Edgar Cayce's medical remedies?

DennisPTate

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Brian has a near death experience and is shown how to get back into his body and save his body in a manner that sure does remind me of the Edgar Cayce remedies for many medical conditions.

Brian is shown water, aspirin and citrus peelings for his stroke. His remedy works and the circumstances were very much like the medical advice that Edgar Cayce gave to so many people during a time when medicine was no where nearly as advanced as it is these days.




He Had a Stroke and Met God – The Shocking Near-Death Story That Changed Everything​


39,285 views Sep 23, 2025 Near-Death Experiences - NDE

Near-death experience podcast 1618 is Bryan Duszczak who had a NDE experience due to a stroke.

2. Prayer According to Edgar Cayce​

Cayce often recommended combining prayer with meditation. While prayer involves speaking to the Divine, meditation is listening for the divine response. This combination fosters a deeper connection and understanding. Cayce believed strongly in the power of prayer for healing. He suggested that praying for others, especially those who are sick, could facilitate their healing process. Group prayers were considered particularly potent. According to Cayce, prayer could change the vibrational frequencies of the body and mind, aligning them more closely with higher spiritual frequencies. This alignment could bring about healing and greater harmony in life. He taught that prayer connects individuals to a universal consciousness or collective mind, where all souls are interconnected. Through prayer, people can tap into this universal energy for guidance and support. Cayce encouraged making prayer a daily practice. He suggested that starting and ending each day with prayer helps maintain a spiritual connection and keeps one aligned with their higher purpose. Overall, Edgar Cayce’s teachings on prayer revolve around the concepts of sincerity, positive affirmation, healing, and a deep, personal connection with the divine.
 
I just ran into another truly fascinating explanation for the astonishing gifts that Mr. Edgar Cayce had been given.


At the age of twelve, Edgar asked for his own Bible and resolved to read the Bible straight-through once for every year of his life, even to the extent of catching up with the twelve years that had already passed. He stuck to his promise to the very end when he died at the age of sixty-seven. He had read the Bible sixty-seven times.

Moved by the Holy Spirit to declare himself a believer, Cayce was baptized by immersion at the age of thirteen. Shortly afterward, while Cayce was reading his Bible in a secluded spot near his home, a bright light filled the place where Cayce sat, and a figure all in white bright as the noon day light appeared. The figure said to Cayce:

“Your prayers have been heard. What would you ask of me, that I may give it to you.”

Cayce’s prayer was:

“…just that I may be helpful to others, especially to children who are ill, and that I may love my fellow man.”

Then the figure was gone.

Later in life, Cayce discovered that he had the ability to induce an out-of-body experience by lying down on a couch, closing his eyes, and folding his hands over his stomach and place his mind in contact with all time and space (the universal consciousness). From there, he could respond to questions as broad as:

“What is the meaning for the universe?” and “What is my mission in life?” to as specific as, “What can I do to help my headaches?” and “How were the pyramids of Egypt built?”

His reply to these questions became known as psychic “readings“. People today continue to consult these readings for advise.

References​




Near death experiencers do often experience surges in IQ and in other types of gifts as well.


For Sappington and others, the issue is not whether the person is actually meeting God, but why NDErs routinely seem better adjusted, more at peace and content with themselves and the world after their experience. Disregarding, for the time being at least, how they got that way, and focusing on the changes themselves, psychologists would like to borrow this newfound sense of well-being and utilize it in therapy.


Reports are highly consistent and common: "I understand things so much more" and "My senses all seem heightened." Subjects claim "sudden knowledge and comprehension of complex mathematical theorems." Psychologist Ring has identified a consistent set of value and belief changes. They include:

a greater appreciation for life


o higher self-esteem

o greater compassion for others

o a heightened sense of purpose and self-understanding

o desire to learn

o elevated spirituality

o greater ecological sensitivity and planetary concern

o a feeling of being more intuitive, sometimes psychic.

o He also observes "psychophysical changes," including:


o increased physical sensitivity

o diminished tolerance to light, alcohol, and drugs

o a feeling that their brains have been "altered" to encompass more

o a feeling that they are now using their "whole brain" rather than just a small part.

NDErs undergo radical changes in personality, and their significant others—spouses, friends, relatives—confirm these changes, reports Bruce Greyson, M.D., clinical psychiatrist and associate professor at the University of Connecticut. Like Sappington, he is concerned with what can be learned from such new outlooks on life.


 

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