DO YOU KNOW ABOUT ENERGY WORK?
....ONLY BEING IN PERSON WITH A PERSON
can you tell about their work....
But you are all TOO afraid and hide
I will let this Adam know what you are doing
ALSO I HAVE 4 NAMES here on NAFPS, I signed up 3 of them last time i was on here
"Energy work" is a load of Nuage gibberish that has nothing to do with Native traditions.
I hope you do contact McLeod. Perhaps he can give you, and all of us, answers to some questions.
I don't see any sign whatsoever that what he does is at all similar to any Native healing tradition. Native healing traditions involve herbal medicine, ceremony, prayer, song, stories, etc. I don't see McLeod doing any of that.
Instead he says he looks at someone's photo, MRI, or X ray and claims he can diagnose or even heal them.
Tell me, Ms Novak, when did Aztecs ever look at an X ray to heal someone? Or Lakota, or Cherokee, or any Native tribe anywhere. What he does is much closer to what many would be psychics, supposed healers, and snake oil salesmen and con artists in Anglo-American and Europeans traditions do.
In fact I don't even know which people McLeod claims to be part of. I didn't see it on his site, or any of the sites promoting him, or even any of the sites criticizing him. Instead he gives a vague claim of being First Nations or Native American, no tribe ever named.
It also seems to be relatively recent he claimed to be Native. On some older promotions it's claimed his family is simply from the suburbs, and they're presented as the most whitebread 'average" Canadian family around.
There's no evidence that McLeod has ever healed anyone.
There is evidence that he's harmed people, that people have delayed or stopped treatment because of him. There's even evidence people have believed they had cancer when they did not, including his most famous "cure", an aging rock star.
If he truly can cure people, then why isn't he among his own alleged First Nations community? Cancer hits us as hard if not worse than others. Poverty, esp in the US, prevents many from getting proper cancer treatment. McLeod is from British Columbia, and the NDNs there and nearby Washington state could sure use his alleged help.
Charging for treatment, letting monetary considerations guide who gets healed and who doesn't, certainly is not part of any Native tradition I ever heard of. Yet McLeod and his parents have become millionaires, by their account.
The only good thing to be said about the McLeods is that they do give a small amount to charity, as their site notes.
Again, in all honesty, I hope you do inform McLeod what we have said. I truly do want to know the answers.