Just feel the vibes! That'll be $20...
20 year old millionaire energy healer
Burnaby, B.C. -- Just a regular 20-year-old, that's how Adam describes himself. But this college student from Burnaby, B.C., who still lives at home with his parents, has become an international phenomenon in the world of alternative healers. "Well I was always seeing auras as a little kid, says Adam. It's just this light around living organisms."
And the year at the state hospital didn't help it any ... | Adam has always had a heightened intuition, but he didn't realize his power until he was 15, when he cured his mother of excruciating headaches.
Adam calls himself an energy healer. Thousands across North America are flocking to his sold out workshops. In this bizarre transformation Adam claims he can influence peoples brain waves, ultimately affecting their health. "Basically it's just images of these people Im working with, he says. Intuitively I know how to change the image a certain way and I can see it influencing that person's health."
Adam claims he doesn't have to physically put his hands on someone to affect their health. In fact there are several people who claim hes been able to heal them long distance. Adam doesn't need to see them or even talk to them. All he needs is a colour photograph.
Ontario resident Tina Norton says she's proof long distance healing works. Her pancreatic cancer is in remission. Canadian Rock and Roll legend Ronnie Hawkins also kicked pancreatic cancer - crediting his remission to Adam.
Then there's the story of the Canadian soldier in Afghanistan, who had his head split open with an axe after being ambushed by a teenaged militant. Trevor Green's wife believes her husband is alive because of Adam.
The trauma team had nuttin' to do with it, nuttin' at all ... | But does Adam truly have healing powers? Skeptics argue that the millions of dollars in workshops, books and DVD sales make up the real motivation behind the energy healing phenomenon. "They don't really cure anybody. It can make people feel better, but they are not necessarily getting better, says SFU professor Barry Beyerstein. Thats why these things need to be tested under properly controlled conditions."
Mebbe it's the Molson's, eh?
Posted by: .com 2006-10-04 |