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The History of
The Reconnection
from the The
Reconnection Website
Based in Los Angeles, founder Eric Pearl has elicited
great interest from top medical doctors and researchers worldwide
including one of the top hospitals in the United States, a Level
1 Trauma Institute, a Spinal Cord Injury Center and a University
School of Medicine.
Prior to the sudden appearance of his non-traditional healing
abilities, Eric ran a highly successful chiropractic practice
for 12 years. In August 1993, he discovered he had been blessed
with an unusual "gift." After 12 years of practicing
traditional chiropractic, he suddenly became a healing vehicle
of a different kind: a conduit through which healing energy flows.
While too busy traveling to maintain his chiropractic practice,
through his seminars and private sessions Eric's "gift"
is constantly reported to be helping people with a wide variety
of serious diseases including malignant tumors, AIDS-related diseases,
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, birth disfigurements and bone deformities.
During the '80s and '90s, Eric, who received his degree as Doctor
of Chiropractic from Cleveland Chiropractic College in Los Angeles,
headed one of the largest chiropractic centers in the L.A. area.
Often referred to as "Chiropractor to the Stars," he
acquired the status of both a highly successful and popular doctor.
Having studied under such masters as Dr. Virgil Chrane and Dr.
Carl Cleveland, Sr., Eric Pearl was one of the few practitioners
who, in addition to the conventional chiropractic approach, incorporated
pure, original and all-but-lost chiropractic techniques.
In both informal and clinical settings, patients (and physicians!)
have witnessed the results of these healings that occur through
Eric SIMPLY BY HOLDING HIS HANDS NEAR THEM.
Why Me?
If I were sitting on a cloud scouring the planet for just the
right person upon whom I could bestow one of the rarest and most
sought-after gifts in the Universe, I don't know whether I would
have reached through the etherium, pointed my finger through the
vast multitudes of people - the shepherds, the shopkeepers, the
righteous and the self-righteous - and said "Him! That's
the one. Give it to him."
Now maybe it didn't happen quite that way, but that's the way
it feels. Except when it doesn't. I mean, except when someone
else comes up with an entirely different and convincingly plausible
explanation. "Oh, no," some well-meaning person may
exclaim, incredulous at my obvious lack of understanding of how
the Universe works, "you've clearly done this before in your
past lives." Now what I want to know is this: how is it that
they're so privy to my past lives when I'm still trying to figure
this one out?
I mean, let's be real. I'd spent twelve years building one of
the, if not the largest chiropractic practices in Los Angeles.
I had three homes, a Mercedes, two dogs and two cats. All would
have seemed perfect if I hadn’t mishandled my money and
my alcohol sufficiently as to bring my six-year relationship to
an end, an event that left me virtually unable to put one foot
in front of the other for three days. Prozac helped that. It helped
that a lot.
Six months later I'm visiting Venice Beach, California with my
assistant, who insists that I get my cards read by a reader on
the beach. "I don't want to get my cards read by some reader
on the beach," I responded with absolute conviction. If a
reader were all that wonderful, people would come to her; she
wouldn't be dragging a card table, tablecloth, chairs and accoutrements
to an overcrowded beach sidewalk where she could proceed to flag
down unsuspecting tourists to foist her version of their futures
upon them, expecting them to pay for the privilege.
"I met her at a party and told her we'd be here. I'd be
very embarrassed if we didn't get a reading, " she responded
on a dime, adding that the woman has both $20 and $10 dollar readings.
One look into my assistant's eyes told me that further protest
would prove useless. "Fine," I grumbled, reaching for
a ten-dollar bill, knowing that was fully half the money we had
left to spend on lunch. I marched dutifully over to the woman,
sat down in her folding chair, gave her ten dollars and thought
about how hungry I was already.
In exchange for my money, I received a very nice yet unremarkable
present-time reading and enjoyed being called "Bubelah"
by this endearing Jewish gypsy. Almost as an afterthought she
said to me, ?There’s a very special work that I do through
the use of axiatonal lines. It reconnects your body's meridian
lines to the grid lines on the planet that connect us to the stars
and other planets." She told me that she was able to do this
work and that, as a healer, it was something that I needed. She
also told me I could read about it in a book called The Book of
Knowledge: The Keys of Enoch. It sounded quite interesting so
I asked the question: "How much?" She said, "Three
hundred thirty three dollars." I said, "No, thank you."
This is the kind of stuff you're warned about on evening news
shows. I can hear the news blurb now, "Jewish gypsy on Venice
Beach takes $333 from unsuspecting chiropractor." My picture
with the word "Sucker" under it flashes across the screen.
" ... convinces doctor to pay her an additional $150 a month
for life to burn candles for his protection." I feel humiliated
for even having considered it. So, my assistant and I left and
creatively went about constructing a ten dollar lunch for two.
You'd think this would have been the end of it, but the mind
works in mysterious ways. I couldn't get the thought out of my
head. I found myself taking the last fewminutes of a lunch break
to go to the Bodhi Tree Bookstore attempting to quickly read through
chapter 3.1.7. of The Book of Knowledge: The Keys of Enoch. This
chapter discusses these axiatonal lines. The biggest lesson that
day was that if ever a book were created that could not be quickly
read through, this was that book. But I had read enough. This
was going to haunt me until I gave in. I cracked open my cookie
jar.
The work is done in two days, two days apart. Day one, I gave
her my money, lay there on her table and listened to my mind jabber,
This is the dumbest thing I've ever done. I can't believe I gave
$333 to a perfect stranger so she could draw lines on my body
with her fingertips. As I lie there thinking of all the good uses
this money could've been put toward, a sudden surge of insight
came over me as I heard myself think, Well, you've already gave
her the money. You may as well cut the negative chatter and be
open to receiving whatever there is to receive. So I lay there
quietly, ready and open. I experienced nothing. Absolutely nothing.
I, however, seemed to be the only person in the room who knew
that. But I paid for both sessions, and therefore I was coming
back on Sunday for part two. The strangest thing happened that
night, however. About an hour after I'd gone to sleep, the lamp
next to my bed - a lamp that I'd had for ten years - turned itself
on, and I woke up to the very real sensation that there were people
in my home. I searched the house with my Doberman, a carving knife
and a can of pepper spray but found no one. I went back to bed
with the uncanniest feeling that I was not alone, that I was being
watched.
To the eye, day two started out pretty much the same as day one.
However, it soon became apparent that it was to be anything but.
My legs didn't want to stay still. They had that "crazy leg"
feeling that strikes every once in a blue moon in the middle of
the night. Soon that sensation took over the rest of my body,
interspersed with almost unbearable chills. It was all I could
do to lie still on the table. Much as I wanted to jump up and
down and shake the sensation out of every cell in my body, I didn't
dare move. Why? Because I paid my $333 and I was going to get
my money's worth out of this. That's why. Soon it was over. It
was an oppressively hot August day and we were in a non-air-conditioned
apartment. I was chilled near frozen, my teeth chattering as this
woman rushed to wrap me in a blanket where I remained for five
minutes until my body temperature returned to normal.
I was now different. I don't understand what happened, nor could
I possibly attempt to explain it, yet I was no longer the person
I was four days before. I drifted into my car, which somehow knew
the way home.
I don't remember the rest of that day. I couldn't tell you for
certain if the rest of the day even took place. All I do know
is that the following morning found me at work. And the odyssey
begins.
It had been my practice to have my patients lie on the table
with their eyes closed for 30 to 60 seconds following their adjustments
to relax, and to allow their adjustments to set. On this particular
Monday, seven of my patients, some who had been with me for almost
twelve years, and one who was seeing me for a first visit, chose
this day to ask me if I had been walking around the table as they
lay there. Some asked if anyone else had come into the room because
it felt as if several people were standing or walking around the
table. Three said it felt as if people were running around the
table, and two sheepishly confided that it seemed as if people
were flying around the table.
I'd been a chiropractor for about twelve years and no one had
ever expressed anything like this before. Now seven people had
said this to me on the same day. Something was up. Interspersed
between my patients, I was fielding other observations from my
employees: "You look so different! Your voice sounds so different!
What happened to you over the weekend?" I certainly wasn't
going to tell them. "Oh, nothing, " I replied, wondering
myself what exactly had taken place over the weekend.
My patients were reporting that they could feel where my hands
were before I touched them. They could feel my hands when they
were inches to feet away from their bodies. It became a game to
see how accurately they could locate my hands. Yet it became more
than a game as people started receiving healings. At first the
healings seemed minor: aches, pains and the like. As patients
would come in ostensibly for chiropractic, I would adjust them,
then tell them to close their eyes and lie there until I told
them to open them again. While their eyes were closed, I would
pass my hands over the patients for a moment or two. When they
got up and the pain was gone, they asked me what I had done. "Nothing.
And don't tell anyone, " became my standard reply. This directive
was about as effective as Nancy Reagan's "Just Say No"
approach to drugs.
Soon people were coming in from all over for these healings and
I had no idea what was going on. Sure, I checked in regularly
with the woman who had reconnected me via the axiatonal lines.
"It must have come from something that was already in you.
Maybe it had to do with your mother's near death experience at
the time of your birth," she said, adding "I don't know
of anyone who ever responded like this. It's fascinating."
Fascinating. Apparently, fascinating meant that I was on my own.
Early October found me manifesting. I held my hands over a woman's
knee that had been bothering her, the result of a childhood bone
disease. When I removed my hands, her knee felt better. My hands
were covered with blisters, tiny little blisters that lasted for
only three to four hours. This happened on more than one occasion.
Whenever I would blister, people from the other offices in the
building would come running to see. (I should have charged admission.)
Then it happened. My palm bled. I kid you not. Not streams outpouring
as in oldmovies or the National Enquirer, but more as if I had
stuck my palm with a pin. Yet it was blood, just the same. It's
an initiation! peopleinformed me. Into what? I asked. And again,
how do they know? Why didn't I know? Who really knows?
A quest arises.
November finds me in our office of a world-renowned psychic.
Out of breath, lost, and 30 minutes late (as usual), I rush in,
plop down on his chair and pretend not to notice "the glare".
You know, that look mastered by the anally retentive, terminally
prompt; the one that causes you to flash back on every lecture
you've ever received about being on time and to simultaneously
question your value as a human being based upon the perceived
enormity of this single, yet questionable, flaw. I was certain
that on his days off he was petitioning Congress to bring back
the use of the word tardy in the public school system. This reading
was shot, I was sure.
He spread his cards in a very businesslike fashion, carefully
not showing a hint of warmth or compassion on his face. He looked
at the cards, then looked me straight in the eyes with a slightly
quizzical expression or a scowl and asked, "What is it that
you do?" Now, I don't know about you, but at $100 an hour,
I was thinking, You're the psychic. You tell me. I refrained from
verbalizing my thoughts. "I'm a chiropractor," I said
matter-of-factly, being careful not to give out too much information
that might color my reading. (I didn't even tell him my last name
when I scheduled the appointment.) "Oh, no. It's much more
than that," he said. "Something comes out through your
hands and people receive healings. You will be on television,"
he continued, "and people will be coming from all over the
country to see you." This was the last thing that I had expected
to hear from this man. Then he told me I would be writing books.
"Let me tell you something," I shot backwith a knowing
smile, "if there's one thing I'm sure of, it's that I won't
be writing any books."
Books and I never got along. By this point in my life I had maybe
read two books, and one of them I was still coloring. But life
was to bring more changes. Psychics, healers, and channelers found
me. From all over the country they would come, telling me that
they were told in their meditations to work on me - and refusing
any monetary compensation in return. My love affair with alcohol
cooled down to a casual friendship: one and a half glasses of
wine with dinner, occasionally. No one was more surprised than
I.
The strangest was yet to come: My addiction to television came
to an abrupt halt. It was replaced by, dare I say it, books. I
couldn't read enough: Eastern philosophy, life after death, channeled
information, and even UFO experiences. I looked at, listened to
and read everyone, everywhere.
At night, I would lie down to go to sleep, and my legs would
vibrate. My hands felt as if they were constantly "on".
The bones of my skull would also vibrate and my ears would buzz.
Later on, tones would come to me, and on rare occasion what sounded
like voices in choir.
That's it. I've lost my sanity. I was certain now. Everyone knows
that when you lose your sanity, you start hearing voices. Mine
were singing. In choir yet. I couldn't have had a little light
humming, a faint vocalist or even a small chorale group. No, I
get a whole choir.
And what about my patients? They were seeing colors: beautiful,
exquisite blues, greens, purples, golds and white. And although
they were able to recognize these colors, they told me that they
had never seen these particular manifestations before. Their beauty
is beyond that which we know. I am told by my patients who are
in television and film that not only do these colors not exist
as we know color here on earth, but even using all their sources
and technologies that we have today, it would not be possible
to reproduce them.
And, yes, patients saw angels. Now angels are a popular thing
to experience, so in the beginning I didn't pay that much attention
to the angel stories until people began describing the same stories:
the same angels, the same messages, the same names. We're not
talking common angel names like Michael or Ariel, neither are
we talking Moses or Buddha, although a lot of people do say that
they see Jesus. We're talking names like Parsillia and George.
George appears to children and others who might be unnerved by
the thought of seeing an angel. You see, George appears first
as a small multi-colored parrot. Then, as it is regularly explained
to me, suddenly he isn't a parrot at all, suddenly he just becomes
your friend. George has been known to appear to people later during
times of stress.
The first person to see George was an 11-year-old girl named
Jamie. She and her mother flew in from New Jersey because she
had scoliosis of the spine, quite noticeably disfiguring the body
of this unusually bright and otherwise very attractive girl. When
Jamie came out of her session, she said to her mother and me,
"I just saw this tiny little multicolored parrot. And he
told me his name was George. And then he wasn't a parrot at all.
He wasn't even a life-form." Life form: now there's a word
for an eleven year-old. "Then, he just became my friend."
Within the next two to three months, several George sightings
were reported to me by other patients, none of whom knew of George,
because, as with all of the angels, I keep the names and descriptions
in confidence so as not to influence other people's experiences.
(Even in this writing I've changed the names of George and Parsillia
to protect the purely innocent.)
Jamie's spine was mostly, though not completely, corrected by
her third session, after which she returned to New Jersey. I've
spoken with her several times since. She appears to be doing fine.
And, every once in a while, she still hears from George.
Parsillia, on the other hand, comes with specific messages. First,
she often lets you know that you will be healed. Following that,
she tells you that, if you are healed, you are to go on television
and "spread the word". I guess she would be called our
Angel of Public Relations.
The first person to see Parsillia was a woman from Oregon named
Michele. Michele had seen me during an NBC interview on one of
my earlier talk show appearances. At the time she weighed all
of 87 pounds. She had Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and fibromyalgia.
She had no appetite and it hurt her just to swallow. She was unable
to get up from a chair to make it into the bathroom by herself.
Tomake her pain somewhat bearable, she would have to be carried
from her bed and placed under a hot running shower up to four
times each night. If she took her children on a one-hour drive
to visit her mother, she would have to stay there, in bed, for
three days before she was able to make the drive home. She was
obviously unable to hold down a full time job. And her six-year-old
would have to make dinner for his three year-old brother: peanut
butter sandwiches.
Michele, like most of my patients, had never seen an angel or
heard voices before. It took her three days before she was able
to get the angel's name. Parsillia told her that she would be
healed and that she was to spread the word via television. Approximately
one year later, she was a guest along with me on a different talk
show. She was all smiles - and quite a few tears. Her weight is
now normal, her complexion healthy, she holds down a full time
job and exercises regularly. And oh yes, she cooks dinner for
her family every evening. No more peanut butter sandwiches.
Another visitor patients see is a man with white hair, a white
moustache and a white coat. Other times, he appears in a robe
with his head covered.
Debbie, a Southern California mother of three, was the first
to see this angel (whose name we don't know). She was diagnosed
in March of 1995 with terminal pancreatic cancer, the same cancer
that took the life of actor Michael Landon. She was told she had
maybe two months to live. Her experiences included being elevated
out of her body, traveling through a tunnel, seeing flecks of
turquoise and blue light and ultimately being embraced by white
light. Debbie experienced the white haired man in both forms.
The first time she encountered him he was wearing his robe and
head covering. He touched her wrist sending a surge of energy
coursing through her body. He then bowed and walked away, leaving
her in the presence of a very bright yet unusually welcoming light.
Tears filled her eyes. She next found herself in a tunnel traveling
through the galaxy, feeling "stuff" leaving her body
through both her feet and her head.
By Debbie's second or third session, her previously inoperable
tumor was 80 percent gone. Approximately eight months later, her
doctors felt she was a candidate for surgery to remove the remaining
20 percent. Just prior to her appointed surgery date, she returned
for another of our sessions. A day-and-a-half later she went to
the hospital in anticipation of her surgery. After some tests,
however, she was sent home. No surgery. Apparently, in the day-and-a-half
since our session her tumor had vanished completely. Nothing remained
but scar tissue.
As an interesting side-note, Debbie came back for another session
in November. During her session she felt water droplets landing
on the right side of her face. Following that, the man with the
white hair and mustache reappeared, this time wearing his long
white coat, which was blowing behind him in the wind. Then he
simply blew away.
Patients also commonly see a circle of doctors wearing white
coats, conferring and guiding the healings. They can be seen talking
in the circle, yet they can't be heard. Another regular is a young
Native American girl who places a leather band with shiny, square
ornaments on your forehead. Often times a Native American male
also comes and stands in the room. (We are not yet sure whether
he's a chief or a shaman.) Another visitor is a very tall, handsome
angel, usually described as eight, nine or ten feet tall with
huge, densely feathered white wings in scalloped rows. I am told
that he stands behind with his arms around my waist, peering over
my right shoulder, silently guiding my hands. Many of these angels
seem to have their own specific scents: flowers, incense, herbs
- in particular, rosemary.
Then came Jered. Jered was four when his mother first brought
him in. With braces on his knees that would no longer hold him
up, his eyes simultaneously looked in two different directions
yet were able to focus on nothing. Words no longer came from his
mouth, and in the void was only the endless flow of saliva. Jered's
light had been reduced to a vacant expression which showed barely
a glimmer of the beautiful being that once dwelt within.
Jered had been losing the myelin coating of his brain where nerve
impulses travel. He had been suffering approximately fifty grand
mal seizures per day. Medication reduced the seizures to approximately
16 a day. As he lay there on the table, motionless and almost
without expression, his mother explained that over the past year
she had helplessly watched his rapid deterioration. By the time
of her first visit, she found herself left not with the child
she once knew, but with what she could only describe as an "amoeba".
During Jered's first session, whenever my hand would approach
the left side of his head, he would sense its presence and reach
for it. "Look, he knows where your hand is. He's reaching.
He never does that," his mother pointed out with hopeful
surprise. "That's where the myelin is missing," she
added. Jered became so active that by the end of that session
his mother had to sit by him on the table, lightly holding his
hands, placatingly singing children's songs as only a mother can.
Their favorite was "Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star". The
day of Jered's first session, these physically violent seizures
stopped. Completely.
Jered's second session found him grasping at doorknobs and beginning
to turn them. His vision improved, he was now able to focus on
objects. On his way out of our office, he pointed to a floral
arrangement in our reception area: "Flowers," he said
smiling. There wasn't a dry eye in the room.
That night, Jered was discovered reciting the letters of the
alphabet with Vanna White while watching Wheel of Fortune. And
before he went to sleep, this formerly speechless cherub looked
up towards his mother and said "Mommy sing to me." Five
weeks later, Jered was back at school. On the playground. Catching
balls.
Did Jered see an angel? He never said so, but I know that he
did. This one drove him one hour to and from his appointments,
sat by him on the table, lightly held his hands and lovingly sang
to him "Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star" as only an angel
can.
It turns out that I had to go inside to find most of my answers.
My two main concerns were, one, that I couldn't predict what someone's
response would be and therefore could make promises to no one,
and, two, that I would have unpredictable highs and lows in the
energies that would last anywhere from three days to three weeks.
I had always been an in-charge type of person who could accomplish
whatever I set my mind to. While others took a wait-and-see attitude,
I preferred to dominate, manipulate and control situational outcomes.
Obstacles that seemed invincible to others were invisible to me,
so I would charge ahead and get things done. The most galling
expression on earth to someone like me was, "If it's meant
to be, it will be." Meant to be, schmeant to be. If I want
it to happen, I'll make it happen, and don't any of you namby-pamby
fatalists get in my way. So, imagine my surprise when the realization
dawned on me that for these healings to really accelerate, I had
to get out of the way and quit directing, to step back and let
a higher power guide. Who's saying this? I thought. It can't be
me.
But it was true. Not only did the energy know where to go and
what to do without the slightest instruction from me; the more
I got my attention out of the picture the more powerful the response.
Some of the greatest healings occurred when I was thinking about
my grocery list. The audacity!
Receive, don't send.
Who said that? I asked, searching the inner recesses of my head
as if I could really see something in there. You've got the wrong
person here for that kind of advice. My ego was still recovering
from "get out of the way and let a higher power guide."
How am I going to get these healings through to these people if
I don't send them?
Receive, don't send.
I heard you the first time. Now answer my question, I mentally
retorted.
Silence.
(Silence can really irk me sometimes.)
I went in to see the next patient. Hoping that I wasn't doing
her a disservice and grateful that she couldn't read the hesitation
and uncertainty of concept in my mind, I began, palms open, at
her feet. I received from the patient through my hands. I received
from the heavens through the top of my head. It was loving, it
was humbling, and it was confusing. It felt awkward. And then
I saw the patient begin to respond. And it felt right.
At that point I truly embraced the concept that I had been espousing,
yet not fully understanding all along: I am not the healer, only
God is the healer, and for some reason, whether I'm a catalyst
or a vessel, an amplifier or intensifier, pick your own word,
I'm invited into the room.
The session was over. The patient had seen the same spectacular
colors and heard the same exquisite tones that the other patients
see and hear. She too had seen two of the angels frequently described
to me as being present during the healing process. Her problem,
a mixture of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, fibromyalgia, and colitis,
was to be gone after this session. Although not immediately life
threatening, it had been ruling her life for the past eight years.
She got up from the table and said, "Thank you!"
I replied, "Don't thank me. I didn't do it." She said,
Well of course you did," not understanding. "It wouldn't
have happened if you didn't hold your hands over me."
I thought, Maybe that person sitting up there on that cloud didn't
make such a mistake after all. Maybe I was selected for this gift
because I don't wear robes and turbans, because I don't hang tapestries
and burn incense, because I don't walk around barefoot eating
bowls of dirt with chopsticks. Maybe it's because I'm accessible
and speak in relatively plain terms. Or maybe it's because of
my ability to come up with silly little ways of explaining things
that I'm only beginning to grasp myself.
"It's like this," I explained, searching for an easily
comprehensible analogy for a young girl whose concept of spiritual
synchronicity was that Melrose Place was both the name of the
street where my LA office had been located and that of her favorite
TV show. "It's as if you've just had a wonderful chocolate
malted...and you're thanking the straw."
She laughed. I think we both got it.
Eric Pearl has appeared nationally on The Leeza Show, Sally
Jessy Raphael, The Other Side and other television programs. His
patients' healings have been documented in six books to date:
Hot Chocolate for the Mystical Soul; Chicken Soup for the Alternatively
Healed Soul; More Hot Chocolate for the Mystical Soul; Hot Chocolate
for the Mystical Teenage Soul; Are You Ready for a Miracle with
Angels? And Eric's own book, The Reconnection: Heal Others, Heal
Yourself (Hay House).
Links:
The
Reconnection Website | What
the Bleep Do We Know? | Katherine
Beck's website |
Whats
Up On Planet Earth
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