Thursday, December 27, 2018

Talking To Souls

Animals in a zoo. various wild animals photo. 172


The eyes are the window to the soul, it has been said. But what makes a soul? What does it look like? How can one be able to hone their intuitive gift--to communicate on a soul to soul frequency--and to bypass both on the part of the sender and the part of the receiver in this communication, the influence of the ego on the message of the soul?

It takes time.

It takes training to recapture what once as children we had as intuitive gifts, our birthright, as souls incarnate on Earth. 

Small children are known for not having a 'filter'--they speak what is on their mind. And until the socialization comes in the school age years, if you are around a little one the things they say might both surprise you with their insight and wisdom. Some speak of having lived lives before, giving details of who they were, where they lived, and how they died. These are stories of reincarnation. 

Some see angels and fairy beings...imaginary friends. And almost all are afraid of the things that are hidden in the dark, and go bump in the night, like the boogeyman.

To move forward in this lesson, let us assume a soul is a form of energy which is part of us, and stays as 'us' after we die. For lack of a better photo image--we know many of you are highly visual--let us assume this cute fuzzy animal above as a generic image of a soul for the time being. 

Let us assume that souls are a part of life and everyone has one, every living thing, for example, 'the spirit of the tree'--and not get into details over dogs souls being able to go into Heaven and the like. 

A soul is a soul.

Part of being a healer is being able to communicate with, and pick up on, information provided by the patient's soul. 

This is part of medical intuition. Many times, the healer who is open to hunches and nudges often performs better clinically than the one who uses a shotgun to go through every list of possible causes on the differential diagnosis, every test, every workup until something is found.

Intuition saves money.

And medical intuition also is in closer alignment to the patient's actual needs. 

The best part of medical intuition is that nagging feeling that something 'isn't right', that you haven't found it yet, the cause of the disease, and that you must keep searching. 

Someone who is working on a protocol or a shotgun blast of checking anything and everything isn't going to pick up on that quiet voice because they are lulled into believing that as the system/powers that be behind the papers promotes, all patients are alike, all disease is alike, and all treatments are alike. For everyone.

The other day, Carla's sister was talking to their cousin about his recent diabetes diagnosis. He wasn't tolerating the medication, the metformin. She shared that her daughter doesn't get the stomach ache with the Extended Release form of it.  This type of subtlety isn't included in most protocols, although a primary care provider with lots of experience might arrive at this.


Let's take this up a notch.

What happens when someone with the training and the gift, like Carla has, who is able to talk with souls on a soul level, goes to work in the hospital?

There is difficulty in communicating the results of intuition with anyone other than the patient in real time 'on the front lines'.

There are various ways to transfuse a patient. The most simple kind takes three hours for one unit of blood, and it drips by gravity or on a pump into the patient. Another kind is 'blood pump tubing' with a chamber a hand may squeeze to pump the blood in a little faster. Often times this in combination with pressure bags it is enough to keep up. For a major trauma, this isn't fast enough to resuscitate (put the blood back into) the patient. For this there is a device called a Level One Rapid Transfuser which both heats and puts pressure on the bags of blood. One faster kind exists, its called a Rapid Transfuser, which is basically a bucket connected to half of a bypass machine--and is used in Liver Transplant. 

Yesterday a patient was in trouble. Big trouble. There was blood on the walls and the floor as well as the patient. GI bleeds can be massive.

The ER had the type of set up just below the Level One. 

Carla sensed trouble. She couldn't put it into words, but her experience with the gastroenterologist, the nature of the procedure, and the bleed made her want to have Plan B and Plan C ready.

When she asked about the Level One the response was, 'the patient isn't bleeding now and doesn't need it'.

Carla sensed strongly that the patient was going to rebleed again, at some point, possibly during the procedure. 

Was the balloon you insert into the esophagus and inflate to stop uncontrollable bleeding available? (no. not anywhere in the hospital, it turns out).  

Would someone be available during the procedure to continue hanging the blood? Yes, it was promised, but the charge nurse for the ER walked off looking for the tube. 

Carla really wanted the Level One connected to the patient, but it was a new extension to the ER, and not her turf. It was trouble enough to get one line devoted to anesthesia without a lot of piggyback drips (sandostatin and protonix) running in them. 

Carla trusted in Source -- and her training--that everything would be okay. 

Even when she told the respiratory therapist, there is a lot of blood, you need to hold cricoid and not let go--and she knew the therapist WOULD let go--and she did, needing a gentle reminder to put the cricoid pressure back during the intubation...with Carla giving thanks that the airway was clear of blood so she could see...

Carla was ready with pressors when the blood pressure went to sixty. They were all drawn up in advance--something she rarely does now due to cost containment--and worked.

Everyone was praying--scrub tech, Carla --and by some miracle, one of the two bands stuck in place and the patient didn't exsanguinate!

(After this was the CT scanner, then the state-of-the-art angio suite).

So here we have intuition--premonition--facing the inertia of the unawakened caregivers--who in the clinical situation open their hearts and pray while they are giving the care.

In summary this notch is the clinical application of intuition and soul information and soul ability in the front lines of today's medical care.

Let us click up that dial a little more, toward what will be the future of medicine.

It is not one cause, one imbalance, one cure for one disease. 

The chakras interact.

It takes a very highly skilled healer to ferret them out.

Some, like Carla when she is making her bracelets--simply lets go, trusts, and listens when she makes them. A couple's matching bracelet set she made for her friend who had stage four lung cancer and his wife, was amethyst with a single tiger eye focal. Amethyst it turns out, provides Serenity. It calms the mind and eases anxiety. It works in the emotional, spiritual and physical plane to provide calm, balance, patience, and peace.  Tiger Eye brings Harmony. It helps to unite one's will and desires, brings ideas into reality. Enhances integrity, willpower, practicality and correct use of power. 

Carla wasn't thinking of this when she put those two stones together. 

Carla only knew it would help, and that it 'felt right'.

This first step into to future of medicine is the incorporation of Spirit into the clinical scenario. With healers who trust in the access to the Higher Knowledge which is both supplied and graciously supported by the angels (who are also always present and assisting, in guidance with the soul).


What's more?

Carla experienced this by chance (again, there is never an accident!) yesterday during the long hours caring for her patient who was very ill.

In doing her Reiki (already she had given the Transition Symbol as the patient was crashing and she was resuscitating him) she sensed the connected the daughter who was flying down from San Francisco had to this soul, and it was important he live.

She said words to the interventionist, 'I know this is very difficult, and challenging. As long as you have done your best, there is nothing more anyone would ask you to do.' as he was struggling. He visibly relaxed. It was difficult, with the equipment in stock, the kind he preferred (there are sizes and they are stocked for most average clinical presentations but this one was not the norm, and needed bigger). She was patient when the rep was called and spoke to the team over the phone, and made a gentle suggestion perhaps in the future to put it on video phone so the rep could watch the equipment like in the O.R. when they are present. 

These procedures take six hours.  

And also when doing the Reiki, Carla encountered the soul floating outside the body connected by a grey silver cord (not a shiny one). 

Apparently the soul hadn't wanted to be connected to the body for a long time. During consent,  Carla explained to the patient that the anesthesia was risky, but doing nothing was even more certain risk--known outcome that wasn't good--so it was best to proceed with the procedure. He had a knowing look in his eye, one of resignation. As one who had come close to death in the past, and was accepting the fact of this possibility.   The soul, to her conscious awareness in the interaction, seemed in the right place and nothing unusual.

It was only when she looked she saw the truth. It didn't want to go back and hadn't wanted to go back for a long time, but didn't have the opportunity to leave for good (this in itself is a choice lesson! )

What Carla hadn't expected was heavy, heavy pressure from something in the spirit world on top of her head right after she saw the soul in its position with her spirit eyes/intuition. It was persistent! Carla struggled for a moment to remember what to do, then she recalled the Empath's Prayer--'if it is not mine Lord, please take it away'. 

The pressure eased immediately.

Then it came back.

It took several tries to stop it. 

Was the patient a hitchhiker trying to get a ride on a different body?

Or was it something that was attached to the patient wanting an 'upgrade'?

Who would know?

I would know! I'm in the Spirit world. And I run things! 

But outside from this, it is better left unexplained, unanswered, and to give all of you something upon which to reflect. 


In summary, intuition's role in medicine once was primary, before the invention of scientific research and life-saving treatments.

Intuition's role receded to 'bedside manner' and was not encouraged in any more development. Despite this, people for the most part, have come to trust clinical insights and hunches, and also, always have continued to pray.

The addition of spirit to the healing realm is the next great adventure!  How can advanced technology (even if it was suppressed) be of assistance without the input of those who have built it and know how to use it in healing?

The patient always tells you their diagnosis. This is something learned in medical school, early in the training as you develop your interviewing skills to take a history and physical. If you listen carefully, the patient will tell you in their own words, and their own way, not in anything medical--what is wrong. 

Can you imagine what will happen when the soul of the patient can communicate directly to the healer?

(he dusts off his hands--ed)  You can wrap that one for the books!






clap! clap!

Aloha and Mahalos,
Namaste,
Peace,

Ross and Carla
The Illuminated Twin Flame Soul Twins.