Читать книгу The Edgar Cayce Handbook for Health Through Drugless Therapy - Harold J. Reilly - Страница 38
Case 1841
ОглавлениеA fifty-three-year-old woman was advised by a surgeon to have a major operation (hysterectomy) immediately. David Kahn prevailed on his friend to consult Cayce for a reading first before surgery.
The reading, in March 1939, diagnosed her disorder as “glandular disturbances [which] . . . produce the forming of lymph globules . . . in the pelvic or digestive areas ...” No operation was necessary if she followed the treatments, Cayce said, which included two periods of Atomidine taken for seven days, “for cleaning the system,” omitted for five days and taken again for seven. After the Atomidine the patient was to start with a pine-oil fume bath and full massage and some osteopathic adjustment for six or eight weeks. He also recommended pelvic douches and a diet that avoided fried food, white bread, potatoes, and red meat.
Mr. Kahn wrote Cayce a few months later, “You no doubt have heard from Mrs. [1841] that she is 100 percent improved and cured ...”
The woman never had that “urgent” operation.