Intuitive DR at IMEC!
Dr Tev follows her intuition and attends the International Mandela Effect Conference 2024! This is one OPEN MINDED physician! And so amazing to meet such a rare person at an event like this. We really have stepped into a new timeline and a golden new age.
Transcript
We are the voices of quantumhealers.com. Inspiring healing every day for everyday people.
Candace Craw-Goldman
All right, hi everyone. It’s Candace Craw-Goldman from QuantumHealers.com. I just met TEV.
Dr. Tev
Hi there, Hi I’m Tev.
Candace Craw-Goldman
She’s one of the attendees here at the Mandela Effect. And were you one of the ones that had a special story about how you got here?
Dr. Tev
I do. I do.
Candace Craw-Goldman
Would you mind sharing that? And I’m gonna come out of the I’m gonna come out of the camera and just hold the mic for you. I’ll hold it. I’ll hold it for you.
Dr. Tev
I had no idea about this conference. I had a session with Miss Cynthia Sue Larson several years ago, like, I think four, five years ago, probably, I don’t know by what miracle she remembered me, because I hadn’t had any contact with her, but she sent me an email a couple of months ago. I didn’t see the email. It was buried in my personal email under 20,000 others, anyway, didn’t see it. So about three or four days ago, I was meditating, and then I got up and I just had this thought, go check your email and search for Cynthia Sue Larson. I was like, why? You know? I was like, okay, whatever. I’ll do it. I won’t question it. So I went, I put her name, and I searched for it, and there was an email that was sent at the end of September, and I opened it up, it’s like, Hey, I know this is close to where you live. I was like, wow, she remembers where I live, couple hours from here, there’s going to be the Mandela Effect conference. So I was like, Oh my goodness. So it was funny, because it was just two days before the conference, so the conference hadn’t passed yet, so last second, you know, here, got the tickets, and here I am. And, yeah, my sister came with me. So it’s pretty, pretty exciting. Sorry.
Candace Craw-Goldman
So when you, when you followed your intuition like that, is that something that you do all the time?
Dr. Tev
I’m not cognizant of when I’m doing it, but I believe I do it more often than not so but sometimes serendipitous things have the most fruitful outcomes, I think, in life.
Candace Craw-Goldman
So, you’ve been here now and well, what do you think so far? Have you figured out kind of why your intuition brought you here?
Dr. Tev
I don’t know yet, but I think it will come to me. I have a very scientific background, and I’m a physician, so you know, we’re taught to think very differently, but I’ve always been very open minded, and quantum physics has also always been an interesting field to me, so getting to see a different perspective on everything is very refreshing and different and painful and enjoyable all at the same time.
Candace Craw-Goldman
You know, this is kind of crazy, because, again, like, there’s my talk. It’s being set up for here after lunch. I haven’t even done my talk yet, and I basically there’s a point in my talk where I’m like, how open minded is your doctor? I actually say that.
Dr. Tev
That’s funny,
Candace Craw-Goldman
Because I’m sorry to sound like this, but there’s not many of you out there.
Dr. Tev
There aren’t. No, there aren’t. I think the problem with that is sometimes we forget that a human is a whole. It’s not an organ system. A human is not just an organ system. Or you have to treat them as a whole, and that’s the mind, body, and soul connection, you know, and you have to give them more than just a script, sometimes a touch, or your attention, your time, and a little bit of your heart. I think it’s what true healing is about, and I’m a huge, huge advocate for that. So we have a lot to learn.
Candace Craw-Goldman
You’re special being here now, I have found that their nurses are far more likely to be open minded to this sort of thing, and that doctors it’s been the hardest to talk to about any of this stuff, any of it at all.
Dr. Tev
I could see that because, from a from a very early on in a physician’s career, you know, you’re taught about boundaries. You’re taught about, you know, things like that that will also protect you, and nurses have more contact with patients. You know, nurses, you know, historically now, you know, they have more physical contact. You know, doctor might come, let’s say, at the hospital, the doctor might come round for five minutes, but the nurse there for 12 hours. You know, so. So I think that there’s that, that component. But also I think. The medical community, there is an overall fear of being different or being perceived differently, but I, of course, practice by the newest medical guidelines. I always try to stay up to date. I practice medicine off of medical guidelines, but I don’t think there’s anything wrong with adding a human touch to that, adding a little consciousness, a little bit of your soul, to that. I don’t think there’s anything wrong as long as you are following the rules, you know. So I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that. I think you can still be a good doctor, practice modern medicine while being a human being at the same time, which I think some of us miss that mark quite often.
Candace Craw-Goldman
Do you ever, do you ever find it hard to accept information from your own patients? What I find it really interesting is there’s a prevailing and you know, attitude out there a lot of times that unless you’re a physician, you shouldn’t have an opinion. They shouldn’t be, you shouldn’t be doing much research on your own. And I always thought, well, that’s that seems silly. It’s so easy to do some kinds of research now, and why shouldn’t people look into information?
Dr. Tev
And I encourage it, you know, I encourage patients to do their own research, but I will also review it. I don’t dismiss things, no matter how far out it sounds. I will review it and I will look at it, but, you know, I might not agree with them, and I’ll tell you, I’m very open minded, but I may not necessarily agree. Or I’ll say, hey, there’s not enough actual scientific research on this for me to recommend this to you, you know, but I could see where this is not hurting you in any way. So I’m very open minded when it comes to that. But I think the biggest disservice we can do is break that trust between a patient physician and relationship, because that trust is vital in their healing process. And if you say, I don’t want to listen to it, I don’t want to hear it. I don’t care what you have to say. I don’t care where you looked it up, you’ve immediately shattered that trust that’s already there, and I think that needs to change. I may not agree with what they’re bringing me. I may say, hey, this might actually hurt you, you know. But there’s nothing wrong with looking at it, you know.
Candace Craw-Goldman
All right, I’m gonna end this by. I’m gonna end this by putting you a little bit on the spot. What if I told you that during my talk? I’m gonna show you somebody getting a live sonogram showing a tumor disappearing in real time.
Dr. Tev
I’ve seen it.
Candace Craw-Goldman
Do you know what? I’m so happy that I am so happy.
Dr. Tev
Look, I’ve seen that video, yeah and the thing is, miracles can happen, you know, and sometimes you have to look at it as a miracle might be something that science has just not yet learned how to catch. And like I said, I’m open minded, and I’m all for miracles and healings. I’ve had patients in the past who had pretty bad diagnoses, you know, that they were not meant to recover from. But I tell them, I’m not. I used to do primary care. I’m in the ER now, but I used to say, you know, I’m not your oncologist, I’m not your radiologist, I’m here for your moral support, and I’m here to hold you and help you through this process, you know, and I know the numbers are not for you, but, but I think that the biggest thing we can teach a patient is that mind, body and soul connection. I think you have to, you know, a lot of doctors will say, Don’t give false hope. Yeah, but that adjective false really shouldn’t be there, because hope is hope, whether it’s false or real or doesn’t matter. I think that people should always prepare for the worst, but I think we have to learn how to expect the best as well. You know, I don’t tell people, oh, you’re going to have a miraculous recovery. Everything’s going to be fine because that’s not that’s not fair, and it’s not right. But I always tell them, I’m not your oncologist, but I’m here to help you, but I want you to try to focus on your healing and try to see yourself healed, and I try to keep you know I would try to keep them through that process. But I’ve seen remarkable recoveries from diagnoses that shouldn’t have had a recovery, scientifically speaking. So I try to be open minded when it comes to that. And and when you tell them, Oh, it’s this is going to go badly, and every physician you have, oh, this is going to be horrible, everything’s good, they’re going to expect nothing but that. Why? Why do that disservice? Stay neutral, uplift them, help them prepare for the worst, but you can also give them hope for the best as well. I think that that’s a that’s a tight rope to walk on. It’s a tough one, but I think it’s possible.
Candace Craw-Goldman
Well, thank you, thank you for your time. And while that one video might not have been a surprise, I guarantee I’ve got a couple others so that you haven’t seen.
Dr. Tev
I’m super excited. I’m super excited for your lecture. Thank you so much.
Candace Craw-Goldman
Nice to meet you.
Dr. Tev
Likewise. Thank you. Bye.
Responses