“Would you like to swing on a star,…carry moonbeams home in a jar….and be better off than you are? Or would you rather be a mule?”---Johnny Burke
What would you do if you were in reasonably good health but were told you had a month or two, maybe even a year to live? Might be a good idea to mosey up to the ticket office at the train station because maybe you do. Once you’re rolling at a good clip down the Septuagenarian Highway, all bets are off. Worse yet, the Octogenarian Turnpike is a permanent Falling Rocks Zone, the original Highway to Hell where strange, unnamable body parts start collapsing inside you and leaking out your orifices. Sooner, rather than later, you’re gonna take a trip on that old gospel ship and go sailing through the air, so it’s past time to sign that reverse mortgage, get paid off in small bills, grease up the woody and head for Adventureland. Maybe you’ll even find some magic along the way.
Sure, we know it’s neat and tidy at Assisted Living but have you ever seen Bryce Canyon at night or ogled The City by the Bay while walking across the Golden Gate Bridge? Maybe catch a Sedona vortex at prime spinning time and watch your impetigo fade away? Oh, pish-tosh, you say but sober observers Bill and Siobhan once met Marge and Eddie near the airport vortex and Ed said this: “My lungs used to hang out at an interstate ramp, holding a sign that said ‘Will Work For Air.’ At home in Michigan, I can’t walk across the street. But in Sedona, I can do anything I want, like hiking out here today. It’s the vortexes. They create miracles.” Yeah, we know, you’re rolling your eyes. Eddie would say don’t knock it if you ain’t tried it. “There are all kinds of options for travelers,” he says. “Would you rather go somewhere for a chili cook-off or a life-changing experience?”
If you’re on your way to Santa Fe or tripping out to Taos, you might want to stop exactly in the middle of nowhere at legendary Ojo Caliente, New Mexico, where believers pour in daily for the healing waters. Caliente is one of a very few hot springs spas on Earth the waters of which contain four healing minerals---arsenic, lithia, soda and iron in naturally sulfur-free waters. We felt invigorated after an hour there, but for an elderly Native American woman in our pool, the waters were a lifesaver. “I travel two hours to get here and two hours back every week,” she said. “Sometimes more. I can’t function otherwise, I get no help from what doctors recommend. This place is a panacea for me.”
Maybe your flesh is willing but your spirit is weak. You’ve always wanted to see California’s rosewoods, so take a long look at the big boys and edge on up to Mount Shasta, a renowned spiritual destination with a powerful energy vortex and the Earth’s first chakra. Shasta is a hub for healing retreats, meditation and nature-based wellness, focusing on spiritual growth and rejuvenating body and mind. The mountain, itself, is renowned for its stunning natural beauty, snow-capped peaks and mystical Bohemian vibe. If you occasionally wonder where have all the hippies gone, you can still find a bunch here, wandering through the crystal shops tootling their flutes. Lisa Marie Mercer is already on her way.
Where Is Edgar Cayce When You Really Need Him?
Edgar left us alone and blue in 1945. Thousands he rescued from misery mourned the day, attesting that but for him they’d have been laid in the cold, cold ground years ago. Cayce was an American clairvoyant who reported and chronicled an ability to diagnose disease and recommend treatments while he was asleep. During thousands of transcribed sessions, he answered questions on subjects like healing, reincarnation, dreams, the afterlife, past lives, nutrition, Atlantis and future events. Cayce said he was a Christian (probably the safest thing do do at the time) and not a spiritualist or a communicator with spirits. He is considered the founder of the New Age movement and a principal source of many of that movement’s characteristic beliefs.
In the Fall of 1910, Edgar Cayce became the subject of increasing publicity for his medical readings. The following profile was printed in The New York Times on October 10 of that year:
“The medical fraternity of the country is taking a lively interest in the strange power said to be possessed by Edgar Cayce of Hopkinsville, Ky, to diagnose difficult diseases while in a semi-conscious state, though he has not the slightest knowledge of medicine when not in this condition.
During a visit to California last Summer, Dr. W.H. Ketchum had occasion to mention a case involving Cayce and was invited to discuss it at a medical banquet attended by 700 physicians. Ketchum’s speech gave an explanation of Cayce’s strange psychic powers during the previous four years. The talk created such widespread interest that one of the leading Boston medical men invited Ketchum to prepare a paper as a part of a program of an upcoming meeting of the American Society of Clinical Research. Its presentation created a sensation and Ketchum was deluged with letters and telegrams inquiring about the amazing Edgar Cayce.”
People who had been helped by Cayce began coming out of the woodwork. The public couldn’t get enough stories about this miracle man. On January 17, 1911, Cayce and his father gave a public demonstration at a suite in Louisville’s Seelbach Hotel. In June, a Nashville newspaper advertised Cayce’s readings. Cayce was mentioned in a new encyclopedia. Cayce’s increasing popularity attracted entrepreneurs who wanted to use his reputed clairvoyance for profit. A cotton merchant offered him $100 a day for readings about the cotton market. People asked where to hunt for treasure, the outcome of horse races, where to dig for oil. In May of 1921, the Cayce Petroleum Company began drilling about six miles north of San Saba. In June, 1922, Cayce advertised free baby picture day at his studio in Selma, Alabama. It was a non-stop circus as everyone wanted a piece of Edgar Cayce. By October, he was associated with the Cayce Institute of Psychic Research. Cayce was now spending most of his time on non-medical issues. There are all kinds of speculations on what Cayce was and was not but the prevailing opinion of most observers at the time was that he was a legitimate healer, the likes of which we haven’t seen since.
Ah, But We’ve Still Got Charlie Goldsmith!
We know you’re cynical, and with good reason. We all saw the Elmer Gantry movie back in 1960, watched Oral Roberts con enough suckers to build a university in 1963, suffered the ravings of crackpot radio evangelists while driving through Arkansas and were mesmerized by the gall and eyelashes of Tammy Fay Bakker on the televised PTL club in 1974. Phonies, every last one of them, trolling for dollars from a general public desperate to believe. So what’s the story with this new guy, this Charlie Goldsmith? Seems like he just popped in out of nowhere one day and now he’s got the natives all adither for the first time in generations.
Goldsmith is an Australian “energy healer,” who’s been around longer than you think. He apparently discovered his healing talents at age 18 and was willing to participate in several scientific studies to state his case. In 2015, The Journal of Alternative and Complimentary Medicine published results of the first study in which Goldsmith treated 50 reports of pain at a 76% success rate and 29 reports of non-pain problems at a 79% success rate. That’s not soggy gingerbread. The study, conducted at NYU’s Lutheran Hospital caught the attention of producers who got him a TV deal, a series called The Healer, showcasing his unique gift of alleviating pain and promoting healing within minutes. Despite initial skepticism, his work has amazed many, including medical professionals. Goldsmith’s unusual ability is to focus his energy on a patient’s problem areas without actually touching him. Often working in under one minute, he focuses on “transmuting and releasing” stagnant energy, which patients describe as experiencing sensations of heat, cold and/or tingling. He sometimes hovers his hands over the affected area, aiming for immediate relief especially from chronic pain, inflammation and infections. By all indications, his success rate is close to 80%. And here’s what makes Charlie Goldsmith most different from your run of the mill healer---he doesn’t charge a penny for his services.
In 2025, Goldsmith authored the book “Human Medicine: The Lost Manual for your Emotions” and developed Ennie, an energy healing app. Based in Los Angeles, he continues to collaborate with doctors, researchers and sports organizations to integrate his methods into modern medicine. He also conducts live shows focused on human medicine and healing. He remains very focused on bridging the gap between energy work and traditional medical practices. Oh, and even without collecting patients’ fees, Charlie Goldsmith is currently worth a nifty thirty-eight million dollars.
Shelter From The Storm
Meanwhile back in Funkytown, the last survivors of the hippie revolution of the sixties and seventies are gathering at Heartwood Soundstage this weekend for one last be-in. Successor to the penultimate Last Tango In Gainesville, The Grand Finale offers two days of music, memories and potential goodbyes for The Generation Which Changed The World, even if just for a couple of decades. “Sure we were naive idealists high on drugs,” says Andy Dennis of Cassadega, “…maybe we were a little bit selfish. But we were aware enough to know society was running off the tracks, the government was out of control and we had young kids with bright futures being mowed down in Vietnam for no good reason. Today’s kids should be so naive.”
The Grand Finale comes in two parts; a Friday evening concert on Heartwood’s inside stage by Wil Maring, Robert Bowlin and Mike Boulware at 7 p.m. and an all-day bash with five bands on Saturday, preceded by the Last Tango In Gainesville movie at noon. Two deceased heroes of the Last Tango, Paco Paco and Blake Harrison will be remembered during the afternoon. Admission to the Saturday session is free but a ticket from Heartwood is required. Use the address below to order tickets for either or both days.
“It’s like Custer’s Last Stand for us,” smiles Ricky Coniglio of Hartford. “I’m joining up with two old fraternity brothers from back in the day. All of us have health issues, but we said the hell with it, we’re going. We went to the Subterranean Circus the first year it was open and everybody in the house gave us a hard time. I put an enormous poster of Raquel Welch on my wall, smoked pot and started burning incense. They threw me out of the fraternity and my friends Jerry and Clark quit the next day. We’ve been best friends ever since. Whenever we get together, I bring the poster. We put it up on the wall over our restaurant booth one year and everybody in the place came over to see what was going on. One guy even sold us some grass. So you ask if our little band of brothers is going to The Grand Finale, perhaps the last of its kind ever? I ask you---is the Pope a White Sox fan? See you at the t-shirt table. I’ll be the guy who looks like Jerry Garcia and I’ll be purchasing the Extra-Large.”
Here’s the link for tickets, compadres:
https://heartwoodsoundstage.com/shows/the-grand-finale-01-may.
