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Case
Histories from Ifa...
Case 2:
A dear friend who is very ill
The names have been changed to
respect the privacy of the individuals.
It would be very
easy to present only those case histories with a successful conclusion
regarding those who have come to Ifa for help and guidance. Yet, it would
not be totally true. While divination, performed by a competent Babalawo,
whose world view matches your own, will always be accurate, it will not
always be able to provide solutions that please the client.or, more important,
that the client wishes to follow. The following is one such example..
It was early one
morning when I received a call from a long time client Jane. "I have a
favor to ask", she began, "I would like you to read an old a dear friend
of mine who is very ill." Of course, I agreed, and told her to have her
friend call me for an appointment. Strangely, it was Jane who called back
several minutes later to ask if I could see her friend at 1:00 PM that
day. Again, I agreed, but was somewhat puzzled by why the woman herself
had not called, as well as to why Joan, an internationally famous and
successful business woman was making the effort for her. I figured I would
find out when the woman showed up.
At 1:00PM I buzzed
an elegant, fashionably dressed, woman into my office. She introduced
herself, and it was quite easy to see she was exceptionally ill at ease
in what, to her, was a strange and unfamiliar setting. I attempted to
put her at ease by asking about her friendship with my client. It turned
out they had been friends since childhood, and while their lives had taken
widely diverse paths, their friendship had remained intact. My client
had built one of the most successful high fashion businesses in the United
States, regularly was featured in National Magazines, traveled constantly
with names that were genuinely part of the Jet Set. Her friend, who sat
quietly on the far side of my desk, had married a college sweetheart,
moved East, and been a dutiful wife and mother to her daughter, while
her husbands career and fame skyrocketed. He had reached international
prominence in the field of Law, and was a powerful man in government.
What then was the issue she had come to discuss?
With candor and
firmness, she described to me how, three years before, she had had a malignant
tumor removed from her breast. This was followed by chemotherapy and radiation.
All seemed well until about two years later. Then, suddenly, the cancer
reappeared. More Chemotherapy was tried, but the cancer remained. She
was scheduled for a bone marrow transplant in two months which was, by
her own account (as well as the available modalities 8 years ago) the
"last resort" or hope for stemming the inexorable progress of her disease.
That, however, was NOT what she
was concerned with!
What she was concerned
with, was her 24 year old daughter, a beautiful, talented, and brilliant
graduate with honors from American university, who had been diagnosed
two years before with a malignancy of her brain! The mother haltingly
recounted the radiation, the experimental proton therapy, the chemotherapy
etc. that the daughter had undergone. As if to underline her husband and
her commitment to the daughter, she explained that they had spent over
1 million dollars over and above the 80% of the major medical policy the
Husband's firm provided. The daughter was currently in a period of remission,
but the prognosis was bleak. Could I help?
Quietly, I began to divine.
Within a few moments
it became clear. There was something that could be done for the mother.
There was nothing I could do for her daughter.
Then, as now, when
confronted by that rare situation where I am unable to find a solution,
I wonder "why?" Is it because I have not yet learned enough? Or, is it
simply that sometimes, when problems or issues are brought to us, they
have progressed too far... accumulated too much negative energy, to be
undone. Twenty seven years of devoting myself to studying Ifa, I begin
to think both answers are true.
At any rate, I
realized how badly the mother would take this. Still, as a Babalawo, it
is my duty to tell the client what "is", not what they would "like" to
hear. So, I explained to the mother that it was quite clear to me that
an intricate cleansing ceremony would allow her to maximize the bone marrow
transplant and be well.BUT, there was nothing that I could offer for the
daughter.
Her eyes filled
with tears, and she steadied herself long enough to ask briefly about
what the ceremony would entail. Then, thanking me for my time and help,
she said she would "think about it" and get back to me.
It was less than
an hour later when my Client Jane called to see how the reading went.
When I described the alternatives to her she was both sad and excited.
Sad for the woman's daughter, but elated that her friend could live a
long and productive life. But Joan, I interrupted, "she is never going
to go ahead with it." "What do you mean?." Joan said " It will make her
well, why do you say she won't do it?" "Because", I replied, "she and
her husband have so much invested, so much time, love, behavior etc. in
trying to save their daughter, that, if she sees that she could get better,
and the daughter can not, she would spend the rest of her life berating
herself for not seeking our kind of help sooner, when it could still have
saved the child." "Oh Philip, that would be so tragic," Jane replied.
"Jane, I promise you she would rather die believing they did everything
possible for the child, than wondering if they could have done something
different to save her."
The woman never
called or returned. A year later I saw the obituary for her daughter.
Six months after that I saw the needless obituary for the mother.
Sometimes this is a hard profession...
Blessings!...
Philip Neimark
Oluwo
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