psychiatrist who in the early
1990's carried out an experiment that involved giving doses of the powerful
psychedelic drug DMT to human volunteers. Over twenty years earlier Dr Sanislav
Grof did the same with LSD, see: http://www.rickstrassman.com/.
These drugs have the uncanny property of producing very lucid visions of other
worlds inhabited by unearthly intelligent creatures. Curiously enough different
people from different places and backgrounds often encounter the same entities
while on these psychedelic trips, including clown-like creatures. I strongly
recommend Dr Strassman's book DMT- the
Spirit Molecule for more details. Did clowns enter our culture through
people experiencing shamanic voyages? In that case are these strange clowns
popping up in Northampton and other
places really just students playing a prank? Poor students! They get blamed for
everything like this, don't they? Are these instead otherworldly beings who
have managed physically to breach the wall between our world and theirs?
Actually, I doubt it. I'm pretty sure that these clowns really are just people
dressed up, whether or not they're students. But it's an interesting
development from a Jungian worldview; could these tricksters be motivated by
some kind of collective unconscious imperative that the clowns are using to examine
this universe? They could be similar to "This Man", see: http://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/this-man.html.
2 comments:
It's very strange. My 13 yr old son mentioned that 'clown sightings' were a hot topic in his school, back in November 2013. I confess that I dismissed it at the time, but it was sufficient for him to have nightmares on several nights. Googling 'Sheffield Clown' reveals there have indeed been many reports in Sheffield, Rotherham, Barnsley, Scunthorpe, Lincoln and on and on.
Thanks for the info, Herbie. Let us know if either of you spot any more.
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