Читать книгу Edgar Cayce’s Quick & Easy Remedies - Elaine Hruska - Страница 33

TESTIMONIALS/RESULTS

Оглавление

Mrs. [639], who received her second reading from Cayce on August 21, 1934, when she was sixty-three years old, wrote a letter to Cayce dated March 21, 1935:

“ . . . in your March 1935 Bulletin {former A.R.E. publication} under ‘Health Hints’ {regarding the apple diet} . . . Will you kindly advise me what the Jenneting variety apples are, where they grow, and where they can be purchased . . . ”

639-2, Report #6

(See also Additional Information.)

On April 23, 1935, Edgar Cayce wrote that he had made some inquiries and thought it was the same variety as Delicious, Arkansas Black, and the Russet: “ . . . and there is one, of course, called the original Jenneting. Haven’t tried this out myself as yet but as I usually do am going to try it, for would never want to be the means of giving something for someone that I wouldn’t try myself.” (639-2, Report #6)

She later reported on her experiences on April 19, 1936:

“I have been taking the apple diet once a month for three months; I think it a splendid thing and I get along with it very well with the exception that the olive oil makes me so sick at my stomach. I am wondering how it would do to take it {the apple diet} every two weeks for one day and a half with ¼ glass of oil? Maybe that amount of oil wouldn’t affect me so badly. Mr. [550] took it the last time I did but the oil didn’t make him sick. I believe you wrote once that you had taken the diet for half the time prescribed and would like to ask if you used half the amount of oil in doing so.”

639-2, Report #11

On May 6, 1936, Edgar Cayce replied:

“Perhaps you take too much of the olive oil with your apple diet. I only took half a teacup—that, it seems to me, is less than the glass, isn’t it? Have found excellent results with only a day of the diet, and decreasing the oil according to the days taken. Try that and see if you do not have good results.”

639-2, Report #12

In one instance, in a reading on himself, Cayce received this information: “Too much picric acid has been a part of the diet here.” (294-194) Gladys Davis made this notation: “I think EC had been on an apple diet for a day; had to stop, he was suffering so.” This reading on September 29, 1939, was given several years after the above correspondence.

Edgar Cayce’s Quick & Easy Remedies

Подняться наверх