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The current Lightworker Healing Protocol requests inclusion of the self, all the practitioner’s primary clients for the session being launched, all the practitioner’s previous clients, and then all other beings, human and extraterrestrial. Would it add meaningfully to the quorum of LHP sessions and their benefits to also request on the list after the practitioner’s previous clients, to include all clients of all other LHP sessions, so they are worked on in parallel? That way, every LHP session by every practitioner, will launch an LHP for everyone ever worked on, with all to be repeated, and so on, through the leveraging. What is Creator’s perspective?208 views0 answers1 votes
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The last time the Lions won the championship was in 1957. “Coincidentally,” the City of Detroit at the time, would experience its peak population of 1.8 million in 1958, and at the time, was the most prosperous city in the country, and the entire region was arguably one of the most successful and prosperous on the planet. All that would change dramatically over the next decades, for both Detroit and its Lake Erie sister city, Cleveland. The NFL Cleveland Browns have not fared much better, winning their last NFL championship in 1964. Are they, too, a “targeted group?” One of the most deflating things ever to happen to a fan base was for the team to be moved to Baltimore and renamed the Ravens in 1996. In 2001, just four seasons later, the Ravens won the Superbowl—a Superbowl that arguably should have been won for Cleveland. The Browns were restored in 1998, but have been one of the worst teams in the NFL since then. Is all this the end result of intentional targeting, or just coincidence? What can Creator tell us?187 views0 answers0 votes
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Since 1957, the Detroit Lions have won just one playoff game. A simply unmatched history of futility. However, that one year, 1991, was exciting, and the Lions got just one game away from the Super Bowl. But it wasn’t without tragedy. In November of 1991, right offensive guard Mike Utley suffered a neck injury that left him paralyzed for life. Seven months later, the Lions’ left offensive guard Eric Andolsek was struck and killed by a semi-truck that ran off the road while he was trimming his lawn. The driver lost control of the vehicle while wiping his face with a rag. And just like that, the Lions lost two of their best offensive linemen, perhaps in Lions franchise history. This all but guaranteed that any chance the Lions had of winning the Super Bowl in January 1993 simply vanished. Two freak accidents so close together that paralyzed the team, and removed two of their most important players, suggests this was a vicious backlash to keep a targeted group from ever succeeding. What can Creator tell us?150 views0 answers0 votes
Quarterback Erik Kramer was the quarterback of that ill-fated Lions team that got close to the Super Bowl in 1991. Years later, his life would unravel when his son died of a heroin overdose, his wife divorced him, and his parents died from cancer. His antidepression medications stopped working, and Erik decided he could not go on that way. In 2015, he bought a gun, drove to a motel room and placed the gun under his jaw, and pulled the trigger. Erik says the last thing he remembers was driving there, but with no memory of arrival, check-in, or pulling the trigger. Yet, miraculously, not only did he not die, but he has since fully recovered with no apparent deficits of any kind, physical or mental. Was Erik a targeted individual? And was that targeting a backlash for his centerpiece role in getting the Lions close to the Super Bowl? If Erik had played anywhere else at the time, might he have avoided being targeted? A retrocausal LHP session has been done for Erik and was quite powerful. Is this the reason Erik not only survived but was able to heal completely when the odds of such a thing are nearly unfathomable? What can Creator tell us?171 views0 answers0 votes
Erik Kramer was not the only Lions quarterback who appears to have been targeted. Quarterback Eric Hipple, who played for the Lions in the 1980s, also attempted suicide when his life was unraveling in 1998. On the way to the airport in Detroit, Eric wrote a note to his wife, who was driving, that said, “I can’t keep doing this,” unbuckled his seat belt, opened the door, and exited the vehicle as it was doing 70 miles an hour. He wrote in his 2008 book, Real Men Do Cry, “I honestly don’t know what I was thinking at the time. … Flight seemed like a pretty good idea for that split second, and the next thing I knew, I woke up in the hospital emergency room. I had a concussion and a lot of road rash from the pavement, and, by the grace of God, no other injuries.” Was that grace made possible by a retrocausal LHP said for him? What can Creator tell us?158 views0 answers0 votes
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