The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, June 08, 1978, Page Page 5, Image 5

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Psychic? devine being/' Lee said. "Some call it Yahweh, some call it God, whatever you want to call it. But, it is a divine influence, a divine in telligence. I don't see it as a personage." Although Dr. Lee claims she rarely has difficulty with her advanced powers, "there are times when anybody using paranormal senses has a difficulty. In order to have full control of your paranormal senses you have to be in what we call 'in balance.' And that balance consists of the mental, the emotional, the physical and the spiritual... You have to be able to step out of yourself." The ultimate "stepping out" was experienced by Lee when she was declared clinically dead at the age of 18. Temporarily released from earthly bonds and relieved of what she calls the tremendous weight of the human body, Leestr addled the abyss between life and death. "It was a very euphoric feeling. It is the most fabulous feeling I have ever experienced in my life. I experienced total freedom from my body ? the freedom of being able to go wherever my thoughts wnulrl talri* mp " LIKE OTHERS who have flirted with death's threshold, Lee has nothing but praise for the occurrence. She described the colors as unbelievably brilliant and the music as breathtaking. An ad mitted devotee of Johann Strauss waltzes, she said the "deathly" sounds made Strauss outputs "sound like acid rock." Concerning life and its problems in the earthly sphere, the psychic criticized psychologists and social workers for attacking personal crises at the wrong level. Having worked with case-hardened maladjusted youths and drug addicts of all ages, Lee said she believes conventional thinking and conventional therapy is off-base. "Many bad habits and problems m iim wm ; Capolin, pRQfessionals M Aimienne Vk IB Call or c !| to make app | phone: 1 1 Location: Ri 1 men's Styl< Women's S ?>RyCuts4 i :! mon.-fRi. 9:00 k t 3 are not solved," she explained, ''because they (psychologists, therapists, etc.) attack the conscious mind. What you have to do is bypass the conscious mind... You (the patient) have to get in an altered state of consciousness, which is what we call the alpha state." Bypassing the conscious in order to reach the neglected subconscious is the key to many mysteries and powers, Lee noted. Once, mankind had much greater paranormal abilities, she said, but a process of attrition caused by increasing emphasis on reason and intellect has caused great atrophy of subconscious powers. "THE REASON we don't have Mictu vpaiaiiuimai yuwcis; WJ U1V i fore is that because through technology, through advancement, through scientific research, we started using the intellect. In effect, we have been told 'If you can't feel it, if you can't taste it, if you can't touch it, then it doesn't exist.' "As we grow in the years ahead we'll be able to explain more how these things work. But, that doesn't discount the fact that they are facts ? that they do work." Chastizing U.S. neglect and scorn of paranormal phenomena, Lee admonishes, "I really think 1A. I # A n s iime ior America to wake up and know that there is something very, very important here in parapsychology." Adding emphasis to her warning, Lee said, "the Russians are using the paranormal. They will annihilate us if we don't wake up." The Soviets train teams of thoughttransmission senders and receivers, she remarked, and the inherent evil of this weaponry is, "There is no limit to thought ? this to flio ilonrta" v?.. ?J ! A *" w?v uaugu. x uu etui intercept thoughts, but you can't stop them. "THEY (RUSSIANS) can ina Styles | in hamstylinq : :ki &6BORah ; I ,ume By gn ointments. a '77-7018 1 issell house | SS 9.00 I ;tyles 10.00 1 .5? J A.m.-6:00 p.m. i| filtrate any country they want to. They can send images without the aid of cameras or recorders ? without the aid of anything. The truth is that our country is not willing to spend the dollars to in vestigate, where Russia's ^willing to. Russia knovfs they have something/' 1 (Trr, \ ^ / uSs Thurs Eggplant 1 r-i rv t r rv ** i OCI VCU W I til SI I wine, and Fre Spaghetti served with h 1^. "w -w wv for evenin rsTi S B( j FreeL j witl" g ?1W?H ] | . (offer ? While attacking America's closed-mindedness, Lee admits to being a skeptic herself. -"I'm a skeptic. I really am. And this is why I got as involved in this as I did, because I was skeptical enough to say if I've (tot th?u? abilities, what kind of positive way can I use them." H I Capri 3 Italia Harden St. TIM)-' day Specia ^ m *tu *"V >r 'armesian ftg.&o de order of spaghetti, Itc nch bread. w/White Clam Sa at garlic bread. cials available g meal only 5-10 ] mSSSSSS^SSSSSSmmiSSSSSSSSSSm UFF1 sat the Heat with ( argeLeuM iL _ _ I r I rne purcnase or any on f's Famous pod June 8-14 with coi / miUTORV Rgnrr-ALii Refrigerators 2 cu. ft. $8 per mo. Columbia 1201 Percival Rd. 782-4590 's r 11 a) 1 ilian salad, uce $2.75 p.m. jfsm s i a ^ , 1 | I ? i Mae e e of I i Stubs I 629 Main j