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I blew $700 on a famous psychic ( part 1 )

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JimDBB

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Jan 27, 2003, 12:43:58 AM1/27/03
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Crystal bawl: I blew $700 on a famous psychic whose best talent was
predicting my gullibility.

By Janet McDonald. Jan. 8, 2003

Despite what you're about to read, I am arguably not a complete
idiot. I have degrees from three Ivy League schools in French
literature, journalism and law. I've authored books. Three of them,
to be exact. OK, so they're not "Anna Karenina" or "The Bluest Eye"
or "The Years" but still, they're published and are on display atop
my mother's dresser drawer, between the Eiffel Tower snow globe and
the photo of me grinning next to a life-size cardboard replica of
Bill Clinton.

And I'm not some gullible white-bread girl from Kansas. I'm
streetwise, born and bred in a Brooklyn housing project.

So I wonder, how did an aging and undoubtedly bleached blonde with a
crystal ball and the smoky voice of a barroom broad make a loser of
a lawyer and a punk of a project girl -- and walk off with 700 of
my hard-earned dollars?

I know exactly what went wrong; I'm an idiot.

My first error was to mistake CNN's Larry King for a journalist.
King's universe of newsworthy interviewees consists mostly of
actresses and babes who look like actresses, real actors and hunky
inspirational speakers who look like actors, and real models and
disfigured beauties made to look, after expensive reconstructive
surgery, like models. And there are the famous psychics.

My second error was to jot down the name of famous psychic and
regular "Larry King Live" guest Sylvia Browne, as I watched her
perform. I don't believe in psychics. Really. But I was impressed
by this one. I got chills watching her, hearing the gasps, squeals
and sobs of callers as she shocked and comforted them with precise
descriptions of their dearly departed loved ones. I'd seen Sylvia
Browne solve mysteries and identify callers‚ spirit guides and
guardian angels, and confidently assure everyone that spouse,
lover, dad, mom, son, daughter, sister, brother, grandparent,
poodle was in heaven and doing great.

Something made me believe against reason that Sylvia Browne might
give me the answers to questions that were troubling me. How could
Sept. 11 have happened? Should I stay in Paris or move to New York,
which in its sudden noble vulnerability seemed to be calling me
home? Should I continue practicing law or would my fledgling
writing career save me from a life of contract-churning drudgery?

With a mixture of curiosity, hope and embarrassment I went to
Browne's Web site, read up on the famous psychic and swallowed so
hard at the cost of a reading that I nearly choked ($750 for an
in-person reading with Sylvia; those on a tight budget could
consult her by telephone for $700 or talk with her presumably
half-gifted son for half-price, $350). I made an appointment to
have a telephone consultation, for which I had to pay in advance by
credit card.

Then I was dogged by doubts and miserly misgivings, exacerbated by
the reactions of friends, a group of overeducated, unevolved cynics
with faint, dingy auras. They laughed at my enthusiasm for the
famous psychic and even questioned the origin of the phone calls to
the King show, smirking that the callers all seemed to be women
from somewhere in Nova Scotia. But it's CNN, I protested, and
they'd check for that kind of thing. Right?

"Omigod! Omigod! How'd you know that?" callers enthused.

"Honey, I'm a psychic," she'd answer time and again in that
gravelly, cocky voice. I was taken. And how.

I'd been told the night before by Browne's corporation scheduler
that Sylvia would call, tell me spontaneously about myself and my
life, and then respond to questions. So I was sitting by the phone
with my list of questions, sweating with anticipation, when the
phone rang. On the other end was The Voice.

"I discovered you on 'Larry King Live' two years ago," I said
breathlessly.

"Oh yeah, I've been on there five, six times. Janet, how are you
doing with headaches and stomach and lower back?"

I rarely get headaches, have a steel trap for a stomach and go to
the gym several times a week. But I searched for something, eager
to get my reading off to a good start.

"Umm, OK, I had been having lower back pain, um ... in the past."

"I'd start doing some stomach crunches on the bed. Then I would
really start trying to take some lecithin."

"OK," I said, writing down my instructions. It occurred to me that
in our high-stress, sedentary world most people had headaches,
stomachaches and lower back pain. But she was probably warming up
before zeroing in on me specifically.

"L-E-C-I-T-H-I-N," said the psychic.

Why was she spelling it? Didn't she know that I was a spelling
champion all through school?

She went on generically about protein and blood sugar and fatigue.
I stared at the clock and my list of questions. She suggested I eat
chicken and fish. I already did, and often.

Next page | Black twins with a hat store in the King's Court.
Right.


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Comments:
: This is an article I got off the internet, Boris.
: -----------------------------------------
: Crystal bawl: I blew $700 on a famous psychic whose best talent was
: predicting my gullibility.
: By Janet McDonald. Jan. 8, 2003

: Despite what you're about to read, I am arguably not a complete
: idiot. I have degrees from three Ivy League schools in French
: literature, journalism and law. I've authored books. Three of them,
: to be exact. OK, so they're not "Anna Karenina" or "The Bluest Eye"
: or "The Years" but still, they're published and are on display atop
: my mother's dresser drawer, between the Eiffel Tower snow globe and
: the photo of me grinning next to a life-size cardboard replica of
: Bill Clinton.

: And I'm not some gullible white-bread girl from Kansas. I'm
: streetwise, born and bred in a Brooklyn housing project.

: So I wonder, how did an aging and undoubtedly bleached blonde with a
: crystal ball and the smoky voice of a barroom broad make a loser of
: a lawyer and a punk of a project girl -- and walk off with 700 of
: my hard-earned dollars?

: I know exactly what went wrong; I'm an idiot.

: My first error was to mistake CNN's Larry King for a journalist.
: King's universe of newsworthy interviewees consists mostly of
: actresses and babes who look like actresses, real actors and hunky
: inspirational speakers who look like actors, and real models and
: disfigured beauties made to look, after expensive reconstructive
: surgery, like models. And there are the famous psychics.

: My second error was to jot down the name of famous psychic and
: regular "Larry King Live" guest Sylvia Browne, as I watched her
: perform. I don't believe in psychics. Really. But I was impressed
: by this one. I got chills watching her, hearing the gasps, squeals
: and sobs of callers as she shocked and comforted them with precise
: descriptions of their dearly departed loved ones. I'd seen Sylvia
: Browne solve mysteries and identify callers‚ spirit guides and
: guardian angels, and confidently assure everyone that spouse,
: lover, dad, mom, son, daughter, sister, brother, grandparent,
: poodle was in heaven and doing great.

: Something made me believe against reason that Sylvia Browne might
: give me the answers to questions that were troubling me. How could
: Sept. 11 have happened? Should I stay in Paris or move to New York,
: which in its sudden noble vulnerability seemed to be calling me
: home? Should I continue practicing law or would my fledgling
: writing career save me from a life of contract-churning drudgery?

: With a mixture of curiosity, hope and embarrassment I went to
: Browne's Web site, read up on the famous psychic and swallowed so
: hard at the cost of a reading that I nearly choked ($750 for an
: in-person reading with Sylvia; those on a tight budget could
: consult her by telephone for $700 or talk with her presumably
: half-gifted son for half-price, $350). I made an appointment to
: have a telephone consultation, for which I had to pay in advance by
: credit card.

: Then I was dogged by doubts and miserly misgivings, exacerbated by
: the reactions of friends, a group of overeducated, unevolved cynics
: with faint, dingy auras. They laughed at my enthusiasm for the
: famous psychic and even questioned the origin of the phone calls to
: the King show, smirking that the callers all seemed to be women
: from somewhere in Nova Scotia. But it's CNN, I protested, and
: they'd check for that kind of thing. Right?

: "Omigod! Omigod! How'd you know that?" callers enthused.

: "Honey, I'm a psychic," she'd answer time and again in that
: gravelly, cocky voice. I was taken. And how.

: I'd been told the night before by Browne's corporation scheduler
: that Sylvia would call, tell me spontaneously about myself and my
: life, and then respond to questions. So I was sitting by the phone
: with my list of questions, sweating with anticipation, when the
: phone rang. On the other end was The Voice.

: "I discovered you on 'Larry King Live' two years ago," I said
: breathlessly.

: "Oh yeah, I've been on there five, six times. Janet, how are you
: doing with headaches and stomach and lower back?"

: I rarely get headaches, have a steel trap for a stomach and go to
: the gym several times a week. But I searched for something, eager
: to get my reading off to a good start.

: "Umm, OK, I had been having lower back pain, um ... in the past."

: "I'd start doing some stomach crunches on the bed. Then I would
: really start trying to take some lecithin."

: "OK," I said, writing down my instructions. It occurred to me that
: in our high-stress, sedentary world most people had headaches,
: stomachaches and lower back pain. But she was probably warming up
: before zeroing in on me specifically.

: "L-E-C-I-T-H-I-N," said the psychic.

: Why was she spelling it? Didn't she know that I was a spelling
: champion all through school?

: She went on generically about protein and blood sugar and fatigue.
: I stared at the clock and my list of questions. She suggested I eat
: chicken and fish. I already did, and often.

:


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