The Miracle Stairs

I’m all packed up and ready to go to the airport, but I wanted to post something for you guys before the trip. Here’s an email I received from a blog member. If any of you guys living in the U.K. are in the market for a psychic surgeon, check him out!

Hello dearest Elisa,

How are you?  I just had a very nice second talk with Erik and Kim.  At the end, I asked Erik whether I could send you the name of a psychic surgeon in the UK.  I wanted to know, as I did not want to disturb you.  Erik told me it was fine, so here is the name of the person.

Peter Langhorn, who is also connected with the Arthur Findlay College in Stanstedt.  When you see his comments on FB, they are so loving and soft.  He works with the spirit surgeon Sir Reginald Watson Jones,

Erik confirmed all the jokes and signs he sent me.  I love to share them with you and the group – although it might take a bit of time writing.  But the text will come for sure!

Lots of love,

Hedwig in Belgium

Sorry we couldn’t have the radio show last night. Kim fell unexpectedly ill at the last minute, and that didn’t give Robert time to meditate as he usually does before channeling. Both of us are going to be out of town next Thursday, so the next show will be on the 15th. Sorry!

Enjoy today’s post!

Me: Okay, the last thing I want to talk about is something called the “miracle staircase” in Santa Fe, New Mexico. These nuns made this chapel, and it had two stories, but for some reason, they forgot to build a staircase to get to the second floor! They must have been smoking the same thing as the Dogon people because I don’t know how they’d get away with that! So they asked the carpenters in the community to help, but everyone said, “No, we can’t help you. The space is too small. There is nothing we can do.”

This was sometime in the 1800s.

Me: Anyway, but then, all of a sudden, this man rides in on a donkey and offers to help them. And he carried absolutely nothing except for some tools. So he built the staircase in 6 months. Oh, first of all, they prayed to St. Joseph, the patron saint of carpentry. I didn’t know that existed. There are probably so many saints. There’s probably one for mufflers, I swear to god!

Robert chuckles.

Me: So this one, St. Joseph, was for carpentry. So this guy came in on a donkey and builds it in 6 months using no nails, no screws, no glue. He didn’t bring in wood for some reason, but it was built from wood that wasn’t even in that region, and it had no central support. Engineers have no idea why, when you step on it, it doesn’t collapse.

Robert: Wow. Erik says it’s real, but I wondering if it was.

Me: So, who built it? Was it St. Joseph?

Robert: Yeah, I’m still wondering how he built it.

Me: Yeah, I want to know that, too!

Erik: It wasn’t St. Joseph, but because of their prayers to him, this guy was pulled in.

Me: Okay, so who built it? Was it an alien? Was it a spirit? Was it some supernatural, paranormal dude?

Erik: There are very wise, very connected people on the planet that we never know about.

Me: Okay.

Erik: They have no ego, and they have no desire to be known. They’re like ghosts. They’re real people, but they’re like ghosts. They come into people’s lives, do things, amazing things and—

Me: So it’s not even an angel?

Erik: No, not in this case.

Dang. That would have been cool.

Erik: There are certain people who you might label as an angel because of what they do while they’re here on Earth. You could classify him like that, but he was also like I was describing earlier: the kind of people who come in, do what they’re going to do, and then they just disappear and you never see them again.

Me: Yeah! He did! And he didn’t even get payment or anything! He just up and left. Okay, so how did he do it?

(Long pause)

Robert: He’s showing it to me, so I’m trying to figure out how to word it.

Erik: Mom, think of it on a molecular level. Human beings are starting to understand how to create super strong materials based on how you lay the chemistry, like the elements latch together. Well, you can do that on a larger scale, too, with certain kinds of materials. This particular kind of wood that he used, he’s had experience with it in the past. It’s very strong, but this wood doesn’t exist in that same state now.

Me: Is the tree extinct?

Erik: It’s just changed.

Me: Changed. Okay. Where did he get it if it wasn’t from that region? He didn’t pack it on his donkey.

Robert: Right!

Me: Apparently. I don’t know. Maybe he did. You can tell me, Erik.

(Pause)

Robert: Oh! I’m sorry. This is why it makes sense now.

Erik: There are people on the planet who can move objects with their minds. That’s been documented.

Me: Oh, yeah!

Erik: There are people who talk to dead people.

Me: Like you!

Robert: Like me!

Erik: There are people who heal people. There are also people who can change matter and make it take on a state that it wouldn’t ordinarily have.

Me: Okay.

Erik: But if you look at it under a microscope, you wouldn’t see any difference from other material.

Me: Interesting.

Erik: Something in the way that material—and for me it’s very easy because when I look at it, I see its energy—but physically, when you look at it on an atomic level, it looks the same.

Me: So energetically, it’s different, but physically, it’s not.

Erik: Right.

Robert: He shows it to me like you take a piece of wood, and you see how it’s laid, and then you take another piece of wood that’s the same as what was used to build that staircase, and it lays exactly the same, but if you could see the energy or the aura of it, its aura is different. It’s almost like steel.

Me: Ah!

Robert: So it can hold things up, and it can last a whole lot longer.

Erik: It has to be connected in a certain way like when I talked about how elements were laid together in a certain way to create something stronger. When you put all those pieces of wood together in a certain fashion, they become super strong without the need for connecting materials like nails.

Me: Wow.

Erik: It’s kind of like a super strong Jenga.

Robert laughs.

Me: Wow, interesting.

I’m going to have to work on my vocabulary. Seriously.

Me: So, basically, he worked with the energy. He was able to work with the energy to make it strong and make everything adhere without nails, screws or glue.

Erik: Yeah.

Me: How did it stay up without a central support?

Robert: I don’t think I’m doing it justice with the way I’m describing it.

Erik: It had to do with how he laid it.

Robert: I don’t understand that. To me, when I see it, I see a staircase with pieces of wood floating in the air.

Me: It twirls. It curves.

I’m trying to convey that it’s a spiral staircase. Jeez.

Robert: So it has a central part with wood going around it like this?

He twirls his finger around his vertical hand.

Me: I don’t know. I don’t think it has a central support like a rod or anything.

Robert: No, I mean how the wood was laid on top of each other.

Me: Oh, okay.

Robert: When you look at it from one perspective, it looks like it has a central support, but it doesn’t.

Erik: It’s just the wood, the way it’s laid. I don’t know how to describe it any other way except it’s how he put the wood together, the way he laid it, the angles he chose, the way the wood was cut and then, of course, the way the wood’s energy was manipulated.

Me: So did he use wood from the region but change it so that it looked like it wasn’t from that region?

Erik: It was wood from the region. Not only did he change it energetically, but he treated it in a certain way, too. He spread something on it.

Me: What do you mean?

Erik: He used a resin, like a chemical.

Me: Oh, okay. And it also had 33 steps, and that’s how many years Jesus lived, apparently, you know? Jesus already told us he didn’t die on the cross so he lived longer than 33 years, but is that just a coincidence or did that have some meaning?

Erik: It was meant to honor the religion of the nuns.

Me: So it was purposeful?

Erik: It was purposeful, but it was also coincidental because it was the exact number of steps needed. The nuns didn’t know that that was going to be the case, but it was.

Me: No. Anything else about the “miracle staircase” before we close?

Erik: That’s all I got on that.

Me: That’s all you got? All right! Well, thank you, Erik and thank you, Robert!

Robert: You’re welcome.

Me: I love you guys.

Robert: Love you, too.

Erik: Bye, Mom.

He blows me a kiss. Sweet boy.

Me: Muah to both of you guys!

Check out this additional information about these stairs HERE.

Loretto_Chapel

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Elisa Medhus


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