Confessions of an Intuitive
By Sue Frederick
When I work with clients, I see their gifts and potentials and what they came here to do. I also see their departed
loved ones, who come to the session to offer guidance. This information comes to me as photographic images, words, and strong
feelings that I transmit directly to my clients.
I was born in New Orleans to a French Cajun
mother who came from a long line of women with “the gift.” I inherited a double dose of telepathy, clairvoyance
and precognition from her and her mother, and on back through generations of Degas women.
These
unusual gifts were nurtured by the mysterious city of my childhood. In the haunted alleys of the French Quarter, most everybody
gives respect to the “unseen” world in some form or other: voodoo, Catholicism, psychics, vampires, Mardi Gras.
My early years were flavored with this spicy magic, from my Grandpa’s stories of the swirling Mississippi River to the
unforgettable images I absorbed in the dark recesses of Crescent City life. I thrived on the rhythms of my crazy Cajun ancestors.
And, like them, I heard other people’s thoughts and had vivid dreams of events that would happen in the future.
My psychic gift is most powerful now that I use it to help others. But it took nearly 55 years to embrace this ability to
see the unseen world, and to learn what it had to teach--rather than being ashamed or afraid of it.
One
of my strongest experiences in confirming the power of the unseen realm began in 1978, when I met and married a fellow mountaineer,
Paul Frederick. We were crazy in love and planning a family when, at only 35 years old, he was diagnosed with colon cancer
and given two weeks to live. From the moment of his diagnosis, we were determined to overcome it.
We explored conventional and alternative healing methods, and quickly became immersed in energy work, visualization, herbal
medicine and Native American medicine. Paul was part Cherokee, so his mother provided us with books and healers from the Native
American tradition. She got us an audience with a famous Sioux healer, Chief Fools Crow.
Over the next few months,
as Paul’s health deteriorated, I experienced many extraordinary other-realm experiences with him. Chief Fools Crow became
Paul’s constant dream companion. Paul awoke each morning with a new story to report about something Fools Crow had taught
him the night before. The most dramatic was Paul’s sudden ability to speak Lakota, the language of the Sioux.
In the last few weeks before he died, Paul woke up singing a Lakota death song every morning. He said Fools Crow taught
him two songs--one to deal with the pain and one to help him die. When the doctors heard this strange singing, they thought
he was either speaking in “tongues” or was delirious, and they reported this in his medical charts. In college,
I had studied Native American history and was very familiar with the language of Lakota. I knew exactly what he was singing.
On a rainy summer day in July 1980, Paul slipped into a coma. For nearly 24 hours, the accumulated stress of the
past year washed over me and, eventually, I fell asleep on the floor. As soon as I dozed off, Paul appeared in front of me.
He was smiling and quite happy. He touched my arm and said, “Don’t worry. I’m free. But what are you waiting
for? You said I could die in your arms.”
I awoke with a jolt and cleared everyone out of
the room. Paul’s mother and I stood on either side of him. We rubbed his arms and legs and told him it was okay to go
now--that we wanted him to be free. We told him to leave his body and fly out into the soothing summer rain storm.
As soon as we spoke those words, Paul’s breathing changed. He took one long peaceful sigh, and his spirit left
his body. I saw it leave as clearly as you can see your hand in front of your face. It was an image I’ll never forget.
It was Paul’s gift to me.
I could never again doubt the spirit world or my ability to see
it. That final moment was a confirmation of what I was here to do. I realized for the first time that we are all in charge
of how and when we die – even how and when we take our last breaths. And I knew with every cell in my body, that death
was only a passage of the spirit into the unseen realms.
A few years later, my best childhood
girlfriend died after a two-year bout with Leukemia, and my father died one month after being diagnosed with lung cancer.
Though I wasn’t able to be with either of them when they died, they both appeared and spoke to me at the moment of crossing
over. By this time, I was clear beyond all doubt that we are spiritual beings having a human experience – rather than
the other way around.
Today, I’m abundantly grateful for my work , which is my passion.
My intuitive gifts are finally out of the closet, and I’m freely able to share them with others. The images and dreams
that have always guided me are now guiding others through this work. Here are three ways to open yourself up to your
own intuitive guidance:
1. Meditate everyday. The practice of meditation quiets the chatter
of the mind and connects us to our divinity. It puts us in the realm where our departed loved ones exist and opens our intuitive
pathways of communication.
2. Ask for dream guidance. Before falling asleep, ask to have a dream
that connects you to your departed loved one. Keep a journal by your bed and write your dreams as soon as you wake-up.
3. Spend time around water. Lakes, streams, oceans, pools and even bathtubs open us up to receiving guidance from
the other realms. Water loosens our grip on “reality” and relaxes us into a receptive state – which is how
we must feel to get guidance and answers.
Intuitive Sue Frederick offers sessions to help
you connect to your life's mission and to download guidance from your departed loved one. To schedule a phone session click here...