ahlam1399
02-13-2020, 06:31 PM
</p>I interviewed a fascinating lady the other week. I do a feature called â??Beyond The Darkâ?*. We go all over the world talking to people about the paranormal, aliens, out-of-body experiences, angels – you get the drift.
I am sceptical but open-minded about there being other beings out there. I mean, how can we be so vain to think that we are the only living things in this vast universe?
Iâ??ve interviewed some really off-the-wall people and some learned scholars. This particular person fascinated me, as she touched on something I canâ??t stop thinking about.
Let me tell you about her. Louisa Oakley Green, an award-winning science writer and journalist, became interested in paranormal phenomena when she married her psychic husband more than 20 years ago.
Sheâ??s a University of South Carolina journalism graduate. Green also studied science for medical writing in New Jersey and Traditional Astrology in London. Her work and interests maintain a curious balance between science and mysticism. You can learn more about her at www.psychicbystander.com
Early in the writing of her second book, Sightseeing in the Undiscovered Country: Tales Retold by a Psychic Bystander, she said she interviewed a medical doctor who worked in a hospice in a large city. She told me some fascinating stories, not only about how she cared for the sick during their transition into death, but how she and her staff saw some of the spirits wandering around the hospital afterwards.
</p>http://i1.wp.com/hameed.nwar.uk/w101/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Are-hospices-paranormal-hot-spots-Pete-Price.jpg?w=1220
The abandoned Newsham Park Hospital… could spirits still be lurking inside? Photo by Colin Lane
Most eventually left, but there were occasional stragglers. She went on to say that once a month, unbeknownst to the general public, a local priest was asked to visit the hospital to perform a ritual to help lost souls cross over.
While Louisa was telling me this, I thought is this happening in hospitals and hospices in this country? Could we have priests or psychics exorcising spirits, helping these lost souls to pass to the other side?
I asked a few people that I know in the medical profession if theyâ??d heard anything about this. A couple said no, but one in particular was very hesitant. Iâ??ve made phone calls to hospitals and a couple of psychic churches. Iâ??ve spoken to psychics and something is not right, as I donâ??t appear to be getting straight answers â?? so Iâ??m wondering if Iâ??ve stumbled on something the public really donâ??t want to know about and staff in hospitals and hospices turn a blind eye to.
Or have I got it completely wrong? Can any of you out there shed any light on this? Do we have people helping lost souls go over to the other side in hospitals and hospices?
Turning 70 with a roast… what am I letting myself in for?
I suddenly woke up the other day and thought what I have let myself in for next Monday, January 25?
Iâ??m 70 and have been in showbusiness for 50 years. The Hilton Hotel Liverpool is having its first-ever roast and itâ??s me! I have to sit on a stage with my colleagues from showbusiness tearing me apart and I canâ??t answer back.
Could you imagine me doing that on radio? Thank goodness itâ??s all for charity and everyone is working for nothing.
What can they possibly say about me that would upset me? They surely wouldnâ??t talk about the fact that I am self-opinionated and a namedropper with an autobiography called â??Pete Price Namedropperâ??.
They wouldnâ??t dare mention about the clangers I drop in panto, like the year I came down as Buttons in Cinderella and did the whole speech from the year before as Wishy Washy in Aladdin.
They wouldnâ??t surely mention the fact I lose it on radio most nights.
If I survive this roast, I might learn some things about myself that I didnâ??t know and might be a better person â?? or I might retire!
Source link (https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/showbiz-news/are-hospices-paranormal-hot-spots-10767568)
أكثر... (https://hameed.nwar.uk/vb/w101/2020/02/13/are-hospices-paranormal-hot-spots-pete-price/)
I am sceptical but open-minded about there being other beings out there. I mean, how can we be so vain to think that we are the only living things in this vast universe?
Iâ??ve interviewed some really off-the-wall people and some learned scholars. This particular person fascinated me, as she touched on something I canâ??t stop thinking about.
Let me tell you about her. Louisa Oakley Green, an award-winning science writer and journalist, became interested in paranormal phenomena when she married her psychic husband more than 20 years ago.
Sheâ??s a University of South Carolina journalism graduate. Green also studied science for medical writing in New Jersey and Traditional Astrology in London. Her work and interests maintain a curious balance between science and mysticism. You can learn more about her at www.psychicbystander.com
Early in the writing of her second book, Sightseeing in the Undiscovered Country: Tales Retold by a Psychic Bystander, she said she interviewed a medical doctor who worked in a hospice in a large city. She told me some fascinating stories, not only about how she cared for the sick during their transition into death, but how she and her staff saw some of the spirits wandering around the hospital afterwards.
</p>http://i1.wp.com/hameed.nwar.uk/w101/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Are-hospices-paranormal-hot-spots-Pete-Price.jpg?w=1220
The abandoned Newsham Park Hospital… could spirits still be lurking inside? Photo by Colin Lane
Most eventually left, but there were occasional stragglers. She went on to say that once a month, unbeknownst to the general public, a local priest was asked to visit the hospital to perform a ritual to help lost souls cross over.
While Louisa was telling me this, I thought is this happening in hospitals and hospices in this country? Could we have priests or psychics exorcising spirits, helping these lost souls to pass to the other side?
I asked a few people that I know in the medical profession if theyâ??d heard anything about this. A couple said no, but one in particular was very hesitant. Iâ??ve made phone calls to hospitals and a couple of psychic churches. Iâ??ve spoken to psychics and something is not right, as I donâ??t appear to be getting straight answers â?? so Iâ??m wondering if Iâ??ve stumbled on something the public really donâ??t want to know about and staff in hospitals and hospices turn a blind eye to.
Or have I got it completely wrong? Can any of you out there shed any light on this? Do we have people helping lost souls go over to the other side in hospitals and hospices?
Turning 70 with a roast… what am I letting myself in for?
I suddenly woke up the other day and thought what I have let myself in for next Monday, January 25?
Iâ??m 70 and have been in showbusiness for 50 years. The Hilton Hotel Liverpool is having its first-ever roast and itâ??s me! I have to sit on a stage with my colleagues from showbusiness tearing me apart and I canâ??t answer back.
Could you imagine me doing that on radio? Thank goodness itâ??s all for charity and everyone is working for nothing.
What can they possibly say about me that would upset me? They surely wouldnâ??t talk about the fact that I am self-opinionated and a namedropper with an autobiography called â??Pete Price Namedropperâ??.
They wouldnâ??t dare mention about the clangers I drop in panto, like the year I came down as Buttons in Cinderella and did the whole speech from the year before as Wishy Washy in Aladdin.
They wouldnâ??t surely mention the fact I lose it on radio most nights.
If I survive this roast, I might learn some things about myself that I didnâ??t know and might be a better person â?? or I might retire!
Source link (https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/showbiz-news/are-hospices-paranormal-hot-spots-10767568)
أكثر... (https://hameed.nwar.uk/vb/w101/2020/02/13/are-hospices-paranormal-hot-spots-pete-price/)