Natural Remedies / Ghostly Encounters

Hosted byGeorge Noory

Natural Remedies / Ghostly Encounters

About the show

In the first half, naturopathic doctor Dr. Randi Shannon discussed a range of health topics grounded in natural remedies and ancient diagnostic methods. Highlighting the dangers of modern technology, particularly smartphones, she linked their "dirty energy" emissions to serious health risks. She also addressed diabetes management, criticizing the pharmaceutical approach as merely managing chronic conditions rather than eliminating them. She noted, "I haven't met one [diabetic] yet that we couldn't help to reverse" through the use of diet and natural supplementation. She warned against counterfeit supplements, urging listeners to use trusted sources to avoid fake products, particularly those from unreliable online sellers.

Encouraging adults to monitor their tongues as health indicators, Shannon explained that if tongues have cracks, crevices, spots, or discolorations, these could be signs of an issue or imbalance, and a way to assess organ health. On cancer treatments, she distanced herself from conventional chemotherapy, describing it as "created from mustard gas," while acknowledging patients' autonomy in treatment choices. Regarding such medications as ivermectin and fenbendazole, Dr. Shannon stated she has "never seen anyone yet" who was helped with cancer from them and expressed concern about harmful additives in these products.

She advised listeners to consider parasite cleanses, asserting, "If you've never done a parasite cleanse, guess what? You have them," and recommended a high-dose herbal blend containing wormwood, papaya, black walnut hull, and pumpkin seeds.

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In the latter half, seasoned paranormal investigator and author Leslie Rule shared insights from her decades-long exploration into hauntings and ghostly phenomena. Growing up in a house built on a Native American burial ground in Puget Sound, her personal experiences sparked her lifelong quest to validate ghost sightings through historical research. "I don't think we should be afraid of ghosts. I think they're just people who are earthbound and they no longer have their bodies," she said, distinguishing her approach from sensationalized portrayals in media. Apparitions vary dramatically, she revealed, from shadowy figures to glowing, partially visible forms, and sometimes appear so human that only their sudden disappearance reveals their ghostly nature.

She recounted a compelling case from Whitefish, Montana, where the apparition of a man appeared decades after his death on railroad tracks near a local bar. Reporting that seeing a ghost in a mirror is a common manifestation, Rule noted, "Almost everybody who had a sighting of a ghost in the mirror told me... they would see somebody standing behind them... and the apparition would continue to remain in the mirror," even though no one was present behind them. Sounds are often associated with ghosts, including footsteps, knocking on the door, rapping on the wall, laughter, crying, and voices, and sometimes the voices seem to be talking to each other or calling out the name of the witness.

Among the more chilling stories was the ghost of a disfigured little boy seen at the notoriously haunted St. James Hotel in New Mexico, a site of violent deaths. Rule also recalled a haunting on the Queen Mary ship involving a mysterious woman who vanished without explanation in 1936, a case entangled with theories of a possible serial killer aboard.

News segment guests: John M. Curtis, Catherine Austin Fitts

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