1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:04,600 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to coast AM on iHeartRadio, 2 00:00:04,960 --> 00:00:07,440 Speaker 1: and we are back a couple of great hours here 3 00:00:07,440 --> 00:00:10,240 Speaker 1: as we talk about one of my favorite prophets, the 4 00:00:10,360 --> 00:00:14,520 Speaker 1: late Edgar Casey. Kevin Tadeshi back with us, executive director 5 00:00:14,560 --> 00:00:19,160 Speaker 1: and CEO of the Edgar Casey's a r E Foundation, 6 00:00:19,280 --> 00:00:23,159 Speaker 1: of course, and Atlantic a university responsible for managing the 7 00:00:23,239 --> 00:00:27,000 Speaker 1: day to day operations of the Edgar Casey organizations. He's 8 00:00:27,040 --> 00:00:29,640 Speaker 1: been both a student and teacher of the Casey material 9 00:00:29,720 --> 00:00:35,280 Speaker 1: for forty plus years. Nationally recognized research on interpretation of dreams. 10 00:00:35,640 --> 00:00:39,000 Speaker 1: Known for his ability to explain complex subjects and a 11 00:00:39,600 --> 00:00:42,600 Speaker 1: easy to understand matter, Kevin, of course is popular for 12 00:00:42,680 --> 00:00:46,440 Speaker 1: his insight and sense of humor as well as books 13 00:00:46,479 --> 00:00:49,120 Speaker 1: include Contemporary Casey and the one of course we're going 14 00:00:49,200 --> 00:00:52,000 Speaker 1: to talk about tonight, Edgar Casey and Angels and the 15 00:00:52,000 --> 00:00:55,680 Speaker 1: Angelic Forces. Kevin, welcome back, Thanks for having me on 16 00:00:55,680 --> 00:00:58,040 Speaker 1: the program. Looking forward to this. How did you get 17 00:00:58,080 --> 00:01:01,760 Speaker 1: interested in Edgar Casey? How did that happen for you? Well, 18 00:01:01,840 --> 00:01:04,280 Speaker 1: it really happened when I was at a when I 19 00:01:04,280 --> 00:01:06,640 Speaker 1: was still in high school. I went to a program 20 00:01:06,720 --> 00:01:09,800 Speaker 1: for boys State, which is you know, the American Legion 21 00:01:09,840 --> 00:01:13,520 Speaker 1: teaches about the government. I was at the University of 22 00:01:13,560 --> 00:01:16,240 Speaker 1: Colorado and went down to the bookstore during that program. 23 00:01:16,520 --> 00:01:19,240 Speaker 1: And this was nineteen seventy five, and Jestern had just 24 00:01:19,280 --> 00:01:21,959 Speaker 1: written a book, not Sleeping Profit, but his follow up them, 25 00:01:22,040 --> 00:01:25,120 Speaker 1: which was a profit in his own country, the Story 26 00:01:25,120 --> 00:01:27,360 Speaker 1: of the Young Edgar Casey, and that book jumped out 27 00:01:27,400 --> 00:01:29,360 Speaker 1: at me. And as soon as I got that book 28 00:01:29,360 --> 00:01:31,560 Speaker 1: and read it, I said, there and then, you know, 29 00:01:31,640 --> 00:01:33,760 Speaker 1: someday I want to work at ARI. So that became 30 00:01:33,800 --> 00:01:37,120 Speaker 1: my goal. And seven years later, when I graduated from college, 31 00:01:37,120 --> 00:01:39,640 Speaker 1: I moved to Virginia Beach and have been here for 32 00:01:39,680 --> 00:01:42,440 Speaker 1: the last thirty seven years. Well what a great organization. 33 00:01:42,520 --> 00:01:46,120 Speaker 1: You've done a tremendous job with it, Kevin. And it's 34 00:01:46,120 --> 00:01:49,280 Speaker 1: a great resource too for people who just want information 35 00:01:49,360 --> 00:01:52,840 Speaker 1: on Edgar Casey, isn't it. It really is. And regardless 36 00:01:52,840 --> 00:01:55,400 Speaker 1: of your field of inquiry or study, whether it's health 37 00:01:55,600 --> 00:01:59,560 Speaker 1: or relationships, or meditation or ancient mysteries or whatever it 38 00:01:59,640 --> 00:02:03,360 Speaker 1: might be, whether it's online or our programs or our books, 39 00:02:03,400 --> 00:02:08,000 Speaker 1: I think that the Casey information provides a leavening influence 40 00:02:08,040 --> 00:02:10,919 Speaker 1: and a resource and all kinds of topics. Let's talk 41 00:02:10,919 --> 00:02:13,760 Speaker 1: about Edgar Casey for a moment here, Kevin, for people 42 00:02:13,760 --> 00:02:16,960 Speaker 1: who the few who may not know who the guy was. 43 00:02:18,200 --> 00:02:22,960 Speaker 1: Absolutely he lived between eighteen seventy seven and nineteen forty five, 44 00:02:23,280 --> 00:02:26,919 Speaker 1: and when he was twenty one years old, he was 45 00:02:26,960 --> 00:02:31,000 Speaker 1: really a traveling salesperson and he developed laryngitis, which you 46 00:02:31,040 --> 00:02:33,760 Speaker 1: know most of us have experienced laryngeius at least for 47 00:02:33,760 --> 00:02:36,840 Speaker 1: a while. His persis assisted and if you're a traveling 48 00:02:36,880 --> 00:02:40,360 Speaker 1: salesperson with laryngitis, pretty soon you're out of a job. 49 00:02:40,560 --> 00:02:43,840 Speaker 1: So he became a photographer and eventually would become an 50 00:02:43,880 --> 00:02:48,320 Speaker 1: award winning photographer. But the laryngias persisted, and although he 51 00:02:48,720 --> 00:02:50,320 Speaker 1: was young, and when he was young, he had a 52 00:02:50,320 --> 00:02:54,000 Speaker 1: couple of psychic experiences, like he claimed he could sleep 53 00:02:54,000 --> 00:02:57,520 Speaker 1: on school books and memorize their contents, and he talked 54 00:02:57,560 --> 00:02:59,720 Speaker 1: about the fact that he could see and speak to 55 00:02:59,840 --> 00:03:03,120 Speaker 1: his grandfather who was deceased. But other than that, he 56 00:03:03,160 --> 00:03:06,640 Speaker 1: had a normal life. And he was at the Hypnosis 57 00:03:06,720 --> 00:03:10,880 Speaker 1: stage show in Hopkinsville, Kentucky in nineteen oh one, and 58 00:03:11,080 --> 00:03:13,799 Speaker 1: the hypnotist was asking for volunteers to come up, and 59 00:03:13,919 --> 00:03:15,840 Speaker 1: some of his friends volunteered him, and he went up 60 00:03:15,880 --> 00:03:19,680 Speaker 1: there and he told hypnotists that he didn't think he 61 00:03:19,680 --> 00:03:21,720 Speaker 1: could be hypnotized, but he thought he could put himself 62 00:03:21,720 --> 00:03:25,480 Speaker 1: to sleep, and he did, and while asleep he spoke normally. 63 00:03:25,680 --> 00:03:30,280 Speaker 1: And later on another hypnotist in town and physician decided 64 00:03:30,280 --> 00:03:32,399 Speaker 1: to try an experiments and they had agg Casey put 65 00:03:32,480 --> 00:03:34,600 Speaker 1: himself to sleep and describe what was wrong with him 66 00:03:34,639 --> 00:03:37,160 Speaker 1: and how he could get well. And that really became 67 00:03:37,160 --> 00:03:39,560 Speaker 1: the first reading, which happened in March nineteen oh one, 68 00:03:40,200 --> 00:03:44,000 Speaker 1: and the doctor who was there decided, you know, if 69 00:03:44,000 --> 00:03:45,640 Speaker 1: he could do this for himself, maybe he could do 70 00:03:45,640 --> 00:03:48,480 Speaker 1: it for other people. And from then on Aggar Casey 71 00:03:48,480 --> 00:03:52,240 Speaker 1: started giving readings, and we have copies of fourteen thousand, 72 00:03:52,320 --> 00:03:56,160 Speaker 1: three hundred and six readings, most of which deal with health. 73 00:03:56,280 --> 00:03:58,320 Speaker 1: Nine thousand deal with health, but then he mentioned a 74 00:03:58,360 --> 00:04:02,040 Speaker 1: total of ten thousand different top He was, I would say, 75 00:04:02,120 --> 00:04:06,360 Speaker 1: Kevin pretty accurate. Don't you think he was extremely accurate? 76 00:04:06,440 --> 00:04:09,600 Speaker 1: And even some of the things that he said that 77 00:04:09,720 --> 00:04:13,120 Speaker 1: seemed far fetched at the time as years have passed, 78 00:04:13,200 --> 00:04:16,880 Speaker 1: have come to be true. When they were his two 79 00:04:16,880 --> 00:04:19,920 Speaker 1: sons who are now both deceased, they went back and 80 00:04:19,960 --> 00:04:23,360 Speaker 1: looked at all the readings that they could especially follow 81 00:04:23,440 --> 00:04:26,560 Speaker 1: up on, and in terms of medical insights, it seemed 82 00:04:26,600 --> 00:04:29,640 Speaker 1: like he had a ninety three percent accuracy rate, which 83 00:04:29,680 --> 00:04:31,839 Speaker 1: is even better than it generally. If you go to 84 00:04:31,880 --> 00:04:33,680 Speaker 1: your doctor and you have a problem and they're trying 85 00:04:33,720 --> 00:04:36,800 Speaker 1: to figure out what it is, ninety three percent accuracy 86 00:04:36,880 --> 00:04:39,600 Speaker 1: rate is just incredible. And keep in mind he never 87 00:04:39,640 --> 00:04:42,120 Speaker 1: saw most of these people. He would go to sleep. 88 00:04:42,160 --> 00:04:45,880 Speaker 1: He would tune into wherever they were, outline their problem, 89 00:04:45,960 --> 00:04:48,800 Speaker 1: an outline a regiment of treatment, and very often he 90 00:04:48,839 --> 00:04:52,599 Speaker 1: could even recommend doctors who lived near them for them 91 00:04:52,600 --> 00:04:57,080 Speaker 1: to go to. Didn't this ability eventually kill him because 92 00:04:57,080 --> 00:05:00,400 Speaker 1: he just was exhausted all the time. Well, yeah, his 93 00:05:00,440 --> 00:05:03,560 Speaker 1: own readings told him that it was basically was tuning 94 00:05:03,600 --> 00:05:07,120 Speaker 1: into a higher level of vibration, and it recommended that 95 00:05:07,160 --> 00:05:09,279 Speaker 1: he never give more than two a day, one in 96 00:05:09,279 --> 00:05:12,600 Speaker 1: the morning and one in the afternoon. And in nineteen 97 00:05:12,680 --> 00:05:16,320 Speaker 1: forty three, his biography There as a River came out, 98 00:05:16,400 --> 00:05:20,200 Speaker 1: written by Thomas Grew and the same year Cornet magazine, 99 00:05:20,200 --> 00:05:23,360 Speaker 1: which was kind of like the Life magazine of its day, 100 00:05:23,360 --> 00:05:26,000 Speaker 1: wrote an article on the miracle Man of Virginia Beach 101 00:05:26,040 --> 00:05:29,440 Speaker 1: and outlined some of the amazing cures he had come 102 00:05:29,520 --> 00:05:33,120 Speaker 1: up with, and from then on he was inundated with mail. 103 00:05:33,200 --> 00:05:36,560 Speaker 1: In fact, the postman would deliver up to eight bags 104 00:05:36,560 --> 00:05:38,400 Speaker 1: of mail a day and just drop him there on 105 00:05:38,400 --> 00:05:41,880 Speaker 1: their porch, and Casey told his secretary that he could 106 00:05:41,920 --> 00:05:44,440 Speaker 1: walk by the bags and he could fill the people's pain, 107 00:05:45,080 --> 00:05:48,479 Speaker 1: and he asked her to start booking ahead, and he 108 00:05:48,560 --> 00:05:52,159 Speaker 1: started giving eight readings a day and eventually had a stroke, 109 00:05:52,320 --> 00:05:55,880 Speaker 1: and when he finally died in January nineteen forty five, 110 00:05:56,000 --> 00:05:58,120 Speaker 1: they were booked eight readings a day. Two years in 111 00:05:58,120 --> 00:06:02,400 Speaker 1: his dance were newspaper picking up on his abilities as well. 112 00:06:02,960 --> 00:06:06,600 Speaker 1: They were. The first one was The New York Times 113 00:06:06,600 --> 00:06:10,240 Speaker 1: in nineteen ten and did a full page spread with 114 00:06:10,320 --> 00:06:13,920 Speaker 1: the headline alliterate man becomes doctor when hypnotized that he 115 00:06:14,000 --> 00:06:17,240 Speaker 1: wasn't illiterate, but it made for a better headline. And 116 00:06:17,360 --> 00:06:20,960 Speaker 1: from then on we have literally hundreds of copies of 117 00:06:21,520 --> 00:06:24,400 Speaker 1: newspaper articles over the years of what he was able 118 00:06:24,440 --> 00:06:27,960 Speaker 1: to do. And the challenge for him was that he 119 00:06:28,440 --> 00:06:30,800 Speaker 1: was able to tune into people. He could describe what 120 00:06:30,880 --> 00:06:33,479 Speaker 1: was wrong with them, that people would get a reading, 121 00:06:33,520 --> 00:06:36,279 Speaker 1: they'd go to their doctor because lots of times medical 122 00:06:36,320 --> 00:06:39,080 Speaker 1: personnel was needed to carry out the treatment, and they'd 123 00:06:39,080 --> 00:06:41,840 Speaker 1: say something like, you know, this guy never met I 124 00:06:41,960 --> 00:06:44,880 Speaker 1: went to sleep on a couch and outlined a regiment 125 00:06:44,880 --> 00:06:46,600 Speaker 1: of treatment, and here's why I'm supposed to be doing 126 00:06:46,640 --> 00:06:49,760 Speaker 1: about it. And Casey was recommended things like a change 127 00:06:49,760 --> 00:06:53,719 Speaker 1: in diet, attitudes, and emotion changes. He drew from every 128 00:06:53,760 --> 00:06:57,920 Speaker 1: school of medicine, from pharmacopeia to surgery, but a lot 129 00:06:57,960 --> 00:07:00,599 Speaker 1: of it was things today we would say our normal 130 00:07:00,640 --> 00:07:05,080 Speaker 1: health related things, or treatments that were unusual for the time, 131 00:07:05,200 --> 00:07:08,359 Speaker 1: and doctors were hesitant to carry out some of these treatments. 132 00:07:08,440 --> 00:07:12,000 Speaker 1: And so Casey's dream was to build a hospital where 133 00:07:12,520 --> 00:07:15,480 Speaker 1: he would give readings and regular physicians would carry out 134 00:07:15,520 --> 00:07:18,240 Speaker 1: the treatment and over and over again. When asked where 135 00:07:18,280 --> 00:07:20,680 Speaker 1: should we build the hospital, it came up that Virginia Beach, 136 00:07:20,760 --> 00:07:23,920 Speaker 1: Virginia was the place for the hospital because it was 137 00:07:24,440 --> 00:07:27,400 Speaker 1: on the East coast and the reading said his psychic 138 00:07:27,440 --> 00:07:30,760 Speaker 1: ability would work better near large bodies of water, and 139 00:07:30,880 --> 00:07:33,560 Speaker 1: that eventually Virginia Beach would become one of the largest 140 00:07:33,600 --> 00:07:36,920 Speaker 1: resort cities on the East coast. And Norfolk, which is 141 00:07:36,920 --> 00:07:39,520 Speaker 1: our next door neighbor, here would become one of the 142 00:07:39,600 --> 00:07:43,240 Speaker 1: largest seaports. And at the time, Norfolk was just a 143 00:07:43,280 --> 00:07:46,200 Speaker 1: little podunk town and Virginia Beach had three hundred people 144 00:07:46,200 --> 00:07:49,440 Speaker 1: in it, so this was unusual. Today, Virginia Beach has 145 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:51,400 Speaker 1: half a million people in it, so it has become 146 00:07:51,560 --> 00:07:55,200 Speaker 1: the largest city in Virginia. Actually, yeah, he was a 147 00:07:55,240 --> 00:07:59,320 Speaker 1: remarkable person. I would have loved to have interviewed him, Kevin. Oh, yeah, 148 00:07:59,360 --> 00:08:01,520 Speaker 1: he would have been. He was a great storyteller. He 149 00:08:01,560 --> 00:08:04,160 Speaker 1: was a great lecturer. I hear I've never heard him, 150 00:08:04,200 --> 00:08:06,440 Speaker 1: but I've heard from people who were there that you're 151 00:08:06,480 --> 00:08:11,400 Speaker 1: just a great speaker, great personality. When he gave his readings, 152 00:08:12,120 --> 00:08:15,640 Speaker 1: did he did he enjoy it or was it work 153 00:08:15,760 --> 00:08:19,600 Speaker 1: for him? Well, when he gave his readings, I mean 154 00:08:19,600 --> 00:08:22,800 Speaker 1: it was part of his routine, and he didn't really 155 00:08:22,840 --> 00:08:24,480 Speaker 1: know what he was saying because he had to put 156 00:08:24,560 --> 00:08:26,320 Speaker 1: himself to sleep, which I can talk about in just 157 00:08:26,360 --> 00:08:27,880 Speaker 1: a minute why he had to do that. But he 158 00:08:28,000 --> 00:08:30,960 Speaker 1: had to put himself to sleep, and so he was 159 00:08:31,000 --> 00:08:34,120 Speaker 1: out genuinely for forty five minutes or so, and when 160 00:08:34,160 --> 00:08:36,760 Speaker 1: he came to he didn't really have any recollection of 161 00:08:36,760 --> 00:08:39,800 Speaker 1: what he had said. So his secretary would transcribe what 162 00:08:39,840 --> 00:08:43,480 Speaker 1: he had said, and he'd look it over and sometimes 163 00:08:43,480 --> 00:08:46,000 Speaker 1: look it over, and he at first became concerned that 164 00:08:46,040 --> 00:08:49,040 Speaker 1: he would prescribe something that could hurt someone. So he 165 00:08:49,120 --> 00:08:50,920 Speaker 1: made a vow that he would continue to give readings 166 00:08:50,960 --> 00:08:53,880 Speaker 1: as long as no one ever got hurt. And it 167 00:08:53,960 --> 00:08:56,240 Speaker 1: just became his life's work because it was so helpful 168 00:08:56,280 --> 00:08:58,960 Speaker 1: to people. Was he a likable guy? He was a 169 00:08:58,960 --> 00:09:02,640 Speaker 1: likable guy. He was. He loved a fish. He loved 170 00:09:02,679 --> 00:09:07,160 Speaker 1: to sports. According to his son Hugh Lynn, who I 171 00:09:07,520 --> 00:09:09,839 Speaker 1: got to know and who has passed away, he loved 172 00:09:09,840 --> 00:09:12,319 Speaker 1: to play golf, which he was a lousy player. He 173 00:09:12,440 --> 00:09:17,760 Speaker 1: loved he loved a garden, great storyteller, a great Sunday 174 00:09:17,760 --> 00:09:21,360 Speaker 1: school teacher. People just were drawn to him. He would 175 00:09:21,800 --> 00:09:24,360 Speaker 1: come to New York sometimes and give lectures that were 176 00:09:24,400 --> 00:09:27,480 Speaker 1: just booked, and people would you file out of the 177 00:09:27,520 --> 00:09:29,600 Speaker 1: building around the block trying to get in because it 178 00:09:29,640 --> 00:09:32,480 Speaker 1: was so crowded. Why did he have to sleep in 179 00:09:32,600 --> 00:09:35,800 Speaker 1: order to give his readings? Well, and it's actually for 180 00:09:35,840 --> 00:09:38,440 Speaker 1: that same reason he came to Virginia Beach. According to 181 00:09:38,480 --> 00:09:41,640 Speaker 1: Edgar Casey, he had in his lifetime, just prior to 182 00:09:42,360 --> 00:09:44,800 Speaker 1: Edgar Casey, he had been what he described as a 183 00:09:44,920 --> 00:09:49,440 Speaker 1: n'error du well named John Bainbridge, who was a British 184 00:09:49,440 --> 00:09:51,520 Speaker 1: soldier who had come over to the United States in 185 00:09:51,559 --> 00:09:55,080 Speaker 1: the seventeen hundreds. He had been captured by Indians. He 186 00:09:55,320 --> 00:09:59,760 Speaker 1: escaped and he decided to become a He had a 187 00:09:59,840 --> 00:10:02,680 Speaker 1: very heightened psychic ability, and he became kind of like 188 00:10:02,720 --> 00:10:06,480 Speaker 1: a loner who used his psychic ability to gamble and 189 00:10:06,559 --> 00:10:09,520 Speaker 1: pick up loose women. And Casey said that he had 190 00:10:09,520 --> 00:10:12,800 Speaker 1: really misused that gift, and for that reason he had 191 00:10:12,800 --> 00:10:14,880 Speaker 1: to come back to Virginia Beach, which was the same 192 00:10:15,000 --> 00:10:17,560 Speaker 1: near the same place he had landed at first landing 193 00:10:17,600 --> 00:10:20,360 Speaker 1: as John Bainbridge, to kind of make up for it, 194 00:10:20,720 --> 00:10:23,240 Speaker 1: and that every time he gave a reading this lifetime 195 00:10:23,240 --> 00:10:25,560 Speaker 1: he had to put himself to sleep to set himself 196 00:10:25,640 --> 00:10:28,760 Speaker 1: aside because his personality had gotten in the way as 197 00:10:28,840 --> 00:10:34,319 Speaker 1: John Bainbridge and misused the gift. Amazing, just remarkable. And 198 00:10:35,240 --> 00:10:39,040 Speaker 1: when he died, you said he had a stroke. What 199 00:10:39,559 --> 00:10:42,760 Speaker 1: eventually killed him? Was it the stroke? Well, it was 200 00:10:42,880 --> 00:10:46,040 Speaker 1: the stroke, but he basically got water on the lungs 201 00:10:46,080 --> 00:10:52,880 Speaker 1: after that and essentially drowned, Oh, suffocated, basically suffocated Yeah, 202 00:10:52,880 --> 00:10:56,040 Speaker 1: it was a slow, painful several days there at the end. 203 00:10:56,360 --> 00:11:01,160 Speaker 1: You would think that with his spirit guides and everything else, 204 00:11:01,240 --> 00:11:04,000 Speaker 1: that somebody would have saved him, some entity would have 205 00:11:04,080 --> 00:11:08,439 Speaker 1: just saved him. Well, he had a number of medical mishaps. 206 00:11:08,440 --> 00:11:12,880 Speaker 1: He went to a clinic that really made him worse. 207 00:11:13,240 --> 00:11:17,079 Speaker 1: In Roanoke doesn't exist anymore. And after that experience he 208 00:11:17,120 --> 00:11:20,240 Speaker 1: gave his last reading and was really weak and could hardly. 209 00:11:20,640 --> 00:11:23,600 Speaker 1: This was in the fall of nineteen forty four, and 210 00:11:24,040 --> 00:11:27,160 Speaker 1: his wife, I believe, asked the question how long should 211 00:11:27,160 --> 00:11:30,439 Speaker 1: he rest? And Casey's response was until he is well 212 00:11:30,559 --> 00:11:34,400 Speaker 1: or dead. So, I mean it didn't didn't look very 213 00:11:34,400 --> 00:11:38,400 Speaker 1: promising even then, but he just wore himself out because 214 00:11:38,400 --> 00:11:42,160 Speaker 1: of Casey Kevin, I eat three raw almonds a day, 215 00:11:42,400 --> 00:11:47,680 Speaker 1: and it's supposed to prevent never said cure, but it's 216 00:11:47,679 --> 00:11:50,640 Speaker 1: supposed to prevent cancer. It's one of the things he 217 00:11:50,720 --> 00:11:53,920 Speaker 1: recommended for cancer preventive. Also, you know, our diet is 218 00:11:54,080 --> 00:11:57,720 Speaker 1: another thing he recommended. He I think I've told you before, George, 219 00:11:57,760 --> 00:12:00,079 Speaker 1: when we've talked it. When I was in college, I 220 00:12:00,160 --> 00:12:03,880 Speaker 1: had this horrible problem with allergies. I was allergic to 221 00:12:04,080 --> 00:12:06,280 Speaker 1: every tree, bush and shrub that grew in the state 222 00:12:06,280 --> 00:12:09,160 Speaker 1: of Colorado and got six allergy shots a week. And 223 00:12:09,200 --> 00:12:11,200 Speaker 1: by working with the Casey information on allergies, I don't 224 00:12:11,240 --> 00:12:14,520 Speaker 1: even take pills anymore. So there's a wealth of information 225 00:12:14,520 --> 00:12:17,200 Speaker 1: on all kinds of illnesses that people still access to 226 00:12:17,240 --> 00:12:22,160 Speaker 1: this day. Kevin, did he have supernatural help? How did 227 00:12:22,160 --> 00:12:26,280 Speaker 1: he do this? Well? You know, one of the reasons 228 00:12:26,320 --> 00:12:28,600 Speaker 1: I wanted to write this book on aggregation on angels 229 00:12:28,600 --> 00:12:32,319 Speaker 1: and angelic forces is because throughout his life he talked 230 00:12:32,320 --> 00:12:35,640 Speaker 1: about how the angelic forces not only helped him, but 231 00:12:35,760 --> 00:12:38,319 Speaker 1: helped all kinds of people. And he also talked about 232 00:12:38,800 --> 00:12:42,480 Speaker 1: various guides that had appeared from time to time in 233 00:12:42,559 --> 00:12:45,240 Speaker 1: his life and had been helpful to him. So when 234 00:12:45,240 --> 00:12:47,600 Speaker 1: he was little, I mean the first angelic encounter that 235 00:12:48,280 --> 00:12:51,440 Speaker 1: is fairly well documented in a number of biographies. So 236 00:12:51,440 --> 00:12:54,800 Speaker 1: when he was about thirteen, he had you know, he 237 00:12:54,840 --> 00:12:57,880 Speaker 1: had been brought up in a very religious upbringing, and 238 00:12:57,920 --> 00:13:00,520 Speaker 1: so he had just finished reading the Bible and he 239 00:13:00,679 --> 00:13:03,360 Speaker 1: was alone in his room. The story sometimes says he 240 00:13:03,520 --> 00:13:05,240 Speaker 1: was out in a field, but he was actually alone 241 00:13:05,280 --> 00:13:08,320 Speaker 1: in his room, and all at once he heard saw 242 00:13:08,360 --> 00:13:10,400 Speaker 1: a light and heard a woman's voice and he thought 243 00:13:10,480 --> 00:13:13,120 Speaker 1: it was his mother, and he looked up and saw 244 00:13:13,160 --> 00:13:15,200 Speaker 1: it wasn't his mother, it was someone else, and he 245 00:13:15,280 --> 00:13:18,320 Speaker 1: saw this angelic presence, and she said, tell me what 246 00:13:18,360 --> 00:13:19,960 Speaker 1: it is you want, so that we may give it 247 00:13:20,000 --> 00:13:22,520 Speaker 1: to you. And he said he wanted to help people, 248 00:13:23,160 --> 00:13:28,400 Speaker 1: especially children and people when they were sick, and she disappeared. 249 00:13:28,440 --> 00:13:31,559 Speaker 1: She smiled and disappeared, and he went to tell his 250 00:13:31,720 --> 00:13:34,040 Speaker 1: mother what he had seen, and I think she probably 251 00:13:34,040 --> 00:13:38,200 Speaker 1: thought it was imagination. But it was right after that 252 00:13:38,200 --> 00:13:40,400 Speaker 1: that he was having a hard time with a spelling lesson, 253 00:13:40,440 --> 00:13:43,679 Speaker 1: and his father, who was not the kindest man, got 254 00:13:43,679 --> 00:13:46,920 Speaker 1: really upset with him, and you basically yelled at him 255 00:13:46,920 --> 00:13:49,880 Speaker 1: and told me better learn his spelling lessonr he was 256 00:13:49,920 --> 00:13:51,720 Speaker 1: going to get in a lot of trouble. And Casey 257 00:13:52,240 --> 00:13:54,559 Speaker 1: was so tired he fell asleep on his spelling book. 258 00:13:55,080 --> 00:13:57,840 Speaker 1: And when his father came back in the room, Casey 259 00:13:57,880 --> 00:14:00,240 Speaker 1: had memorized the contents of the book, and the father 260 00:14:00,320 --> 00:14:02,040 Speaker 1: only had to open the book and turn to any 261 00:14:02,080 --> 00:14:04,480 Speaker 1: page in the book in case he could read verbat 262 00:14:04,559 --> 00:14:07,240 Speaker 1: him every while on that page. Now you know, when 263 00:14:07,280 --> 00:14:09,360 Speaker 1: I first heard that story, I used to get some 264 00:14:09,400 --> 00:14:11,520 Speaker 1: books and I'd sleep on him to see what would happen. 265 00:14:11,559 --> 00:14:15,320 Speaker 1: But other than getting a pain in my neck, any experience, 266 00:14:16,480 --> 00:14:19,480 Speaker 1: but that's how it really all he had the helpers, 267 00:14:19,520 --> 00:14:22,040 Speaker 1: didn't me? He had the helpers he did. Do you 268 00:14:22,120 --> 00:14:27,840 Speaker 1: think he could have done this without the helpers? Well, interesting, 269 00:14:27,960 --> 00:14:30,360 Speaker 1: isn't it? It's an interesting question. I think he would 270 00:14:30,400 --> 00:14:33,000 Speaker 1: suggest that all of us have helpers, and that probably 271 00:14:33,640 --> 00:14:37,520 Speaker 1: we all have a certain potential or capacity, and the 272 00:14:37,640 --> 00:14:41,840 Speaker 1: more we rely on the spiritual forces, the guides who 273 00:14:41,880 --> 00:14:44,880 Speaker 1: would help us, that we can do even more. But 274 00:14:45,320 --> 00:14:46,800 Speaker 1: I think he probably would have been psychic and he 275 00:14:46,800 --> 00:14:49,040 Speaker 1: would have been able to do some things, but it 276 00:14:49,080 --> 00:14:51,520 Speaker 1: was the angelic help he would say that was extremely 277 00:14:52,040 --> 00:14:56,920 Speaker 1: advantageous for him in life. Was he a believer in reincarnation? Kevin? 278 00:14:58,080 --> 00:15:01,200 Speaker 1: He eventually became one. He was not a believer at first. 279 00:15:01,240 --> 00:15:04,840 Speaker 1: In fact, from nineteen oh one when the reading started, 280 00:15:04,880 --> 00:15:09,440 Speaker 1: until nineteen twenty three they were almost exclusively health because 281 00:15:09,480 --> 00:15:12,200 Speaker 1: that's what he was known for. And then in nineteen 282 00:15:12,400 --> 00:15:15,200 Speaker 1: twenty three a printer named Arthur Lammer's had asked for 283 00:15:15,360 --> 00:15:17,320 Speaker 1: a horoscope to see if every case he could do 284 00:15:17,360 --> 00:15:21,360 Speaker 1: an astrological horoscope while giving a reading, and Casey gave 285 00:15:21,400 --> 00:15:23,800 Speaker 1: the horoscope, and during that reading, case he said that 286 00:15:24,240 --> 00:15:27,160 Speaker 1: many of the same patterns that were happening in Lammer's 287 00:15:27,280 --> 00:15:30,800 Speaker 1: life in the present had occurred previously when he had 288 00:15:30,800 --> 00:15:34,480 Speaker 1: been a monk, and that really much was the first 289 00:15:34,520 --> 00:15:38,560 Speaker 1: reference they recognized a reincarnation. Now, when Casey's secretary went 290 00:15:38,600 --> 00:15:41,000 Speaker 1: back and looked through the readings after Casey had died, 291 00:15:41,600 --> 00:15:44,400 Speaker 1: she found references as early as nineteen eleven, but they 292 00:15:44,400 --> 00:15:47,280 Speaker 1: didn't understand what he was talking about. So when he 293 00:15:47,360 --> 00:15:51,400 Speaker 1: had that experience, it kind of troubled him. But the 294 00:15:51,480 --> 00:15:53,680 Speaker 1: readings themselves told him to go back and read the 295 00:15:53,720 --> 00:15:56,480 Speaker 1: Bible from cover to cover with the idea of reincarnation 296 00:15:56,520 --> 00:16:00,320 Speaker 1: in mind, and he found literally dozens of Biblical hells 297 00:16:00,320 --> 00:16:04,680 Speaker 1: that suggest improved reincarnation. Kevin Tadeshi with us of course. 298 00:16:05,000 --> 00:16:09,040 Speaker 1: His websites and the Edgar Casey dot org website are 299 00:16:09,080 --> 00:16:12,240 Speaker 1: linked up at Coast to Coast am dot com. His 300 00:16:12,400 --> 00:16:15,240 Speaker 1: latest book is called Edgar Casey on Angels and the 301 00:16:15,280 --> 00:16:19,080 Speaker 1: Angelic Forces, which we will dive into after the break 302 00:16:19,120 --> 00:16:23,720 Speaker 1: and talk about that. When Casey was doing his readings 303 00:16:23,760 --> 00:16:26,600 Speaker 1: for people, and he had, like you said, a scribe 304 00:16:26,760 --> 00:16:29,760 Speaker 1: who was doing this, he actually then talked in his 305 00:16:29,800 --> 00:16:33,960 Speaker 1: sleep right, well, when he was asleep on the couch, right, 306 00:16:34,040 --> 00:16:36,680 Speaker 1: he would he would give the readings. They're asleep on 307 00:16:36,720 --> 00:16:39,280 Speaker 1: the couch. His wife would be seen next to him. 308 00:16:39,320 --> 00:16:42,920 Speaker 1: She gave him the suggestions generally, and his secretary after 309 00:16:43,000 --> 00:16:45,760 Speaker 1: nineteen twenty three was Gladys Davis. She would write down 310 00:16:45,800 --> 00:16:49,600 Speaker 1: in shorthand everything he said and then later transcribe, Well, 311 00:16:49,680 --> 00:16:51,440 Speaker 1: you know when you think of sleep, though you think 312 00:16:51,520 --> 00:16:54,560 Speaker 1: you know you're knocked out. So he really wasn't knocked out, 313 00:16:54,680 --> 00:16:58,520 Speaker 1: was he Well, it was probably an altered state of consciousness, 314 00:16:58,600 --> 00:17:00,400 Speaker 1: but he described it as you know, going in a 315 00:17:00,520 --> 00:17:03,080 Speaker 1: sleeping That's why they called them to sleeping prophet. I 316 00:17:03,120 --> 00:17:07,639 Speaker 1: guess Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight 317 00:17:07,840 --> 00:17:10,639 Speaker 1: at one am Eastern and go to Coast to Coast 318 00:17:10,640 --> 00:17:12,080 Speaker 1: am dot com for more