The Mind of James Donahue Dual Personalities |
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Surgical Transfer Of
Human Cellular Memory By James Donahue April 2006 The proof of the Luciferian
doctrine of universal intelligence and communication on all levels, from the single cell to the vastness of galaxies, is unveiling
itself to us with startling clarity in recent years. The relatively recent advent of surgical transplanting of organs from
human to human has generated some shocking stories that point directly to the transfer of cellular memory from the donor to
the recipient. Dr. Paul Pearsall, a
psychooneuroimmunologist, Dr. Gary Schwartz and Dr. Linda Russek, of the University of Arizona, participated in a study of
heart and organ transplant recipients published in the Journal of Near-Death Studies in 2002. The report, titled “Changes
in Heart Transplant Recipients That Parallel the Personalities of Their Donors,” concludes that cells of living tissue
have the capacity to not only remember, but to pass this memory on to adjoining cells. Some of the stories in
the report include: After he was killed in
an automobile accident, an 18-year-old boy’s heart was donated to a recipient named Danielle. A year later his parents
came across an audiotape of a song he had written titled “Danny, My Heart is Yours.” The song lyrics told about
how he felt destined to die and to give his heart to someone named Danny. When Danielle later met the boy’s family,
they played some of his music. Even though she never heard the songs, they were shocked when she was able to complete the
phrases. A 16-year-old boy who
suffered from a mild form of cerebral palsy on the left side of his body was drowned. His heart was donated to a seven-month-old
child. The recipient, who did not display symptoms prior to receiving the heart, developed stiffness and shaking in the left
limbs. A middle-aged man received
a heart from a 14-year-old girl who was a gymnast and suffered from eating disorders. After that the man complained of becoming
nauseated after eating. He also developed a giggle that that of a young girl. A Caucasian man received
a heart from an African-American teen. The recipient suddenly developed a love of classical music that he did not have prior
to the transplant. He later learned that the donor not only loved classical music, but played the violin. A lesbian and fast food
junkie received a heart from a young woman who was a vegetarian. The donor also was described as “man crazy,”
which was a personality exactly the opposite of the 29-year-old recipient. After that, the woman who received the heart said
she found that eating meat made her sick, and she lost her interest in women. She later became engaged to marry a man. Pearsall also told of
an eight-year-old girl who received the heart of a ten-year-old girl who had been murdered. After the transplant, the recipient
experienced nightmares of being murdered. The dreams were so traumatic that psychiatric help was sought. By working with the
psychiatrist, it was learned that the dreams were so specific, they helped police find and arrest the killer. Other stories included
that of a A A dancer told of becoming
ill and eventually needing a heart transplant. After the operation the woman developed cravings for beer and chicken nuggets.
She later learned these were favorites of her male donor. |
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