Archive for the 'psychic medium' Category

May 15 2012

Pet Psychic Reader Discovers Gift

pet psychic reader

 

Recently reported by Austin, Texas news statesman.com, author Andrea Ball talks about her friends encounter with a Pet Psychic Reader.

So I’m camping at Enchanted Rock with a bunch of rowdy Cub Scouts a few weekends ago when my friend Mary says something that brings our conversation to a halt.

“My pet psychic said … ” she starts.

“Wait, what?” I interrupt.

That’s right, she answers. Less than a year ago, Mary had adopted a boxer with a bum leg from a rescue group. He’d obviously been abused, and she wanted to learn more about him, so she asked a pet psychic to give her dog a reading. It was, she said, a great experience.

And that is how I learned about Elizabeth Martindale — psychic, medium, animal communicator.

Skeptical readers, I can hear your guffaws from across the city. I get it. It’s cool.

But this stuff is right up my alley. I’ve been to psychics. I’ve owned Ouija boards. And let me tell you, I should have listened more closely in 1989 when a ghost named Gloria told me that my parents’ car was on fire because, at that very moment, it actually was.

Martindale, 42, lives in North Austin. She was born in Arkansas, has a master’s degree in museum science and works a full-time job in state government that she’d rather we don’t mention here. She’s always been psychic, Martindale said.

“I would get these messages or information about people’s lives, and I thought everyone could do it,” she said.

Martingale communicated as a Psychic Medium with the dead, but upon request soon found out that she could also communicate with Pets through Psychic Readings.

Last week, Martindale agreed to come to my house to read my three dogs: Bessie, Boris and Pooh.

The second she walks into my small living room, they swarm around her. Bessie, the Boston terrier mix, jumps on her legs. Boris, the morbidly obese pug, spins in circles. Pooh, another terrier mix, trots up to say hi.

Martindale quickly taps into the fact that Boris and Bessie are wonderfully vapid animals. They have no dark past, harbor no miseries. We’ve had them since they were puppies, and they are typical goofy dogs.

“They just keep saying how much they love you,” she says, as Bessie climbs all over her, leaving white hair and dog slime in her wake.

Martindale doesn’t talk to them out loud. There’s no cooing or asking them questions. She just observes them and listens.

Then we zero in on Pooh, who is sleeping in the middle of the room.

Pooh, I tell her, was previously owned by a now-deceased elderly woman named Margaret. But we don’t know anything else about him. Despite his gentle nature, he can be very skittish and is nervous around men. Was he abused at some point?

Martindale stares at Pooh and then says, “I’m getting that he was owned by a family before and there were children, which he liked, but the father was very harsh with him.”

But then things got better.

“He definitely had a little old lady in his life,” Martindale says. “She was 80 or 83 and they would hang out in the recliner and watch ‘Wheel of Fortune.’ ”

She was also very petite and had white poofy hair, she says.

And she was right. Margaret weighed 85 pounds, had white poofy hair, loved her recliner and watched “Wheel of Fortune.” She was 89 when she died.

Did Martindale get all that just because I said she was owned by “an old lady?” A skeptic would say yes. But me, I’m happy to enjoy the mystery. And Martindale is happy to keep reading animals.

“They’re not all that different from humans at all,” she says. “I just like helping them.”

What do you think about Pet Psychic Readers? Be sure to comment.

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Apr 24 2012

Psychic Medium Sally Morgan Answers Reader Questions

Published by under psychic medium

psychic medium sally morgan reading

 

Popular UK Psychic Medium Sally Morgan recently sat down and answered questions for the readers of the UK Mirror, as reported on mirror.co.uk.

Is my cat OK?

I am hoping you can receive messages from a deceased pet. My beloved cat Charlie died aged 19 on May 29, 2010. He was my absolute best friend and my soul mate.

I miss him so desperately and really do hope he’s as happy, safe and loved as he was with me.

JANE JONES, ANGLESEY, NORTH WALES

Psychic Reader Sally says:

Thanks for your letter and gorgeous photo of Charlie. Ever since I was a child, I was able to see animals in spirit.

Our pets give us unconditional love and no matter what, they are always there for us, so it’s not surprising that they will come back and visit us after they have passed.

Of course you miss Charlie desperately but rest assured he is safe, happy and pain-free in the spirit world.

I am sure you will sense him sleeping at the end of your bed and sitting in your kitchen. He will always be with you; he has such a huge place in your heart.

LOVE, SALLY

She’s obsessed by death

I hope you can help me. I have a six-year-old niece who I love very much. But just lately she has been talking a lot about heaven and losing her mum and dad who, by the way are, only 35. She also has a sister who’s four.

She goes to bed and writes letters to her mum and dad about how much she loves them and doesn’t want them to leave her.

She also wrote a heartbreaking letter to her great grandad who died 24 years ago.

She only knows him through family photos but she dreams about him lots and says he comes to see her on a night and stands at the side of the bed. How can this be with a child of only six?

It’s heartbreaking to see her cry and we try to tell her the best we can about things without going into too much detail.

We take her and her sister away with us on holiday and her grandparents look after her, too. It’s just the sadness she has over her great grandad that worries us and the fact she dreams of him a lot and writes such lovely letters to him, yet she has never met him.

Can you shed some light on this then maybe we can all help her and calm her down? She can get very weepy when confronted with it.

S E PARSONS

Psychic Reader says:

Thank you for you letter. Firstly, I want you to know that this is a very common situation. For some reason children are a lot more susceptible to the spirit world and often speak of making contact with loved ones who have passed over.

This part of their mind usually closes with the distractions of everyday life and so only rarely does this sixth sense remain heightened.

Your niece may certainly be in touch with your grandfather in her dreams and as children are quite simplistic in their thoughts, she may simply be trying to understand the fact that loss exists in this world and is concerned she may lose her parents.

I would advise that you speak to her about what exactly it is that’s making her upset. You need to explain that her great grandfather is in a good place and at peace and all you can do is be supportive, offer reassurance and speak to her about her feelings.

There are plenty of other parents and guardians going through the same situation as you. Perhaps if you wanted to look into it further you could contact a local spiritualist church to see if they have had similar experiences. Maybe they could offer you some advice on the situation.

LOVE, SALLY

Article source: mirror.co.uk

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Apr 20 2012

New York Psychic Medium Communicates With The Dead

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New York Psychic Medium Deborah Hanlon claims to have the ability to communicate with the dead and pass their messages to the living.

As recently reported by advocateweekly.com, a New York Psychic Medium operates a center for spiritual development, growth and meditation.

“I connect with the people who have passed on,” Hanlon said in a phone interview leading up to two upcoming weekend appearances in Manchester, Vt., on March 24 and 25. “It’s a bizarre thing to be able to say it in this world.”

….Einstein has been a “major role model” for Hanlon since she was a young girl.

“His intelligence and ability to think outside the box to create a yet unknown world view astonished Deborah at a very early age,” the website says. “While a seemingly strange role model for a psychic, Einstein talked about the ‘proof’ part of the unknown.

It was a death in the family that caused a reemergence of her abilities as a Psychic Medium.

In 2001, Hanlon’s sister’s mother-in-law died. As Hanlon prepared a package of appropriate clothing to mail to her sister, who had not been prepared for a funeral, she said she was overcome by grief thinking about the death, although it was someone she had not been particularly close to.

“At that moment, I felt like I knew where she was,” Hanlon said.

Her first reaction? “I thought I was crazy,” she said. She kept trying to dismiss the feelings, but she started feeling like she knew things about this woman’s life that she had no way of knowing. She shared her feelings with her sister, who encouraged her to pursue it.

“We just started practicing,” she said.

At first they thought Hanlon was only able to “connect” with this one person. But then she started practicing with other people, and things started to make sense — although not so much to Hanlon herself.

“I’m a skeptic, too,” she said. “Because of my logical mind, (I said), ‘OK, show me this is real.’

“I still want that proof.”

Now, 11 years later, she said she gets that proof from many people she sees in her practice and at readings she does in public, like the upcoming Manchester appearances. She also has started appearing on Albany, N.Y.-area radio stations, including Fly 92 and B95.5, both of which can be heard throughout much of Berkshire County. On the radio, she takes calls from listeners and offers them pieces of messages or advice from loved ones who have passed.

She also made it to the final cut for a reality television program called “The Gift” in 2006 on the SyFy Channel. The show was about everyday ordinary people who have a psychic gift of one kind or another; shortly before the taping of the show, the network canceled the series, but not before Hanlon underwent a series of intelligence and psychological tests to determine if she was fit to be on the show.

Although she looks back on the canceling of the show as a blessing — “I was so not ready,” she said — Hanlon said it led to her feeling comfortable to start doing readings publicly, with small house parties and restaurant events. Now, she said, she has connected with 7,000 people and can fill much larger venues, like the Holiday Inn in Latham, N.Y., where she makes many appearances, and the Wilburton Inn in Manchester, where this weekend’s readings are scheduled.

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Apr 05 2012

Maine Psychic Medium & Author Releases New Book

Published by under psychic medium

psychic book

 

A Maine Psychic Medium is keeping busy with a new radio show and as the author of several books.

As recently reported by andovertownsman.com, the Psychic Medium will be performing book signings in New Hampshire.

Kelle Sutliff is contributing a chapter to a new inspirational book with a “Chicken Soup for the Soul” book series co-author, and this week launched her new Internet radio show.

Sutliff lives on Carter Lane, from where she’ll broadcast a weekly Internet only radio show via Skype. It began airing on Tuesdays at 9 p.m. on March 20 and is called “Psychic Cup of Coffee.”

She’s thrilled, but quietly believes all this professional success is connected to her “daily cup of calm” routine.

Each day, she said she spends a few minutes getting physically, mentally and spiritually centered for the day.

“It’s all about positive affirmations,” she said. “You are calmer and get a better perspective if you do this.”

The exercise helps people to be grounded and planted — and as a result, good things happen, she said.

Start those affirmations with “I am,” not “I hope,” during this exercise and there will be benefits, Sutliff said.

“Hope is a big, long word,” she said. “Say ‘I am, not I hope’, and all the negativity will stay away.”

She believes this simple exercise helps alleviate stress — and she’s got the usual stress triggers of many Andover moms. She’s married with three kids ages 12 to 15, and there’s a pet dog, a bird and a hedgehog to keep quiet during the radio show taping. Between 2:30 and 3 p.m. every school day she’s shuttling a child or two somewhere, sometimes with friends.

“Crazy, but I’m so blessed,” she said.

Psychic Medium Kelle Sutliff’s new book “Pearls of Wisdom: 30 Inspirational Ideas to Live Your Best Life Now” in which she was a contributing author, was just released, and focuses on calming oneself.

Her “Daily Cup of Calm” chapter offers readers a step-by-step guide to her calming routine.

Jack Canfield, co-author of the first “Chicken Soup for the Soul” book series, wrote the first chapter. “Pearls of Wisdom” is a small book offering tips on how to live a happy life, and Sutliff is thrilled to be included with the book’s accomplished self-help writers like Canfield.

Her daily calming routine is always used in her business. She’s been a psychic medium for 12 years, and spends a lot of time researching cold and missing person cases for clients. New clients must focus first by using the calming exercise, as she believes that’s a key way to solve mysteries, she said.

On Saturdays, she’s usually with the Boston University Cold Case Collaborative, working on some unsolved case. She plans to talk about the group on her first radio show.

Sutliff is also writing a book, “Listen Up, The Other Side IS Talking.” She’s planning a June release for that self-published book.

“There’s no fluff and puff, no shenanigans,” she said of her new age philosophy on life. “This is not hocus pocus or witchy, witchy — it’s real.”

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Mar 07 2012

Sally Morgan’s Psychic Life

Published by under psychic medium,Psychic Reader

sally morgan psychic

 

Some people have their first psychic experience late on in life, but Sally Morgan, 60, believes it is something that has always been with her.

The first psychic experience happened to Sally at nursery, when she was aged four.

Sally said: “I asked my teacher why my grandad couldn’t be with me. My teacher told me no one was allowed their grandad in the class with them.

“Then I pointed to a girl in my class and asked why she was allowed. I could see clear as day an old man next to this girl.
“The man smiled at me and then just disappeared. No one else in the room saw him.”

During her teenage years, Sally would do readings for her friends. Her client base grew gradually through word of mouth.
Originally, Sally worked as a dental nurse and gave frequent readings by the age of 22.

“I would do full-time readings from my front room. My daughter started to take my bookings and, before long, I had a diary jam-packed full of appointments.”

Although some parts of the work can be extremely heartbreaking, Sally loves being able to help others.

“I knew that I had been given this gift for a reason and felt that I needed to use it in a positive way.”

Even now, the sight of a ghost can give Sally a fright, but she is quick to point out that she feels incredibly honoured.

“I have the privilege of being able to comfort people, help them when they are grieving and deliver messages to them from their loved ones on the other side.”

Sally’s psychic abilities have seen her put doctors right over a diagnosis.

A couple who were trying for a baby went to see Sally. She told them they would have healthy twins, a boy and a girl.

Sure enough, a few months later, the mother became pregnant with twins. Five months into the pregnancy, the couple called Sally in hysterics.

Doctors told the couple that the little boy had a defect and would die when he was born.

Sally thought this had to be wrong, as she had seen the couple with a boy and a girl in her vision.

The couple kept the twins and when they were born both of them were perfectly fine. The doctors admitted that they had made a mistake.

“Now I have a beautiful photo of the twins on my wall, and the boy is perfectly healthy and happy.”

Most of the time, the psychic is doing five shows a week, which doesn’t give her much time to herself.

In the time off she does get, she enjoys spending it with her family.

Since a gastric bypass, Sally has been given a new lease of life.

“I have the energy to go for walks – admittedly, some of the walks are to the stores: my one vice is shopping.”

Sally has been touring the UK for over four years and is not planning on stopping any time soon.

“I absolutely love life on the road. It has really enabled me to explore my ability in a new way. You just never know what is going to happen.”

Article source: pressandjournal.co.uk

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Mar 04 2012

Canadian Psychic Medium Connects People With Loved Ones

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As recently reported by emcottawawest.ca, Canadian Psychic Medium Matthew Stapley claims to have discovered the gift of contacting the spirit world at a young age and uses his abilities to help people contact their loved ones through Psychic Readings.

At the age of 11, he remembers waking up and seeing the image of his dead grandfather standing over his bed.

“Grandpa, you passed away years ago,” said the 11-year-old boy.

“Yeah but I had to be sure everyone was OK,” replied his grandfather, according to Stapley.

The fledgling psychic shared the messages from his grandfather with his family members.

“That’s when my family, my mom and dad, realized I could speak to the dead,” said Stapley.

Psychic Medium Stapley has encountered many skeptics in his lifetime, but rather than clash with them – he chooses to take the high road.

Stapley has encountered his share of skeptics -people who believe psychics are frauds who use tricks like cold reading and providing vague predictions that could easily be interpreted in different ways by people who want to believe they are talking to their dead loved ones.

In 2010, the Ottawa Sceptics Society gathered outside the Mayfair Theatre in downtown Ottawa to picket Stapley’s first-ever psychic show.

Stapley later wrote a thank you letter to the society for making the event more interesting.

People who attend psychic shows come with questions such as, are they following the right life path or ask what the future holds for them.

CONNECTIONS

As a clairvoyant and clairaudient medium, Stapley said he can help others connect with the spirit world, relaying information provided by spiritual guides, angels and loved ones who have died.

The psychic medium said he never forces a connection -he’ll offer to convey a message to someone in the audience, but they have the option of saying no.

The psychic said he sees an aura of colours surrounding people and hears the voices of spirits who tell him what the colours mean.

“Sometimes the spirit world will tell me about the future for people,” said Stapley, adding that everyone has at least two spirit guides.

GIFT

As a teenager, Stapley said he found it difficult to deal with his gift.

“When I turned 16, there was no way I could turn it off,” he said. “It actually made me very depressed.”

Stapley, who attended three different high schools including Merivale High School in Nepean, said he once used his gift to defuse the attention of a prominent bully at Merivale.

The then 18-year-old fledgling psychic described a diffi-cult personal situation the girl was dealing with at home and told her not to take it out on her classmates. The stunned bully asked him how he knew about her personal life.

“I see dead people,” Stapley told her.

When he graduated high school, Stapley studied in a nursing program at AlgonquinCollege, dropping out after he was injured in a car accident.

He later enrolled in a lab technician program at CDI College, graduated and worked as a lab tech for several weeks, before moving on to a full-time career as a psychic medium.

“There’s nothing I’d rather do than this,” said Stapley.

Everyone has a psychic talent, said Stapley -some are just more gifted or connected to the talent than others.

Compassion is an important trait of a psychic medium, said Stapley.

“I see the compassion aspect over everything else,” he said. “I see helping people to healthy relationships about their life.

“I want people to feel they’re not alone.”

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Feb 18 2012

Could Children Be Born With Psychic Abilities?

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Many parents have experienced odd behavior from their children, sometimes unexplainable, which has led them to ask, could my child be Psychic?

As recently written by the examiner.com, could it be that children’s imaginary friends are actually real? Are these spirits or guardian angels that children are able to communicate with?

Certainly youngsters have vivid imaginations. However, there are cases of children describing relatives in rich detail – and to the shock of their parents – relatives that have passed away. They describe events that occurred before their birth or predict future events that indeed come to happen. If parents dismiss such claims or become frightened by them, the child will either suffer or disbelieve himself. This is isolating and potentially harmful.

As a little girl sitting in Sunday church service with my father, I told him I saw pretty lights lifting above the heads of people around me. He shushed me kindly and told me I was just seeing things. He meant no harm, of course, but his disbelief upset me. As time passed, I suppressed the sight and eventually the lights went out. It wasn’t until I reached my ‘30s that I began to see the lights again and realized they were auras. They most certainly had not been my imagination. My youngest daughter sees them, too.

The existence of psychic children begs the question: Are babies psychic? While it may appear that infants are helpless creatures that only blink, eat, cry and sleep, one University of Missouri researcher says that studies indicate infant brains come equipped with knowledge of intuitive physics.

….

While the intuitive physics knowledge is believed to be present at birth, vanMarle believes parents can assist skill development through normal interaction, such as playing and talking with the child and encouraging him/her to interact with objects. With your understanding and help, your child may grow up to be a medical intuitive, an energy healer or a psychic detective!

Is your child Psychic? Be sure to leave a comment.

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Dec 30 2011

Walking With A Psychic

Read this excellent article focusing on one of the world’s most famous Psychic’s Derek Acorah of Most Haunted, article originally posted by The Guardian UK.

 

psychic medium derek acorah

 

By Alex Clark

At the Wyllyotts Theatre, handily situated just round the corner from Potters Bar train station and a few minutes’ drive from the M25, the auditorium is gradually filling to capacity. Predominantly female, predominantly upwards of middle-aged but with a visible smattering of far younger and far gigglier women, the Thursday-night crowd seems chatty and excited, and not particularly different from the audience you’d expect to see the following evening, when Cannon and Ball are due to hit Hertfordshire. There’s little palpable sense of apprehension or emotional tension, certainly not enough to make you believe that those gathered here this evening are expecting to make contact with their dead loved ones.

“Lots of virgins in Potters Bar!” jokes Colin Fry, the spiritualist medium they’ve all come to see. He’s just asked for a show of hands to establish who’s been to what he refers to variously as a “demonstration” and an “experiment” like this before, and only a few have gone up. When I talk to audience members afterwards, though, it’s clear that this was just a natural reticence that quickly melted; most are pretty literate in the ways of the psychic display and are familiar with Fry’s work, either through his live appearances or television shows.

I am not. It’s the first show of this kind I’ve ever been to; neither am I a watcher of the vast number of hugely popular television programmes (Fry’s own Sixth Sense, Most Haunted, Psychic Detectives, Paranormal Witness). Inasmuch as I’ve ever thought seriously about this burgeoning industry, I’d put myself at the open-minded end of scepticism: broadly rational with a twist of “there are more things in heaven and earth”; pretty convinced that death is the end, with a fervent hope that it isn’t (as long as the afterlife is nice); opposed to the exploitation of the grieving by fakers, but unable to see entirely how their made-up stories differ from much of organised religion.

But I’ve come to Potters Bar because Colin Fry and fellow medium Derek Acorah have asked me to; and they’ve asked me to because of what happened to Sally Morgan one late summer’s evening earlier this year. Morgan is (in her own description) Britain’s Best-Loved Psychic; her most celebrated client was Princess Diana, whose death in a car accident she almost foretold (she thought, at the time, that it was the Queen herself who was to die, although, as she points out, Diana did like to be known as the Queen of Hearts). This September, Morgan was playing to a customarily packed house in Dublin when an audience member sitting near an open window heard voices that, she claimed to an Irish radio station the following day, seemed to eerily prefigure the revelations that emerged on stage a few seconds later. The inference, and subsequent accusation, was that Morgan was being fed information about her audience, which she swiftly recycled as evidence of visitations from the spirit world, a charge she has robustly denied ever since – the theatre has supported her claim that the voices were technicians chatting. Although not, her critics have noted, to the point of accepting a Halloween challenge by science writer Simon Singh that she submit her powers to scientific testing.

“I don’t want to get involved in the allegations,” says Fry, when we meet up for a chat before he takes to the Wyllyotts stage. “It’s not for me to defend that particular medium: she can do that for herself, or not.” Interestingly, he doesn’t mention Morgan by name, although he can’t be talking about anybody else. Perhaps his natural demeanour – he is softly spoken, courteous, almost self-effacing – militates against such an out-and-out lack of gallantry; and perhaps it is also part of the positive thinking that he seems to apply to his work and its occasional travails. The Morgan brouhaha, he says, gives professional stage mediums an opportunity to open up their work for inspection, to reassure their public that “when I’m up there on the stage, it is just me, my audience, and whatever it is that I claim that I do”.

Ah, there’s the heart of the matter. What is it, exactly, that he claims to do? He responds very precisely, voice even more hushed, enunciation even more deliberate. “I have a perception of what many people think of as the dead. I have some ability, of varying degrees on different days, where I can sense the feelings and the thoughts and the words and the emotions and the memories of the discarnate. And it’s happened all my life.”

It began, he says, when he was a very small boy. When he was four, he told his grandfather that his mother had died and gone to heaven; the next day, his grandfather received a telegram to that effect. At 11, he passed a message on to his French teacher from her deceased mother; she told him he had a great gift but to be careful whom he told about it. Two years later, he’d realised he was a spiritualist and was also coming to terms with “something else the world was going to have a problem with – being gay”; by 17, he was demonstrating in spiritualist churches. But it wasn’t until many years later, when he was nursing his adopted brother during a terminal illness, that he really began to think that mediumship should take over from his career in retail management. As Michael took his last breath, he tells me, he made the decision to go professional.

By the time I take my seat for the show I am intrigued, even a bit keyed-up. I’m eager for Fry to get through his humorous warm-up, the explanation that his hearing aids are not feeding him illicit information, his introduction of “a member of the press” (“Is that you?” the woman next to me whispers, spotting me scribbling in a notebook) and, most importantly, his entreaty that if we are not lucky enough to receive a message ourselves, we be happy for those who do, and take comfort in their comfort.

And with that he begins to listen out for the voices of the discarnate. Gliding around the stage, hand pressed lightly to head, he waits for the spirit world to guide him to their earthly relative (recently, he tells me, a dead woman called Dilys turned up 24 hours early, at the wrong theatre, to find her husband, and had to come back the next night). This evening, the spirits seem a little more accurate, particularly when they alight on a group of three Indian women, two older and one younger, who seem thrilled with information from their materfamilias; her grand-daughter is barely able to contain her excitement, even when she’s being told to tidy her bedroom.

Throughout, the spirits seem tuned in to the prosaic, the domestic and the sad-but-not-tragic; one mentions lumpy gravy and tinkering with cars, another tells her daughter-in-law that her funeral was such a disaster that she forgives her for smirking at it. A distressed-looking woman is told that she has to take things easier and sinks back, relieved, into her seat. The process is relatively clear to me: it relies on Fry first narrowing down the audience, sometimes simply by gesturing to a part of the room, and then throwing out snippets of information that prompt individuals to identify themselves. The conversations that follow, as far as I’m concerned, neither prove nor disprove the existence of life after death, or the ability of the departed to communicate with those left behind; they’re too general, too punctuated with hesitations and mis-steps, establishing details that fail to chime with anyone.

But something does happen that gives me an insight into what’s going on. Just before the interval – before the punters disgorge to the foyer to browse Colin’s merchandise, his books and CDs and Senses, his aromatherapy range – he casts his net once again. This time, a restless spirit is indicating that he should look for two people, a father and his daughter, or perhaps a daughter who’s tried to persuade her father to come. The woman, he says, is called Jane, or Jean; paradoxically, his unsureness creates a sense of authenticity. But the words have an extraordinary effect on me. My mother, who died unexpectedly five years ago, was called Gina and suddenly, despite the fact that almost the last place on the face of the earth that I imagine she would choose to make contact with me is a theatre in Potters Bar, and despite the fact that I wouldn’t dream of suggesting to my father that he put himself through more heartache in such an uncertain pursuit, I’m drawn in.

It’s not pleasant: I realise that my face is wet with tears and that I have a sort of panicky, claustrophobic feeling, as if my mother needs me in some way but I’m powerless to help her; not entirely different, in fact, from the kind of feelings you have when someone you love is seriously ill or dying. Thoughts flash through my mind. What if I were to stand up? Would Fry imagine that this was some kind of elaborate journalistic sting? Would he help me? What if I sit here and say nothing and my mother thinks I don’t want to speak to her?

In that frozen moment, I’m aware that I’m both elated and frightened by the thought that my mum might be here; and, impossibly, equally sure that she isn’t. By the time I’ve begun to breathe more normally, someone else has claimed that spirit who, it transpires, was a woman looking for her son and her grand-daughter. I don’t really hear what she has to say, because all I can think of is the glass of wine that I will knock back in one during the interval.

Colin Fry’s brand of positive thinking extends well beyond his hope that stage mediums can survive challenges of the Sally Morgan variety. Much of his conversation tends towards the pastoral, the therapeutic: he says he often advises people to go to bereavement counselling, or to their doctor, if he feels that they’re not ready to receive a message; he discourages people from visiting him too frequently if he feels it’s preventing them from coming to terms with the death of their loved ones. What we must all realise, he says, is that we need to move on with our lives so that we are ready to meet those who have “passed over” when the time comes; and not to do so is disrespectful to them.

I ask him if he finds the constant company of the dead oppressive, and he says no, they are simply a “whispering, a half-noise” that is around him all the time. The real weight on his shoulders is the “duty of care” that he feels towards people, the responsibilities imposed by his gift. And yet he is adamant that the work he does is vital and that he has two questions for those who would legislate against mediums: “What would they give people in return? What are you going to replace me with?”

There’s little sign that his devotees want him to do a disappearing act. When I speak to audience members after the final curtain (so to speak), they are delighted with what they’ve heard – particularly those who have received communications. Shehnaaz, her sister Sally and daughter Lucinda, who heard from Shehnaaz and Sally’s mother, are bubbling with excitement, having made the long trip from Chingford by bus. And in the book-signing queue, Sally has received a further dose of good news about her health, which hasn’t been great recently. Will they come again? “Definitely.”

The only dissenting voices I hear are from a group of three women – another medium, a spiritualist healer and their very interested friend. And their complaint is not about whether Fry’s communiqués are genuine, or even accurate, but whether there have been enough of them. At their church, they tell me, the messages come thick and fast; the jokey asides are kept to a minimum. As far as they are concerned, a spiritualist demonstration should have one purpose above all others: to provide evidence of the existence of life after death.

If the ladies from the spiritualist church thought Colin Fry veered too much towards entertainment, I’m not sure what they’d make of Derek Acorah, who greets his audience with a heartfelt “Love you!” and is rewarded with a rousing “Love you back!”, and who spends very little time on the stage, preferring to range up and down the aisles in search of those ready to receive “a loving connection”.

He is clearly a natural showman, as fans of Most Haunted, which he featured in for six series between 2001 and 2005 before a departure that was itself rather mysterious, will attest. But before small-screen fame, and before he turned to mediumship, he had another career altogether: as a professional footballer. At the age of 15, he tells me, he signed for Bill Shankly’s Liverpool, causing consternation in his Evertonian family – and even more at the club when he started telling the other players their fortunes. After Emlyn Hughes had written off his brand-new car the day after Acorah had warned him to drive carefully, Shankly issued him with a stark warning: “You’re an apprentice-professional with the greatest football side in the world, Liverpool Football Club. You’re a footballer, not a psycho.” It didn’t, says Acorah, stop him asking whether they’d beat Villa on Saturday (they did, as he promised).

The vagaries of the sporting life – and dodgy knees – meant that he never quite made it, ending his playing days in Western Australia. Back in the UK, he planned on a new career as a coach, until the spirit world intervened in the shape of Sam, the “guide” who has been with him ever since.

There is something quite surreal about sitting opposite a grown man while he tells you about his adventures in a previous life; in Acorah’s case, in Ethiopia, 2,037 (“2,038 in January”) years ago. It was there, in a small village, that he first became acquainted with Sam, who was a local seer who used to tell the villagers “whether there was going to be a good harvest, watch out for marauding this, marauding that”. Millennia later, Sam re-entered his life in a series of bewildering dreams, at the end of which he explained to Acorah: “You were allowed to follow your dream, but this is your gift that you should use to help mankind.”

His response has been to help people via the “pure, unadulterated communication of connection”, and by allowing Sam to guide him towards what he knows is “the truth, at a cellular level”. Like Fry, Acorah is concerned that allegations of fraudulence “could set our sensitive work back 50 years, if people believed these accusations”.

The people streaming into the Brook, an entertainment venue in the middle of a residential area in Soham, Cambridgeshire, don’t look as though they’ve paid much notice to the nay-sayers (or, as Acorah calls them, “cynical minds”). As they take their seats in front of a large screen, on which images of Acorah at the Pyramids, or in front of his car, with its GHOST DA licence plate, mingle with notices for sufferers of epilepsy and advertisements for the True Vision tour and Soul Journey CD, they seem – like Fry’s constituency – up for it.

But what “it” is proves, once again, elusive – as does his first taker. Eventually, after a certain amount of wandering, he finds a woman who recognises an Anne, who has a connection to George, or possibly Debbie, who is not tall and didn’t worry about her hair. “She’s a little bit annoyed,” he tells the woman. “That’s her, yeah.” “She loved toast.” “Oh yeah.” And later: “Your mum’s spending a lot of time around Mary.” “She would do.”

Unlike Fry, who maintains that he can’t see into the future, Acorah is happy to let his audience know what’s coming their way: in the case of a pregnant woman, that she’s carrying a baby girl; to someone else that they’ll find themselves in the dentist’s chair the following week (“You’ve got a cavity”). And he delights in telling a man called David that, come Christmas, he’ll find himself on a ship, although it’s not particularly welcome news for David, who doesn’t like cruises. In fact, of all the recipients of messages I’ve seen, David seems the most resistant, fighting shy of Acorah’s tidbits and guesses – until the moment that he, too, recognises a name. When I speak to him in the interval, he confesses that he’d been sceptical until that moment, but could then not believe how close Acorah – and Sam – were to the mark.

Whatever impels Colin Fry, Derek Acorah and others of their ilk, it can hardly be the glamour. Before Colin’s show, he and his crew regale me with stories of less-than-pristine B&Bs, tedious motorway drives and late-night sandwich suppers. When Fry goes to take a shower, he quickly rings down from his dressing room to ask if the management can bring up the shower-head, which is removed between each use, presumably to prevent its theft; when Acorah also enquires about the facilities, he’s told he can have a wash and brush-up in a nearby caravan. By and large, their appearances steer clear of the big cities, the star venues; they focus on keeping costs down and ticket prices relatively low. And there are rewards to that approach. I ask one of the stage managers at the Wyllyotts whether mediums usually sell out and get an emphatic yes. Do other kinds of performers? An equally emphatic no.

In the end, I decide, there’s virtually no evidence that either Fry or Acorah are using any kind of technical trickery to enhance their demonstrations; nor, indeed, particularly subtle forms of what has come to be called cold reading. This is a world away from the monstrous cynicism exposed by Hilary Mantel’s novel Beyond Black or, more recently, AL Kennedy’s The Blue Book, during the course of researching which she received advice from Derren Brown, himself a sophisticated analyst of the power of mediumship to convince those willing to believe in it. Instead, I think, it is a kind of updated end-of-the-pier show, performed by men and women with impressive theatrical skills and a rather touching connection with their audiences.

The million-dollar question is whether they themselves believe in their interactions with the dead; and that, unless you happen to catch someone in an act of fraudulence, is impossible to say. Is it harmful? Little more, I think, than all manner of other hocus-pocus, from horoscopes to new-age therapies. Would I go back? No. My fleeting wobble impressed one thing very firmly on me: whatever “loving connection” one feels with one’s dead happens in the memory, and the heart, and the mind. I know exactly how my mother would have reacted to the sight of me in the audience in Potters Bar; with a mixture of laughter and sorrow and a compassionate instruction to take no notice. But she was not there. And wishing it were otherwise will not make it so.

Article source guardian.co.uk

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Nov 28 2011

Celebrity Psychic Sally Morgan Gives Psychic Readings

psychic sally morgan 2011

 

Read as popular UK Celebrity Psychic Medium Sally Morgan answers reader questions for the UK Mirror, and gives them Psychic Readings.

Recently posted by mirror.co.uk, Psychic Sally helps several readers gain closure through her Psychic Readings.

I feel lost without my husband

My lovely husband Fred passed away on April 8 this year.

His health was not good. He was in hospital after a mild heart attack and when he seemed to be recovering, the doctor said he could come home on the Friday.

But when I visited the night before I didn’t think he looked too well. The hospital said he was fine so the last thing I said to him was “see you tomorrow”.

Then I had a phone call early Friday morning to say he had collapsed and could I come straight away, which I did. But it was too late, he was gone before I arrived.

It was a dreadful shock. I never had time to tell him how much I loved him and I am heartbroken without him.

We have three children, all in their 40s, who have their own lives to live.

I am really lonely without him and he was the only man I ever truly loved. I just wished I could have told him.

My mum passed away a few weeks before Fred and my last words to her were “I love you” and she knew I did. Why did I not say that to my Fred?

I just want to know if he is at peace and happy. I cannot wait to be with him again, as I am lost without him. I hope you can put my mind at rest, Sally.

JAYNE

Psychic Sally Morgan: My heart goes out to you, Jayne. We think we are going to spend the rest of our lives with the person we marry and when this changes, our lives turn upside down.

I often hear stories from people who have spent 24 hours a day in the hospital by a loved one’s side. But the moment they decide to leave, be it simply for a cup of tea, for example, is the moment the loved one passes.

I don’t know why this happens, but I like to think that it is their way of taking away more pain for the ones still on earth.

I want you to know that even though you were not there right at the end and you feel that you didn’t get to say your goodbye properly, your husband Fred knows how much you love him.

You had a deep love, one that only soul mates have and you didn’t need to tell each other every day that you loved one another, you both just knew.

Your husband is free from any pain, he is in an amazing place surrounded by nothing but love.

It is always hard for those left behind to try and adapt to a new way of life but your husband wants you to carry on living a fulfilled life. You have a close family and they will help you through times of grief.

Your husband will always be with you in your heart, remember him always and he will continue to share in all of your happy memories.

Who is my feline visitor?

Please can you explain why a spiritual cat comes to me when I am in bed? I feel it jump up and paw at the duvet. It always walks round the back of my body and goes behind my head.

I feel it press the pillow down, I can also hear it purring. We have never had a cat.

I did see it walk across the spare pillow one night, then it just vanished. I am not frightened by it but I would like to know why it comes and what it symbolises.

I did feel it had come to give me healing, does that sound silly to you?

MRS V.P.

Psychic Sally Morgan: I certainly sense that this cat is a spirit that resides in your house. I believe it belonged to a previous owner.

The cat loved being surrounded by people and I think that it is trying to show you affection. I am sure that if you could trace the cat to its previous owner, you would find that the cat used to sleep on their bed a lot of the time.

The cat feels comforted by your presence, and the purring confirms this. It is a very beautiful thing and a perfect example of how animals in spirit can come through to us.

Psychic Sally Morgan is known as Britain’s “Best Loved Psychic”, performing regularly across the United Kingdom, and holding the honor of being the former Celebrity Psychic Reader to Princess Diana.

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Nov 15 2011

Hawaiian Psychic Medium Cleanses Spirits

Published by under psychic medium,Psychic Videos

In this episode of Hawaiian Ghost Mysteries in Wahiawa, Hawaii, a local Spirit Medium travels to a cabin in the woods. There, she claims to clear out the lingering spirits of dead children who have been bothering the living residents.

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