Robert Bullard – Writer and Freelance Journalist
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Robert Ginsburg – inbusiness magazine, Oxford Times
Robert Ginsburg doesn’t like the term ‘healer’, because it conveys an unscientific and faith-based approach to his work. But it provides a rough shorthand for his unusual training and skills: his ability to locate and send his thoughts to address disturbances in people’s ‘subtle energies’ - the building blocks of atoms and cells - and so treat health problems remotely, without drugs, and by addressing their cause.
It is a long way - geographically and career wise - from Robert’s earlier life. Back in the 1970s he was prosecuting fraud cases and convicting criminals on behalf of the Pennsylvania State Government (in the United States), for whom he undertook several high profile cases. He was chief attorney for Penn Central Railroad Fraud Trial – the biggest railroad fraud trial in the country at the time; and he secured the first conviction of a terrorist killing - by one of the Black panthers - of a law enforcement officer in the USA. “I had a great sense of right and wrong,” says Robert.
So what made him change career, and to something so completely different? “I was very frustrated as a lawyer – all I was doing was paperwork,” he says. “But the simple answer is I wanted to be happy.” So when a friend one day invited him to attend a lecture with him being given by a healer, he tagged along out of curiosity.
And Robert was intrigued by what he saw. “I did not understand what was going on, but it fascinated me,” he says. “So I started studying the different types of healing, and eventually it became a passion.”
First thought he had to move residence. “Pennsylvania is about as traditional as the United States can be,” explains Robert. So he moved to California, where people would not associate him with his earlier career, and where, he says, “people are willing to work on change.” And as he was refining his preferred technique he had the chance to train with one of Russia’s highest-ranking physicists, Nicolai Levashov, whose hands-off approach he now uses.
The technique involves making more use of his brain, by which the consciousness expands, and as a result of which Robert says he can see and sense things he could not do before. “I scan the body with my mind, and I am able to feel disturbances in the body’s subtle energy - physically, XX,” he explains. “And once I locate a disturbance, such as a misaligned pelvis, I send my thoughts to reach and treat it.”
Some readers will be very interested and others will be sceptics. But the technique has its supporters, including doctors formerly with the NHS, and has been described as ‘the new knowledge’ for its untapped potential. As for Robert, he insists the technique is scientific, and based on a body of knowledge. And being able to work remotely, hands-off, and with no drugs, differentiates it from other alternative medicines. “It is able to treat everything except cancer”, he claims.
And the hands-off nature of his work means he sees 90% of his clients remotely, most of who are not even in the UK. Says Robert: “It doesn’t matter where they are. I bring an image of the person, and I can feel a disturbance.” But he has also worked in and around Oxford, and this year has helped a 16 year old with an ulcer, a woman with a hormonal imbalance, and several people with severe back pain.
Among the examples he offers are Simon Thornton’s wife – a couple from High Wycombe – who 18 months ago had bowel cancer, and several surrounding complications. Says Simon: “On more than one occasion, Robert was able to de-stress her – to enable her to relax, and to get things back into balance.”
As for Robert’s move to the UK, it was Levashov who suggested it would be a good place to work. And the family choose Oxford so that their daughter could attend the city’s Montessori School.
“I love Oxford – I feel like I fit here,” says Robert. “It is beautiful - there is an intellectual climate; and although it’s small, it has the sophistication of a big city, like London.”
“There are also some great restaurants,” he adds, revealing his partiality for Japanese food. And being a film buff as well, he is excited to be moving house shortly to Jerricho, where a feast of treats will soon be on his doorstep.
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