Nearing
noon local time. You shoveled the driveway, at least the larger part from the
garage doors out. Jared’s daughter just finished the narrower, longer section
which you were going to do next, which was kind of her as she did her
grandmother's driveway first. The first time she used the snow blower from your
observation. - Amorella
Below is
continued work on the quotations begun in yesterday's blog page. - Amorella
********
5. “Whatever
happens to your body, your soul will survive, untouched...”
― J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
― J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
In this
blog the soul survives but the heart and mind may not. The soul is, as it were,
'touched' in either case. For example, the heart may be corrupted beyond its
use to self-repair. The mind without a doable heart makes no difference because
the spiritual heart contains the memories of life not the mind. - Amorella
1324
hours. This doesn't seem just. It is the mind that takes things in first, that
is the brain/mind. People value their 'right minds'.
This is one of the reasons the mind does not
belong in the spiritual realm. - Amorella
1328
hours. In these fictions it is the heart and mind that are connected with the
spirit.
The mind becomes redundant. When conflicted,
the living person moves with her or his heart, not the mind. This is but a
prelude to the humanity in the spirit. - Amorella
6. “Soulmate"
is an overused term, but a true soul connection is very rare, and very real.”
― Hilary Duff, Devoted
― Hilary Duff, Devoted
A soulmate is a heartmate in disguise. Souls
are, for real purpose, clones of one another. The differences in souls exist,
once an empty immortal soul has metaphysically absorbed a mortal human's
heartanmind. Soul-mating is having a deep hearted physical and/or spiritual
affair with someone else. - Amorella
7. “How
can you hear your soul if everyone is talking?”
― Mary Doria Russell, Children of God
― Mary Doria Russell, Children of God
The soul observes/listens for signs of humanity
and then registers such signs. The soul rarely speaks but from time to time it
touches the spiritual heart as an parent might grab hold of the hand of a young
child. - Amorella
8. “Have
you ever sensed that our soul is immortal and never dies?”
― Plato, The Republic
― Plato, The Republic
The
soul stuffing is immortal; human beings, by definition are not. The soul is not
individual until is surrounds and absorbs a human-like heartanmind. - Amorella
9. “Your
soul is oftentimes a battlefield, upon your reason and your judgment wage war
against your passion and your appetite.”
― Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet
― Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet
The soul witnesses the continual simmering
battlefield in the heartanmind. This spiritual ground continues because the
soul, being immortal, allows it to do so until the battles are finally resolved
in the heart. - Amorella
1638 hours. This battlefield is essentially
what hell is.
For most intents and purposes, yes. - Amorella
10. “Every
single human soul has more meaning and value than the whole of history.”
― Nikolai A. Berdyaev
― Nikolai A. Berdyaev
The known purpose of the soul is to protect the invisible heartanmind of
a singular human-like being. The soul has value beyond humanity because the soul
existed before human-like creatures. That's the way it is in this blog. -
Amorella
*******
1652 hours. This
experimental writing project was to observe consistencies and/or
inconsistencies noted in the blog of several years now. I am reminded of Edgar
Cayce in the sense and context of this experimental dance of soul quotations
and my inner writing friend, Amorella.
This reminder is somewhat bothersome because I am, in these days, put off with
Edgar Cayce was to me in the sixties and early seventies. I am no Edgar Cayce
nor would I wish to be. So I wrap this up as a writing experiment, nothing more
or less.
At least you didn't sign your initials after the above statement. Drop
in a Wikipedia note about Edgar Cayce and post. - Amorella
1704 hours. This article is
rather lengthy.
Add and post. - Amorella
** **
Edgar Cayce
From Wikipedia, the
free encyclopedia
Edgar Cayce (March 18,
1877 – January 3, 1945) was an American Christian mystic who answered
questions on subjects as varied as healing, reincarnation,
wars, Atlantis, and future events while claiming to be in a trance. A biographer gave him the nickname, "The Sleeping Prophet". A nonprofit organization, the Association for Research and Enlightenment, was founded to
facilitate the study of Cayce's work.
Some
consider him the true founder and a principal source of the most characteristic
beliefs of the New Age movement.
Biography
Early life
Edgar Cayce was born
on March 18, 1877, near Beverly, south of Hopkinsville, Kentucky. He was one of six
children of farmers Carrie and Leslie B. Cayce. As a child he played with the
'little folk" and was alleged to have seen his deceased grandfather. He
regarded them all as incorporeal because he could see through them if he looked
hard enough. However, he found it very difficult to keep his mind on his
lessons at school.
He was taken to
church when he was 10, and from then he read the Bible, becoming engrossed, and
completing a dozen readings by the time he was 12. In May 1889, while reading
the Bible in his hut in the woods, he 'saw' a woman with wings who told him
that his prayers were answered, and asked him what he wanted most of all. He
was frightened, but he said that most of all he wanted to help others,
especially sick children. He decided he would like to be a missionary.
The next night, after
a complaint from the school teacher, his father ruthlessly tested him for
spelling, eventually knocking him out of his chair with exasperation. At that
point, Cayce 'heard' the voice of the lady who had appeared the day before. She
told him that if he could sleep a little 'they' could help him. He begged for a
rest and put his head on the spelling book. When his father came back into the
room and woke him up, he knew all the answers. In fact, he could repeat
anything in the book. His father thought he had been fooling before and knocked
him out of the chair again. Eventually, Cayce used all his school books that
way.
By 1892, the teacher
regarded Cayce as his best student. On being questioned, Cayce told the teacher
that he saw pictures of the pages in the books. His father became proud of this
accomplishment and spread it around, resulting in Cayce becoming
"different" from his peers.
Shortly after this,
Cayce exhibited an ability to diagnose in his sleep. He was struck on the base
of the spine by a ball in a school game, after which he began to act very
strangely, and eventually was put to bed. He went to sleep and diagnosed the
cure, which his family prepared and which cured him as he slept. His father
boasted that his son was, "the greatest fellow in the world when he's
asleep." However, this ability was not demonstrated again for several
years.
Cayce's uncommon
personality is also shown in an unusual incident in which he rode a certain
mule back to the farmhouse at the end of a work day. This stunned everyone
there, as the mule could not be ridden. The owner, thinking it may be time to
break the animal in again, attempted to mount it but was immediately thrown
off. Cayce left for his family in the city that evening.
Marriage and family
Cayce became engaged
to Gertrude Evans on March 14, 1897, and they married on June 17, 1903. They had
three children: Hugh Lynn Cayce (March 16, 1907 – July 4, 1982), Milton Porter
Cayce (March 28, 1911 – May 17, 1911), and Edgar Evans Cayce (February 9, 1918
– February 15, 2013).
1877 to 1912:
Kentucky period
In December 1893, the
Cayce family moved to Hopkinsville, Kentucky, and occupied 705 West Seventh on
the southeast corner of Seventh and Young Streets. During this time, Cayce
received an eighth-grade education, is said by the Association for Research and Enlightenment to have developed
psychic abilities, and left the family farm to pursue various forms of
employment.
Cayce's education
stopped in the ninth grade because his family could not afford the costs involved.
A ninth-grade education was often considered more than sufficient for
working-class children. Much of the remainder of Cayce's younger years would be
characterized by a search for both employment and money.
Throughout his life,
Cayce was drawn to church as a member of the Disciples of Christ. He read the Bible once a year every
year, taught at Sunday school, and recruited missionaries. He said he could see
auras around people, spoke to angels, and heard voices of departed relatives.
In his early years, he agonized over whether these psychic abilities were
spiritually delivered from the highest source.
In 1900, Cayce formed
a business partnership with his father to sell Woodmen of the World Insurance; however, in March
he was struck by severe laryngitis that resulted in a
complete loss of speech. Unable to work, he lived at home with his parents for
almost a year. He then decided to take up the trade of photography, an occupation that
would exert less strain on his voice. He began an apprenticeship at the
photography studio of W. R. Bowles in Hopkinsville, and eventually became quite
talented in his trade.
In 1901, a traveling
stage hypnotist and entertainer named Hart, who referred to himself
as "The Laugh Man", was performing at the Hopkinsville Opera House.
Hart heard about Cayce's condition and offered to attempt a cure. Cayce
accepted his offer, and the experiment was conducted in the office of Manning
Brown, the local throat specialist. Cayce's voice allegedly returned while in a
hypnotic trance but disappeared on awakening. Hart tried a posthypnotic
suggestion that the voice would continue to function after the trance, but this
proved unsuccessful.
Since Hart had
appointments at other cities, he could not continue his hypnotic treatments of
Cayce, but admitted he had failed because Cayce would not go into the third
stage of hypnosis to take a suggestion. A New York hypnotist, Dr. Quackenboss,
found the same impediment but, after returning to New York, suggested that
Cayce should be prompted to take over his own case while in the second stage of
hypnosis.
The only local
hypnotist, Al Layne, offered to help Cayce restore his voice. Layne suggested
that Cayce describe the nature of his condition and cure while in a hypnotic
trance. Cayce described his own ailment from a first-person plural point of
view: "we" instead of the singular "I".
In subsequent
sessions, when Cayce wanted to indicate that the connection was made to the
"entity" of the person that was requesting the reading, he would
generally start off with, "We have the body." According to the
reading for the "entity" of Cayce, his voice loss was due to
psychological paralysis, and could be corrected by increasing the blood flow to
the voice box. Layne suggested that the blood flow be increased and Cayce's
face supposedly became flushed with blood, and both his chest and throat turned bright red.
After 20 minutes, Cayce, still in a trance, declared the treatment over. On
awakening, his voice was alleged to have remained normal. Apparently, relapses
occurred, but were said to have been corrected by Layne in the same way, and
eventually the cure was said to be permanent.
Layne had read of
similar hypnotic cures by the Marquis de Puységur, a follower of Franz
Mesmer,
and was keen to explore the limits of the healing knowledge involved with the
trance voice. He asked Cayce to describe Layne's own ailments and suggest cures,
and reportedly found the results both accurate and effective. Layne regarded
the ability as clairvoyance. Layne suggested that Cayce offer his trance
healing to the public. Cayce was reluctant as he had no idea what he was
prescribing while asleep, and whether the remedies were safe. He also told
Layne he himself did not want to know anything about the patient as it was not
relevant. He finally agreed, on the condition that readings would be free.
He began, with
Layne's help, to offer free treatments to the townspeople. Layne described
Cayce's method as, "...a self-imposed hypnotic trance which induces
clairvoyance." Reports of Cayce's work appeared in the newspapers, which inspired many
postal inquiries. Cayce stated he could work just as effectively using a letter
from the individual as with the person being present in the room. Given only
the person's name and location, Cayce said he could diagnose the physical and
mental conditions of what he termed "the entity," and then provide a
remedy. Cayce was still reticent and worried, as "one dead patient was all
he needed to become a murderer". His fiancée, Gertrude Evans, agreed with
him. Few people knew what he was up to. There was a common belief at the time
that subjects of hypnosis eventually went insane, or at least that their health
suffered. Cayce soon became famous, and people from around the world sought his
advice through correspondence.
In May 1902 he got a
bookshop job in the town of Bowling Green where he boarded with some young
professionals, two of whom were doctors. He lost his voice while there and
Layne came to help effect the normal cure, finally visiting every week. Cayce,
still worried, kept the meetings secret, and continued to refuse money for his
readings. He invented a card game called Pit or Board of Trade,
simulating wheat market trading, that became popular, but when he sent the idea
to a game company they copyrighted it and he got no returns. He still refused
to give readings for money.
He and Gertrude Evans
married on June 17, 1903, and Gertrude came to Bowling Green. She still
disapproved of the readings, and Cayce still agonized over the morality of
them. A few days later Layne revealed the activity to the professionals at the
boarding house, one of whom was a magistrate and journalist, after which state
medical authorities forced Layne to close his practice. He left to acquire
osteopathic qualifications in Franklin. Cayce and Gertrude accepted the
resulting publicity as best they could, greatly aided by the diplomacy of the
young doctors.
Cayce and a relative
opened a photographic studio in Bowling Green, while the doctors formed a
committee with some colleagues to investigate the phenomenon, with Cayce’s
co-operation. All the experiments confirmed the accuracy of the readings.
However, Cayce refused a lucrative offer to go into business. After a violent
examination by doctors while in a trance, Cayce refused any more
investigations, declaring that he would only do readings for those who needed
help and believed in the readings.
In 1906 and 1907
fires burned down his two photographic studios, leading to bankruptcy. Between
the two fires, his first son was born March 16, 1907. He became debt free by
1909, although completely broke, and ready to start again. In 1907, outstanding
diagnostic successes in the family helped his confidence. He again refused an
offer to go into business, this time with homeopath Wesley H. Ketchum from
Hopkinsville, who was introduced by his father. He found a job at the H. P.
Tresslar photography firm.
However, Ketchum was
persistent, spread information in various medical circles, and in October 1910
got written up in the press. When a reporter contacted Cayce, he explained to
the reporter that he somehow had the ability to easily go into the intuitive
sleep when he wanted to, and this was different from how he went to sleep
normally like everyone else. When asked the mechanism of the readings via the
sleep method, they were told that it happened via the capabilities of the
subconscious mind.
Ketchum again urged
Cayce to join a business company. After soul searching the whole night, Cayce
finally accepted the offer under certain conditions, including that he did not
take money for the readings. Instead the company was to furnish him with a
photographic studio for his livelihood, and build a separate office for the
readings.
The contract was
modified to give 50% of the earnings to Cayce and his father. Cayce read the
back readings, but they contained so many technical terms that he gained no
more understanding of what he was doing. He preferred to put the readings on a
more scientific basis, but only the doctors in Hopkinsville would cooperate,
whereas most of the patients were not in that locality. Also, doctors from all
specialties were needed as the treatments prescribed varied widely.
Edgar Cayce, and
especially Gertrude, still did not give therapeutic priority to the readings
and supposedly lost their second child due to this reticence. When Gertrude
became fatally ill with tuberculosis, they used the readings after the doctor
had given up. Miraculously, the treatment cured her. Shortly after this, in
1912, Cayce, whose everyday conscious mind was not aware during the readings,
discovered that Ketchum had not been honest about them, and had also used them
to gamble for finance. He argued in defense that the medical profession were
not backing them. Cayce quit the company immediately and went back to the
Tresslar photography firm in Selma, Alabama.
1912 to 1925: Selma,
Alabama period
Cayce's work grew in
volume as his fame grew. He asked for voluntary donations to support himself
and his family so that he could practice full-time. To help raise money he
invented Pit, a card game based on the commodities trading at
the Chicago Board of Trade, and the game is still sold
today. He continued to work in an apparent trance state with a hypnotist all
his life. His wife and eldest son later replaced Layne in this role. A
secretary, Gladys Davis, recorded his readings in shorthand.
The growing fame of
Cayce along with the popularity he received from newspapers attracted several
eager commercially minded men who wanted to seek a fortune by using his
clairvoyant abilities. Even though Cayce was reluctant to help them, he was
persuaded to give his readings, which left him dissatisfied with himself and
unsuccessful. A cotton merchant offered him a hundred dollars a day for his
readings about the daily outcomes in the cotton market; however, despite his
poor finances, Cayce refused the merchant's offer. Some wanted to know where to
hunt for treasures while others wanted to know the outcome of horse races.
Several times he was persuaded to give such readings as an experiment. However,
when he used his ability for such purposes, he did no better than chance alone
would dictate. These experiments allegedly left him depleted of energy,
distraught, and unsatisfied with himself. Finally, he decided to use his gift
only to help the distressed and sick.
In 1923, Arthur
Lammers, a wealthy printer and student of metaphysics, persuaded Cayce to give
readings on philosophical subjects. Cayce was told by Lammers that, while in
his trance state, he spoke of Lammers' past lives and of reincarnation, something Lammers
believed in. Reincarnation was a popular subject of the day but not an accepted
part of Christian doctrine. Because of this, Cayce questioned his stenographer
about what he said in his trance state and remained unconvinced. He challenged
Lammers' charge that he had validated astrology and reincarnation in the
following dialogue:
Cayce: I said all
that?... I couldn't have said all that in one reading.
Lammers: No. But you
confirmed it. You see, I have been studying metaphysics for years, and I was
able by a few questions, by the facts you gave, to check what is right and what
is wrong with a whole lot of the stuff I've been reading. The important thing
is that the basic system which runs through all the mystery religions, whether
they come from Tibet or the pyramids of Egypt, is backed up by you. It's
actually the right system.
Cayce's
stenographer recorded the following:
In this we see the
plan of development of those individuals set upon this plane, meaning the
ability to enter again into the presence of the Creator and become a full part
of that creation.
Insofar as this
entity is concerned, this is the third appearance on this plane, and before
this one, as the monk. We see glimpses in the life of the entity now as were
shown in the monk, in this mode of living. The body is only the vehicle ever of
that spirit and soul that waft through all times and ever remain the same.
Cayce was quite
unconvinced that he had been referring to the doctrine of reincarnation, and
the best Lammers could offer was that the reading "opens up the door"
and to go on to share his beliefs and knowledge with Cayce. Lammers had come to
him with quite a bit of information of his own to share with Cayce and seemed
intent upon convincing Cayce now that he felt the reading had confirmed his
strongly-held beliefs. It should be noted, however, that 12 years earlier Cayce
had briefly alluded to reincarnation. In reading 4841-1, given April 22, 1911,
Cayce referred to the soul being "transmigrated." Because Cayce's
readings were not systematically recorded until 1923, it is possible that he
may have mentioned reincarnation in other earlier readings.
Lammers asked Cayce
to come to Dayton to pursue metaphysical truth via the readings. Cayce
eventually agreed and went to Dayton. Gertrude Cayce was dubious but interested.
There, Cayce produced much metaphysical information, which Cayce tried to
reconcile with Christianity. Lammers declared that the fifth chapter of Matthew
was the constitution of Christianity and the Sermon on the Mount was its
Declaration of Independence. It appeared that Cayce's subconscious mind was as
much at home with the language of metaphysics as it was with the language of
anatomy and medicine.
Cayce reported that
his conscience bothered him severely over this conflict. His readings of reincarnations
were going against his biblical teachings and at one point he wanted to cease
his channeling sessions. Once again Cayce lost his voice and in a reading for
himself he was informed if he was no longer going to be a channel, his mission
in this life was complete. Ultimately his trance voice, the "we" of
the readings, dialogued with Cayce and finally persuaded him to continue with
these kinds of readings.
Lammers wanted to ask
the readings the purpose of Cayce's clairvoyance, and to put up money for an
organisation supporting Cayce's healing methods. Cayce decided to accept the
work and asked his family to join him in Dayton as soon as they could. But by
the time the Cayces had arrived there, near the end of 1923, Lammers found
himself in financial difficulties and could be of no use. Cayce used his
knowledge of the Bible to convince his family that it agreed with reincarnation
and other metaphysical teachings.
It was at this time
Cayce directed his activities to provide readings centred around health. The
remedies that were channeled often involved the use of unusual electrotherapy,
ultraviolet light, diet, massage, gemstones, less mental work and more
relaxation in sand on the beach. His remedies were coming under the scrutiny of
the American Medical Association and Cayce felt that it was time to legitimize
the operations with the aid of licensed medical practitioners. In 1925 Cayce
reported while in a trance, "the voice" had instructed him to move to
Virginia Beach, Virginia across the street from the
beach. He was informed that the sand's crystals would have curative properties
to promote rapid healing.
1925 to 1945:
Virginia Beach period
Cayce's mature
period, in which he created the several institutions that survived him, can be
considered to have started in 1925. By this time he was a professional psychic
with a small number of employees and volunteers. The readings increasingly came
to involve occult or esoteric themes.
Money was extremely
scarce, but help came from interested persons. The idea of an association and a
hospital was mooted again, but the readings insisted on Virginia Beach, not
suiting most of the people. Gertrude Cayce began to conduct all the readings.
Morton Blumenthal, a young man who worked in the stock exchange in New York
with his trader brother, became very interested in the readings, shared Cayce's
outlook, and offered to finance the vision in the right spirit. He bought them
a house at Virginia Beach.
On May 6, 1927 the
Association of National Investigations was incorporated in the state of
Virginia. This would manage building the hospital and a scientific study of the
readings. Morton was president and his brother and several others were vice
presidents. Cayce was secretary and treasurer, and Gladys was assistant
secretary. To protect against legal prosecution, the rules required any person
requesting a reading to become a member of the Association and agree they were
participating in an experiment in psychic research. Early in 1928, Dr. Moseley
Brown, head of the psychology department at Washington and Lee University,
became convinced of the readings and joined the Association.
On October 11, 1928,
the dedication ceremonies for the hospital complex were held. It contained a
lecture hall, library, vault for storage of the readings, and offices for
research workers. There was also a large living room, a 12-car garage, servants
quarters, and a tennis court. It contained "the largest lawn, in fact the
only lawn, between the Cavalier and Cape Henry." The first patient was
admitted the next day.
This facility would
enable consistent checking and rechecking of the remedies, which was Cayce's
goal. There were consistent remedies for many of the illnesses regardless of
the patient, and Cayce hoped to produce a compendium that could be used by the
medical profession. A distinguished chemist, Dr Sunker A. Bisley, DPhil (Oxon),
who also used psychic knowledge to produce medicines, collaborated with Cayce
to produce Atomidine, an absorbable form of iodine, which was perfected
and sold.
The basic raison
d'etre for all the cures was the "assimilation of needed properties
through the digestive system, from food taken into the body… [All treatments,
including all schools and types of treatment, were given in order to establish]
the proper equilibrium of the assimilating system." Therapies as divergent
as salt packs, poultices, hot compresses, color
healing,
magnetism, vibrator treatment, massage, osteopathic manipulation, dental
therapy, colonics, enemas, antiseptics, inhalants, homeopathics, essential
oils, mud baths were prescribed.
Substances used included
oils, salts, herbs, iodine, witch hazel, magnesia, bismuth, alcohol, castoria,
lactated pepsin, turpentine, charcoal, animated ash, soda, cream of tartar,
aconite, laudanum, camphor, and gold solution. These were prescribed to
overcome conditions that prevented proper digestion and assimilation of needed
nutrients from the prescribed diet. The aim of the readings was to produce a
healthy body, removing the cause of the specific ailment. Readings would
indicate if the patient's recovery was problematic.
There was a waiting
list of months ahead. Blumenthal and Brown went ahead with ambitious plans for
a university as a supplement to the hospital and a "parallel service for
the mind and spirit". In fact, it was to dwarf the hospital and rival other
universities in respectability before psychic studies would begin.
It was to open on
September 22, 1930. On September 16 Blumenthal called a meeting of the
Association resulting in his ownership of the hospital to curb expenses. After
the first semester he ceased his support of the university, and on February 26,
1931 closed down the Association. Cayce removed the files of the readings from
the hospital and took them home.
The Depression years saw Cayce turn his attention to spiritual
teachings. In 1931, Edgar Cayce's friends and family asked him how they could
become psychic like him. Out of this seemingly simple question came an
eleven-year discourse that led to the creation of "Study Groups". From
his altered state, Cayce relayed to this group that the purpose of life is not
to become psychic, but to become a more spiritually aware and loving person.
Study Group #1 was told that they could "bring light to a waiting
world" and that these lessons would still be studied a hundred years into
the future. The readings were now about dreams, coincidence (synchronicity),
developing intuition, karma, the akashic records, astrology, past-life
relationships, soul mates and other esoteric subjects. Hundreds of books have
been published about these readings.
June 6, 1931, 61
people attended a meeting to carry on the work and form a new organization
called the Association for Research and Enlightenment. In July the new
association was incorporated, and Cayce legally returned the house to
Blumenthal and bought another place.
Hugh Lynn proposed
that they develop a stock in trade rather than something grandiose, and that
they build a library of research into the phenomena and hold study groups, and
that Cayce would do two readings a day. The association accepted this, and Hugh
Lynn also started a monthly bulletin for association members. The bulletin
contained readings on general interest subjects, interesting cases, book
reviews on psychic subjects, health hints from readings, and news of psychic
phenomena in other fields.
Hugh Lynn narrowed
the mailing list to some 300 members who were genuinely enthusiastic, and as a
result the first annual congress of the association was held in June 1932. He
procured speakers on various metaphysical and psychic subjects and included
public readings by Cayce. Members left the conference eager to start study
groups in their own localities. Records were kept of everything that went on in
the readings including the attitudes and routines of Cayce. Everything was then
checked with the subjects of the readings, most of whom were not present during
the reading, and the data was published in a study entitled "100 cases of
clairvoyance." However, the response from scientists in general was that
none of the experiments were performed under test conditions. Hugh Lynn
continued to build files of case histories, parallel studies in psychic
phenomena, and research readings for the study groups.
Association
activities remained simple and un-publicized. Members raised a building fund
for an office, library, and vault, which they erected in 1940-1 as a single
unit added on to the Cayce residence. No sign guided visitors to the centre.
Association membership averaged 500 to 600. The turnover from year to year was
approximately half this total. The other half remained a solid basis for the
research work, an audience for case studies, pamphlets, bulletins—and the
Congress bulletin, which was a yearbook and record of congress events. A
mailing list of several thousand served people who remained interested in
Cayce's activities.
Members were drawn
from all of the Protestant churches: from the Roman, Greek, Syrian and Armenian
Catholic churches; from Theosophy, Christian Science and Spiritualism; and from
many Oriental religions. Cayce's philosophy was, if it makes you a better
member of your church then it's good; if it takes you away from your church,
it's bad. The philosophy of the readings was that truth is one, each
organization is part of this one, therefore the A.R.E. was not to function as a
schism or in opposition to any religious organization. The goal of the work was
not something new but something ancient and universal.
Both sons entered the
forces during the war. They both married, Hugh Lynn in 1941 and Edgar Evans in
1942.
In March 1943 the
first edition of the only biography written during Cayce's lifetime, by Thomas
Sugrue, was published. As a consequence, public demand increased. Office staff
had to be increased, and the mailman could no longer carry all the mail so
Gertrude got it from the post office by car. Hugh Lynn was away in the forces,
and Cayce coped with the letters and increased his readings to four to six per
day.
Cayce gained national
prominence in 1943 after the publication of a high-profile article in the
magazine Coronet titled "Miracle Man of Virginia Beach". World War
II
was taking its toll on American soldiers and he felt he could not refuse the
families who requested help for their loved ones who were missing in action. He
increased the frequency of his readings to eight per day to try to make an
impression on the ever-growing pile of requests. He said this took a toll on
his health as it was emotionally draining and often fatigued him. The readings
themselves scolded him for attempting too much and that he should limit his
workload to just two life readings a day or else these good efforts would eventually
kill him.
From June 1943 to
June 1944, 1,385 readings were taken. By August 1944 Cayce collapsed from
strain. When he gave a reading on this situation, the instructions were to rest
until he was well or dead. He and Gertrude went away to the mountains of
Virginia, but in September Edgar Cayce suffered a stroke at the age of 67, in
September 1944, and died on January 3, 1945. He is buried in Riverside Cemetery
in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. Gertrude died 3
months later.
After the death of
Cayce the Association continued the work of classifying and cross referring the
over 14,000 files of readings that had been taken throughout Cayce's lifetime
from March 31, 1901 to September 17, 1944. The results of these have been
disseminated through the Associations publications with the members as the
recipients of this material.
Claims for psychic abilities
Until September 1923,
his readings were not systematically recorded or preserved. However, an article
published in the Birmingham Post-Herald on October 10, 1922,
quotes Cayce as saying that he had given 8,056 readings as of that date and it
is known that he gave approximately 13,000–14,000 readings after that date. A
total of 14,306 are available at the A.R.E. Cayce headquarters in Virginia
Beach and on an online member-only section along with background information,
correspondence, and follow-up documentation.
Other abilities that
have been attributed to Cayce include astral projection, prophesying, mediumship, viewing the Akashic records or "Book of
Life",
and seeing auras. Cayce said he became interested in learning more about these
subjects after he was informed about the content of his readings, which he
reported that he never actually heard himself.
Supporters
Cayce's clients
included a number of famous people such as Woodrow Wilson, Thomas Edison, Irving
Berlin,
and George Gershwin.
Gina Cerminara published books such as Many Mansions and The
World Within. Brian Weiss published a bestseller regarding clinical
recollection of past lives, Many Lives, Many Masters. These books
provide broad support for spiritualism and reincarnation. Many
Mansions elaborates on Cayce's work and supports his stated abilities with
real life examples.
Wesley Harrington
Ketchum
Ketchum was a
physician who worked with Cayce in the early 1900s. Ketchum himself was born in
Lisbon, Ohio on November 11, 1878 to Saunders C. Ketchum and Bertha Bennett,
and was the oldest of 7 children. He graduated from the Cleveland College of
Homeopathic Medicine in 1904, and took up the practice of medicine in
Hopkinsville Kentucky. He practiced medicine in Hopkinsville until 1912. In
1913 he traveled across country to San Francisco, and took passage to Honolulu,
Hawaii, where he opened a new practice. He returned to California in 1918, and
established an office in Palo Alto California, practicing medicine there until
the 1950s. He retired to Southern California around 1963, settling in San
Marino, just outside Pasadena. He died on November 28, 1968 in Canoga Park,
California.
He wrote The
Discovery of Edgar Cayce, published by the A.R.E. Press in 1964.
Controversy and criticism
Controversy
Cayce advocated some
controversial ideas in his trance readings. In many trance sessions, he
interpreted the history of life on Earth. One of Cayce's controversial claims
was that of polygenism. According to Cayce, five human races (white,
black, red, brown, and yellow) had been created separately but simultaneously
on different parts of the Earth. Cayce also accepted the existence of aliens
and Atlantis, and claimed that "the red race developed in
Atlantis and its development was rapid." Another claim by Cayce was that
"soul-entities" on Earth intermingled with animals to produce
"things": giants that were as much as twelve feet tall.
Historian Olav Hammer wrote that many of
Cayce's readings discussed race and skin color and that the explanation for
this is that Cayce was not a racist but was influenced by the occult ideas of Madame Blavatsky. Cayce declared that the Piltdown
man
was genuine, claiming he was an Atlantean colonizer who had travelled to
Britain. However, the Piltdown man was exposed as a hoax in 1953.
Philosopher and
skeptic Robert Todd Carroll, in his book The Skeptic's Dictionary, wrote, "Cayce
is one of the main people responsible for some of the sillier notions about
Atlantis." Carroll mentioned some of Cayce's ideas, including his belief
in a giant solar crystal, activated by the sun, and used to harness energy and
provide power on Atlantis, and his prediction that in 1958, the United States
would rediscover a death ray that had been used on Atlantis.
In 1930s, Cayce also
incorrectly predicted that North America would experience chaos: "Los
Angeles, San Francisco... will be among those that will be destroyed before New
York". These events were to have happened "in the period of '58 to
'98".
Criticism
Skeptics challenge
Cayce's alleged psychic abilities. Medical health experts are critical of
Cayce's unorthodox treatments, which they regard as quackery.
Science writers and skeptics have suggested that
the evidence for Cayce's alleged psychic powers comes from contemporaneous newspaper articles,
affidavits, anecdotes, testimonials, and books. Martin Gardner, for example, wrote that while Cayce's trances did happen, most of
the information from his trances was derived from books that Cayce had been
reading by authors such as Carl Jung, P. D. Ouspensky, and Helena Blavatsky.
Gardner's hypothesis
was that the trance readings of Cayce contain, "little bits of information
gleaned from here and there in the occult literature, spiced with occasional
novelties from Cayce's unconscious." The word "Blavatsky" occurs
via computer search 3 times, all three in the questions asked by the client.
The quote "Secret Doctrine" only occurs in questions asked by the
client twice.
Many are also
critical of Cayce's support for various forms of alternative medicine, which they regard as quackery. Michael Shermer writes in Why People Believe Weird Things,
"Uneducated
beyond the ninth grade, Cayce acquired his broad knowledge through voracious
reading and from this he wove elaborate tales." Shermer wrote that,
"Cayce was fantasy-prone from his youth, often talking with angels and
receiving visions of his dead grandfather." Magician James Randi has said that
"Cayce was fond of expressions like 'I feel that' and 'perhaps'—qualifying
words used to avoid positive declarations." Examination of the readings do
not show qualifying terms.
Investigator Joe Nickell has noted:
Although Cayce was
never subjected to proper testing, ESP pioneer Joseph B. Rhine of Duke University — who should have been
sympathetic to Cayce's claims — was unimpressed. A reading that Cayce gave for
Rhine's daughter was notably inaccurate. Frequently, Cayce was even wider off
the mark, as when he provided diagnoses of subjects who had died since
the letters requesting the readings were sent.
Science writer Karen Stollznow has written:
The reality is that
his cures were hearsay and his treatments were folk remedies that were useless
at best and dangerous at worse...Cayce wasn't able to cure his own cousin, or
his own son who died as a baby. Many of Cayce's readings took place after the
patient had already died.
Fundamentalist
Christians are critical of Cayce's views on issues such as reincarnation, oneness, and the Akashic records.
Selected
and edited from Wikipedia
** **
1751 Hours. I just
finished the editing and I sit embarrassed that I was really into Cayce from
the sixties into the seventies. My mother had given me a Cayce paperback to read. It is titled The Sleeping
Prophet by Jess Stern. I read it and a few others. Intuitively, I felt there was something
about Cayce that appeared real to me. I remember dismissing the errors because
he was a human being and as capable of making errors as anyone else. I was
drawn by his sincerity and his early on belief that he shouldn't make money from his
readings. I am not embarrassed about this part. That doesn't mean he was
actually a prophet though, even not as a Biblical prophet. Curiosity then
imagination got the better of me. After we returned from Brazil Carol and I drove
to and visited his then new 'Centre' at
Virginia. Beach. People appeared friendly and it was like each was looking at
each stranger wondering if she or he was known to her or him in a previous
life. It was a little much for us, a little too much to possibly share with
total though friendly strangers. We left feeling the 'awkwardness' in the
situation and environment surrounding the Cayce location.
I developed an empathy for
Cayce's humanity. This current writing project with quotes and Amorella reminds
me to not go overboard (beyond fiction) with anything Amorella might write. I am not a true
believer in this world and the universe we find ourselves living
in, i.e. "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio".(1809)
Post at your convenience. - Amorella
Carol
warmed up chili and you added a piece of wheat bread topped with crunchy peanut
butter and strawberry jam along with a glass of ice water. You watched NBC
News. Carol is on the phone with a sister. Tomorrow is for Jill and house
cleaning instead of today. Carol also has her breakfast with old friends, and
after Jill leaves you are off to Kim and Paul's for the night and next morning;
home by tomorrow night. - Amorella
1950 hours.
We talked to Kim today. They are planning on coming down the weekend after this
to help organize the basement so people can come and take what you want to give
away, foremost the sleep couch and two desks. Lots more has to be trashed and
some chairs upstairs need to go to the basement to give the house a less lived
in look for selling.
Post. - Amorella
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