Post by Mr. Jon Donnis on Jan 20, 2013 19:29:28 GMT
(If you are lookking for links to the videos of Gary Mannion caught cheating in a seance see
www.badpsychics.com/2016/06/gary-mannion-secretly-recorded-cheating.html )
Journalist and broadcaster Jane Furnival dies aged 55
www.pressgazette.co.uk/node/49326
Here is her testimonial on Mannion that she wrote a while back:
Psychic surgery of any kind is FRAUD!
Crooks like Mannion should be arrested a jailed, but alas they are allowed to carry on!
AVOID people like Gary Mannion!
www.badpsychics.com/2016/06/gary-mannion-secretly-recorded-cheating.html )
Journalist and broadcaster Jane Furnival dies aged 55
www.pressgazette.co.uk/node/49326
Here is her testimonial on Mannion that she wrote a while back:
A friend recommended Gary Mannion to me after I was diagnosed by the Royal Marsden Hospital with advanced Breast Cancer in March 09.
I am a journalist, author and Broadcaster, and have been a professional writer for 30 years, presenting a primetime TV series for BBC-1 and becoming a columnist for the Daily Telegraph and a cover feature writer for the Daily Mail. I have worked for most national newspapers, many magazines and TV and radio stations. I have an English degree from Oxford University.
I am known for my commonsense, no-nonsense approach and am not easy to convince. I am trained to question and to doubt, and look for alternative explanations – that is the essence of good journalism.
I have never heard the term Psychic Surgeon nor Psychic Healer, and did not know what to expect, so went to see Gary with no expectations and the attitude that ‘I might as well try anything’.
I suppose I hoped for, at best, a slight relief from the chronic abdominal pain, due to a ‘feelgood factor’.
Gary was seeing a queue of people that day, about one every ten minutes, some of them extremely ill.
When my turn came, my husband came into the little treatment room with me. Gary asked my briefly what was wrong and immediately sensed the area in my abdomen where the pain was most strong.
He did not ask me to take any clothes off nor touch me. His hand hovered above the painful area. We chattered generally and he did not try to ‘sell’ me his services nor anything else. I was pleased there was no music nor joss sticks in a rather plain, workaday room.
After about 15 minutes, the session was at an end. He indicated a collection box outside, but did not seem interested in how much I put in. There was about £2.50 in there, representing donations for his entire afternoon’s work. Gary did not seem to care what I donated, was modestly dressed and did not have the possessions nor demeanour of a person who earned a lot of money.
The pain in my abdomen had substantially lessened after I saw him. By the time I was out in the street, the pain had gone completely.
The next morning I woke up and a second pain in my right breast, where my tumour was, had completely gone. I had not expected this.
My husband and friends remarked on the difference in me. I felt optimistic for the first time, that the pain and the cancer could be beaten. That feeling has never left me.
I visited Gary again just before my breast operation, and he remarked that my tumour had shrunk and asked if the hospital had said anything about it. I replied that they don’t measure your tumour again after diagnosis.
However when I received the hospital debrief notes after my operation, the tumour which was diagnosed at 8.5cm, seemed to have shrunk to 4.5cm – which was the size of the tumour they removed.
I repeatedly asked the hospital for an explanation and received no reply from specialists who shrugged and were quite evasive.
Eventually, a friend who is a top breast cancer specialist at Bart’s, suggested that they had measured areas of inflammation around my tumour in the original scan, and the tumour was smaller then they first thought.
I mention this in the interests of completeness. It could be the case; it could also be the case that Gary Mannion shrunk my tumour. This is what I believe because of the way the pain ceased and the fact that my energy levels were transformed after I saw him.
I felt that Gary was a genuine and sincere healer. He never asked for money. He was modest in his statements. His hand, hovering over areas that were giving me problems, such as my neck, was extremely hot, like a bar fire, and I could feel energy flowing from him to my body.
He is a very young man and I think he should go on to work in hospitals where his skill in pain-relief could benefit many.
It is a shame that Gary has had to experience people who scoff at his talents and who have gone to great lengths, from what I have seen on the Internet, to try to convince others that he is a fraud.
I feel that they are in no position to judge this as they have not gone to him in pain, and suffering from illness.
Perhaps if they did go, they would not feel the need to behave so poorly and to devote so much time and energy to scoffing at someone who has brought relief to others.
If you would like to talk to me more about anything I have said here, feel free to email me.
I speak as I find, without fear of favour.
Jane Furnival
I am a journalist, author and Broadcaster, and have been a professional writer for 30 years, presenting a primetime TV series for BBC-1 and becoming a columnist for the Daily Telegraph and a cover feature writer for the Daily Mail. I have worked for most national newspapers, many magazines and TV and radio stations. I have an English degree from Oxford University.
I am known for my commonsense, no-nonsense approach and am not easy to convince. I am trained to question and to doubt, and look for alternative explanations – that is the essence of good journalism.
I have never heard the term Psychic Surgeon nor Psychic Healer, and did not know what to expect, so went to see Gary with no expectations and the attitude that ‘I might as well try anything’.
I suppose I hoped for, at best, a slight relief from the chronic abdominal pain, due to a ‘feelgood factor’.
Gary was seeing a queue of people that day, about one every ten minutes, some of them extremely ill.
When my turn came, my husband came into the little treatment room with me. Gary asked my briefly what was wrong and immediately sensed the area in my abdomen where the pain was most strong.
He did not ask me to take any clothes off nor touch me. His hand hovered above the painful area. We chattered generally and he did not try to ‘sell’ me his services nor anything else. I was pleased there was no music nor joss sticks in a rather plain, workaday room.
After about 15 minutes, the session was at an end. He indicated a collection box outside, but did not seem interested in how much I put in. There was about £2.50 in there, representing donations for his entire afternoon’s work. Gary did not seem to care what I donated, was modestly dressed and did not have the possessions nor demeanour of a person who earned a lot of money.
The pain in my abdomen had substantially lessened after I saw him. By the time I was out in the street, the pain had gone completely.
The next morning I woke up and a second pain in my right breast, where my tumour was, had completely gone. I had not expected this.
My husband and friends remarked on the difference in me. I felt optimistic for the first time, that the pain and the cancer could be beaten. That feeling has never left me.
I visited Gary again just before my breast operation, and he remarked that my tumour had shrunk and asked if the hospital had said anything about it. I replied that they don’t measure your tumour again after diagnosis.
However when I received the hospital debrief notes after my operation, the tumour which was diagnosed at 8.5cm, seemed to have shrunk to 4.5cm – which was the size of the tumour they removed.
I repeatedly asked the hospital for an explanation and received no reply from specialists who shrugged and were quite evasive.
Eventually, a friend who is a top breast cancer specialist at Bart’s, suggested that they had measured areas of inflammation around my tumour in the original scan, and the tumour was smaller then they first thought.
I mention this in the interests of completeness. It could be the case; it could also be the case that Gary Mannion shrunk my tumour. This is what I believe because of the way the pain ceased and the fact that my energy levels were transformed after I saw him.
I felt that Gary was a genuine and sincere healer. He never asked for money. He was modest in his statements. His hand, hovering over areas that were giving me problems, such as my neck, was extremely hot, like a bar fire, and I could feel energy flowing from him to my body.
He is a very young man and I think he should go on to work in hospitals where his skill in pain-relief could benefit many.
It is a shame that Gary has had to experience people who scoff at his talents and who have gone to great lengths, from what I have seen on the Internet, to try to convince others that he is a fraud.
I feel that they are in no position to judge this as they have not gone to him in pain, and suffering from illness.
Perhaps if they did go, they would not feel the need to behave so poorly and to devote so much time and energy to scoffing at someone who has brought relief to others.
If you would like to talk to me more about anything I have said here, feel free to email me.
I speak as I find, without fear of favour.
Jane Furnival
Psychic surgery of any kind is FRAUD!
Crooks like Mannion should be arrested a jailed, but alas they are allowed to carry on!
AVOID people like Gary Mannion!