Carl Jung Paranormal, Part 2: Split Table

A split table made Jung curious

Carl Gustav Jung

A suddenly split table in Carl Jung’s youth brought him face-to-face with a paranormal coincidence he couldn’t explain. Such events led him to a more complete theory of mind as well as the development of what he will call, Synchronicity.

One day during his teenage years, Jung was studying in his room. His door actually led to the dining room where his mother sat knitting. It was partly closed at the time.

Split table cam right after

Jung’s mother pastime

Suddenly the sound of a large bang, like a gunshot, shattered the silence. It had come from the dining room. Immediately, Jung jumped up and ran to see what had made the noise. There he found his mother in an understandably startled condition, her knitting having fallen to the floor. “What happened?” She asked, then telling her son the sound had come from somewhere very near to her.

Split table got Jung's attention

Jung’s focus zeroed in on a table

Looking around, her eyes and Jung’s came to rest on the dining room table. That’s when they both discovered it had split wide open. Astounded, Jung inspected the split table and found that the fracture had occurred within the solid oak itself and not along any connecting joints.

What the split table might have looked like

Explosive, fractured wood

This discovery led to quite a commotion in the family, obviously because no one could figure out how such a thing might happen. Having belonged to Jung’s grandmother when she was young, the table was anything but new. Green wood might split but certainly not oak that had aged so long. Besides, there were no fluctuations in the weather conditions that might cause such a thing. No one ever came up with a plausible explanation for the event.

Soon after the incident with the split table, something else startling happened, again the dining room. These two events when taken together seem to be primary among the many in his youth that would propel Jung into investigations of the paranormal.

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The blog post above, and the others like it, became so popular that I created a book using them as the basis for particular explorations of the paranormal. Titled, Carl Jung, Hauntings, and Paranormal Coincidences, it combines the Jung material with supporting information from my own experiences and those of others.

CarlJungMediumIf you are interested in reading that book, you can find it in most online bookstores. Listed below, however, are direct book links to some of the larger retail outlets in the English speaking world:

Amazon.comAmazon CanadaAmazon UKAmazon IndiaAmazon AustraliaBarnes and NobleKobo (Canada)

But if you would like to just browse through some of those postings on Carl Jung’s paranormal experiences, you can find those links below.

Happy reading.

Part 1: Carl Jung: Paranormal, Coincidences and Synchronicity 

Part 2: The Cracked Table (This post)

Part 3: The Knife

Part 4: The Ghosts

Part 5: The Cottage

Part 6; Jung and Freud

Part 7: The Wedding

Part 8: The Suicide

Part 9: The Scarab Beetle

Part 10: The Flood

Part 11: The Mosaics

Part 12: The Final Breakhrough

Other articles on Jung, Synchronicity and the Paranormal

Carl Jung’s Contribution to Paranormal Study

Energizing Jung’s Ideas About Synchronicity

Jung on Synchronicity and the Paranormal

Why two geniuses delved into the occult

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