A straightforward introduction to connecting with the spirit world, developing your psychic skills and using your mediumship gifts to help others. A medium acts as a conduit between this life and the afterlife, receiving messages from the spirits of those who have passed. Gordon Smith, a world-famous psychic medium, is renowned for his ability to provide exact names, addresses and events relevant to a person's life and the lives of those they have known. In this book, Gordon introduces the practice of mediumship and teaches you how still the mind to enable spirits to communicate with you sit in the power and open up to authentic messages work with auras and read the signs and symbols that surround peopleconnect to your spirit guide and learn their signature or calling cardexplore and develop the three faculties of clairvoyance, clairaudience and clairsentienceset up a mediumship circle at home and work with othersSpiritual development is a lifelong journey. Mediumship Made Easy provides a foundation that will stay with you no matter how far you progress.This book was previously published as Mediumship in the Hay House Basics series.
Hailed as “Britain’s most accurate medium” Gordon has been featured in numerous television documentaries including the BBC’s Everyman, "Mediums: Talking With the Dead" 3 part series as well as appearing as an expert guest on various shows such as This Morning, Richard and Judy and the BBC's Heaven and Earth. Gordon has also presented one of the nation's favourite paranormal shows, Living TV's 'Most Haunted', as well as his own series on the Biography Channel. He even managed to find the time to squeeze in a cameo in a Jacki Collins movie, Paris Connections!
He has travelled to many parts of the world to appear before audiences, read for many celebrities, and written numerous books, including Spirit Messenger and The Unbelievable Truth, which have been published to critical acclaim. Gordon has written regular columns for newspapers such as the Daily Record, Take A Break magazine and Best magazine.
From early childhood Gordon had the ability to see, sense and hear spirit people. As a young boy his ability often unnerved those around him and so he learned to close his mind to these experiences.
Through his teenage years he pushed his abilities into the background of his awareness and lived a very average teenage life. He pursued his passion for gymnastics until he was 19. He was good enough to be selected for the Scottish Commonwealth Games squad. It wasn’t until he was 24, when a friend’s brother appeared at his bedside in the middle of the night that these gifts were re-awakened. He later learned that the brother had died that night in a tragic fire. Gordon went with his friend to a spiritualist church, during the service he was told that he would one day be speaking from the ‘platform’. This was the start of over 15 years of study and practice as Gordon went on to develop his outstanding abilities as a medium or messenger from the spirit world under the tutelage of some of the great legends of the spiritualist church. He developed in a mediumship circle run by the extraordinary Mrs. Primrose, an inspirational figure in Scottish spiritualism and became a close friend of the legendary Albert Best, who is widely acknowledged as one of be best mediums of the last century.
Many years on Gordon Smith is now one of the world’s top psychic mediums and spiritual teachers in the UK. Having spent 15 years balancing his work as an internationally renowned medium with his day job, as a barber in his native Glasgow, Gordon now conducts mediumship workshops and events around the world. Gordon’s Celtic charm and lively demonstrations provide his audience with a rare opportunity to experience the fascinating phenomenon of mediumship, which he delivers to his audience with a mix of his distinctive style of humour, pure passion, and empathy to others.
After my brother died in 2017, I became interested in mediumship and the concept that we don’t really die. I felt strongly that my brother was still a presence but that I could not sense him the way I wanted of a blockage within me.
Still, I had no desire to go to a medium, though several were recommended by friends. Being a hard-core skeptic, I did not want to give a speck of identifying info to someone who if authentic, would not need to know anything about me at all to do their work. There is no such thing when you are paying for this service. Also, I felt that the messages that might have come through were between my brother and I and I didn’t want a stranger in the middle of that. Reading the book, Surviving Death by Leslie Kean educated me on the process of authenticating a medium and the rigorous controls that are put in place to ensure this authenticity.
When I came across this book through Hay House, I felt a sense of calm when I heard Smith speak but what really interested me was how to become more open to receiving messages myself. This book is simple and straightforward. It provides an easy guide to follow if you want to develop psychic gifts or to discover whether or not you have any. What I appreciated most were his clear explanations as to why many practicing mediums have to fish for information from their clients, what makes a good medium and why some are doing more harm than good. I was right to be wary, a very strong instinct of mine.
There is a lifetime of developmental work, that goes into mediumship and the work is ongoing. Much of it is boring, such as just sitting and meditating without any expectation that anything will happen at all. After reading this book, it is clear as to why so many who claim this gift really don’t have much to offer at all. If this topic interests you, I would highly recommend this short guide and perhaps checking out more of Smith’s work on his website.
So direct. I'm so happy I bought this book. By far the best book I've read learning my mediumship. Kind of a old style learning but exactly what is needed. So many books try to connect to this new age style but Gordan was just so his own you get swept up & everything makes sense
I was disappointed in this book as the only recommendation it gave was to meditate and join a circle if you can. It was mainly filled with anecdotes of the author’s experiences and it was very repetitive.