TEXT OF READING 2046-2 M ADULT

This Psychic Reading given by Edgar Cayce at his home on Arctic Crescent, Virginia Beach, Va., this 7th day of December, 1939, in accordance with request made by the wife, Mrs. [1833], Associate Member of the Ass''n for Research & Enlightenment, Inc., through Mrs. [1602].

P R E S E N T

Edgar Cayce; Gertrude Cayce, Conductor; Gladys Davis, Steno.

R E A D I N G

Neurological Time of Reading Hosp., Room 711, 12:00 to 12:15 Noon - Eastern Standard Time. 168th St. & Ft. Washington Ave., New York City.

1. GC: You will give a detailed diagnosis of the conditions you find in this body at this time, giving the cause of the existing conditions, and suggestions for help and relief for this body. You will answer the questions that have been submitted, as I ask them:

2. EC: Yes, we have the body, [2046]; this we have had before.

3. We find that conditions have changed somewhat from that formerly indicated, or when we had this before.

4. There have been further indications of the leakage of the arterial circulation, causing greater distress to the activities of the body.

5. This has produced the conditions affecting the reaction more of the nerve system; as well as the nominal reaction to the general nerve forces of the digestive system, or that which has caused the condition through the stomach - the conditions of contraction.

6. All of these, as we find - as was indicated from the first - are from the lack of sufficient coagulation in the blood stream to prevent the breaking of tissue through the walls of the circulation.

7. And if there had been the CLOSER adherence to those suggestions as indicated, we might have bad a more normal and a better reaction.

8. As for those activities in the present of the body - we find that the better would be the administering of those influences in the circulation to cause better coagulation through the arterial circulation.

9. Unless this is properly adjusted, to be sure, there may be expected to be caused more temperature, more irregularity of the heart's activity.

10. But those injections that would cause the better

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coagulation through the circulatory forces, as we find, offer the better hope for bettered conditions.

11. Ready for questions.

12. (Q) What is condition of heart? (A) This, as may be indicated, is the result - or the irregularity is the result of the lack of fullness of the circulation through the system; and within itself - unless those influences are administered as to cause a too quick or a too full reaction - it may carry on to bring bettered conditions.

13. (Q) Lungs? (A) Here we find the result as might be expected from leakages direct from those areas where thinned walls of blood carriers or agents cause the hemorrhage.

14. (Q) Kidneys? (A) Here we find the effect shown of the system's attempt to carry a slowed or excess of activities of its own secretion; and are not diseased in themselves.

15. (Q) Blood pressure? (A) This varies - that is, it is excessive, and then changes rapidly, because of the very filling of the walls of the blood stream.

16. (Q) Blood vessels? (A) As indicated, through the very thinning of these walls, quite a variation is caused as to the ability of the system to keep a normal balance through same.

17. (Q) What alterations are to be found in the optic apparatus and pathways? (A) There is the effect of those conditions, in that a seepage through a thinned wall causes the greater amount of flow at times to come through these areas.

18. (Q) The auditory organs and their central pathways? (A) Pressures, or a thumping, or a heavy pressure upon same.

19. (Q) Are there any abnormalities in the rhinencephalon; and if so, how are they to be interpreted? (Q) In the manner as indicated, as to that which is causing the conditions - which has produced and does produce the hot and cold sensations, as well as the general pressures upon the nerve system, through reactions to both the sympathetic and cerebrospinal nerves.

20. (Q) What are the conditions of the blood, the spinal fluids, and the urine? (A) As indicated from the activity of each of these upon the general system. These as we find are in order with those conditions which arise form such conditions in the walls of the circulatory system.

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21. (Q) What is the conditions of the right pupillary reflex? (A) This has changed since - because the condition has progressed, and has made more of contraction - owing to the pressures of same upon the nerve centers and ganglia from which such portions receive their impulse for activity. Hence less ability of normal movement.

22. (Q) The left pupillary reflex? (A) The same, though here there has been a dilation, rather than the contraction as in the other.

23. (Q) Right bicep reflex? (A) All of these indications may be seen from the other conditions as outlined, and there needs to be the use of such properties as indicated. There is needed, then, the injection of that effluvium in the blood as would cause better coagulation; not sufficient that it would so slow the circulation as to cause heart block, but that the walls may be stimulated by the flow of such past same in its general circulation.

24. (Q) The left bicep reflex? (A) The effects to all of these portions are in keeping with those things we have indicated. Do that, then, as we have indicated, for the better reaction; though the condition has progressed much farther to be reckoned with, than had it been used in the manner first indicated.

25. We are through for the present. Two copies to Mrs. [1833] - Air-Mail Special, through Mrs. [1602] Copy to Ass'n file s'n file