TEACH MY GRANDSON THAT HE SHALL BE BETRAYED BY MANKIND
"Betrayal by one that dips" refers to Jesus' prophecy at the Last Supper, found in the Gospels (Matthew 26:23, Mark 14:20, Luke 22:21), that one of His disciples would betray Him, specifically the one who dipped his hand in the bowl with Him, identifying Judas Iscariot as the traitor through an act of shared intimacy that highlighted the profound treachery.
Teach my grandson that he will be betrayed and probably by someone closest to him. Sorrow greets the keys of this board, as I write this essay. For son, I am an eyewitness to such treachery. From the Greek, the word "betrayal" is translated in Blue Letter's Bible Lexicon Strong's G3860 - paradidōmi meaning
- "to give into the hands (of another)
- to give over into (one's) power or use
- to deliver to one something to keep, use, take care of, manage
- to deliver up one to custody, to be judged, condemned, punished, scourged, tormented, put to death
- to deliver up treacherously
- by betrayal to cause one to be taken
- to deliver one to be taught, moulded
- to commit, to commend
- to deliver verbally
- commands, rites
- to deliver by narrating, to report
- to permit allow
- when the fruit will allow that is when its ripeness permits
- gives itself up, presents itself"
Son, you will be treacherously delivered up to the "Wicked One" by one as close to you as a "disciple", The word "disciple" comes from the Latin discipulus ("pupil, student") and Greek mathetes (μαθητής), both meaning a learner or follower, entering English via Old English after Christianization. Its root relates to learning and accepting knowledge, evolving from classical roots for "to teach" (docere, didaskein) and "to learn" (discere), carrying connotations of deep commitment and practice, not just superficial following, especially in its prominent use for Jesus' followers in the New Testament. The phrase "A teacher is as close to a disciple as a husband to a wife" highlights that marriage, within a Christian context, functions as a primary model for discipleship, with both spouses submitting to Christ and nurturing each other spiritually, akin to the relationship between Christ and the Church, making it an intimate path to spiritual growth and mutual sanctification. It emphasizes that a wife's Godly life can disciple her husband, just as a husband is called to spiritually lead and care for his wife, reflecting Christ's sacrificial love.
Scott Hurst, pastor at Northminster Baptist Church in Toronto, in "Marriage and Discipleship" writes, "Marriage is about Jesus. Marriage is an illustration of the Bible’s story of “God choosing a wife for his Son—and, astonishingly, choosing wretched sinners like us to be that bride, and so to enjoy his marvellous grace. Our happy marriage to Christ is the goal of history; and every earthly marriage, whether as a beautiful comparison or an ugly contrast, is a powerful reminder of it.”" No sorrow is as when one so close, who has the pleasure to be "one who dips with you", to turn you over to the "Evil One".
Spiritually, hands symbolize power, action, creation, and connection, representing our ability to interact with the world, manifest intentions, give/receive blessings, and express faith, love, or guilt, with distinct meanings often attributed to the right (action, logic) and left (receptivity, intuition) hands, reflecting balance and choice between good and evil. They are seen as conduits for divine energy and healing, signifying protection, authority, generosity, and spiritual transfer. In her hands. my constitutional and judicial rights have been absconded. What made me a free man before the strokes have made me a prisoner since. I have been betrayed and it has been masked by the glory of nurture.
My strokes made my wife my caregiver and power of attorney. A caregiver provides assistance to someone needing help with daily life due to age, injury, illness, or disability, acting as informal family/friends or paid professionals, offering support from personal care (bathing, meds) to arranging medical care, with roles ranging from in-home help to managing finances, highlighting universal needs for support and resources for all types of caregivers. A Power of Attorney (POA) is a legal document authorizing an "agent" (attorney-in-fact) to make decisions for a "principal" (you) regarding finances, property, or healthcare, offering crucial advance planning for potential incapacity and avoiding court-appointed guardianships, with types including durable (stays effective if incapacitated), limited (specific tasks), and healthcare POAs, requiring careful selection and signing, often with notary/witnesses. This profound responsibility has clouded her authority over my life and constitutional rights. My rights begin where her sense of control starts. Where I wish to defend myself in the court of law, she seeks the course of religious passivity and legal obstruction.
Let me be clear! I am thankful to God and grateful to my wife for bringing me home from Cherrydale Health and Rehabilitation Center where I suffered recorded patient abuse, June 2024, by the Arlington County Police, incident report 2024-05010099, and medically reported, insulin shots, that I did not need causing me to lose a great amount of weight. Giving insulin to a person who does not need it (a non-diabetic) triggers a rapid and potentially dangerous drop in blood sugar levels known as hypoglycemia. In a healthy person, the body already produces enough insulin to maintain a normal glucose balance; adding external insulin overrides the body's natural regulatory systems, potentially leading to severe medical emergencies. Abhay Gundgurthi, Sandeep Kharb, M K Dutta, R Pakhetra, M K Garg in "Insulin poisoning with suicidal intent" write, "Insulin is essential for survival in type 1 diabetes mellitus and insulin-requiring type 2 diabetes mellitus patients. The same insulin if taken in overdose in these patients or in non-diabetics can lead to hypoglycemic coma which can have varied outcome from complete reversal to death. Since the introduction of insulin therapy in 1921, diabetics have used insulin overdose as a mode of suicide. Insulin poisoning is also used as a mode of suicide in non-diabetics, especially medical and paramedical personnel and relatives of diabetic patients." I was not taking insulin at MedStar before I was transfered to Cherrydale. My last home was supposed to be Cherrydale. I was paralyzed on my left side and unable to walk or talk as a result of the gradual damage to my brain as a result of my stroke. Brain damage was heightened by the assault that took place at MedStar.
Yes, your grandfather suffered a great many episodes of patient abuse at MedStar and Cherrydale. I survived their psychological warfare. I couldn't physically defend myself but I could mentally. Patient abuse involves intentional or neglectful acts by caregivers causing harm, suffering, or unreasonable misery to vulnerable individuals, encompassing physical (striking, sexual assault), emotional (verbal insults, isolation), neglect (withholding care, poor hygiene), and financial exploitation (unexplained withdrawals, theft). Signs include unexplained injuries, behavioral changes, sudden neglect of needs, or financial irregularities, with reporting to Adult Protective Services or law enforcement crucial. I had a beautiful smile before I was an inpatient but now I have fewer teeth. Ask your great grandmpther. She suggested I get falsies to replace all of the missing teeth. I would cry weekly in asking my wife and family to discharge me. Let me limp out while I still could. All to no avail. My wife had her career that paid the bills. Who would take care of an invalid while she worked? My family in no way wanted to seize such a burden. My friends were in two groups: those that knew where I was and did not care to see me and those, intimidated by my wife and the overwhelming nature of my demise, sought not to care. Betrayal all around. Betrayal is the violation of trust, confidence, or loyalty by someone believed to be a friend, partner, or trusted entity, causing significant emotional and psychological harm, often leading to trauma, anger, and shattered self-esteem, and can manifest as infidelity, dishonesty, or disloyalty, impacting one's sense of safety and ability to trust again. It's a deeply painful experience because it comes from someone close, breaking a presumptive contract of care, and can profoundly disrupt a person's worldview.
I was sexually assaulted by the nursing staff at MedStar. Sexual assault (SA) is an act of sexual abuse in which one intentionally sexually touches another person without that person's consent, or coerces or physically forces a person to engage in a sexual act against their will. In Washington D.C., sexual assault is termed "Sexual Abuse," defined by engaging in sexual acts or contact without consent, using force, threats, incapacitation (drugs/alcohol/unconsciousness), or exploiting power dynamics (like professional relationships), with classifications ranging from misdemeanor to felony (1st, 2nd, 3rd degree) depending on severity, leading to significant jail time, fines, or life imprisonment for severe offenses like 1st-degree abuse. Key factors are lack of consent, force or threats, and victim incapacitation, with specific laws addressing professional abuse and defining "sexual contact" broadly. I will remember on Judgement Day, the night I told my wife that I had been sexually assaulted by the nursing staff. "Are you sure you were sexually assaulted?" "What did they do?" As if Judge, Jury and Prosecutor! "I don't feel comfortable blaming the nursing staff." Imagine how a thirteen-year old girl that was impregnated by her mother's forty-five year old boyfriend and her mother denies it. I refuse to submit to psychoiogical warfare against my God-given rights. Psychological warfare (PSYWAR), or the basic aspects of modern psychological operations (PSYOP), has been known by many other names or terms, including Military Information Support Operations (MISO), political warfare, "winning hearts and minds", and propaganda. My wife was not alone in her respite. Friends and family sought not to be involved or report the injustice. Doctors and nurses alike sought not to get involved or report the crime. Yes, an assault can significantly exacerbate or even trigger a stroke due to extreme physical and emotional stress, potential head/neck trauma causing arterial damage (like dissection), and the resulting intense physiological responses (blood pressure spikes, inflammation), leading to worse outcomes and recovery, especially with traumatic events like strangulation or sexual assault. According to Code of the District of Columbia § 22–3013:
Any staff member, employee, contract employee, consultant, or volunteer of a law enforcement agency or at a hospital, treatment facility, law enforcement facility, detention or correctional facility, group home, or other institution; anyone who is an ambulance driver or attendant, bus driver or attendant, or person who participates in the transportation of a ward, patient, client, arrestee, detainee, or prisoner to and from such institutions; or any official custodian of a ward, patient, client, arrestee, detainee, or prisoner, who engages in a sexual act with a ward, patient, client, arrestee, detainee, or prisoner, or causes a ward, patient, client, arrestee, detainee, or prisoner to engage in or submit to a sexual act shall be fined not more than the amount set forth in § 22-3571.01, or incarcerated for no more than 10 years, or both.
Imagine that a sexual assaulter is free on the street.
Could nurses and doctors disguise patient abuse as workplace violence? Disguising patient abuse as workplace violence can have serious implications, including unaddressed issues leading to further incidents and a culture of silence that jeopardizes patient safety. Addressing this requires robust reporting systems, transparency, and a commitment to accountability. It's possible for instances of patient abuse to be misrepresented or framed as workplace violence. This can stem from various factors, including:
- Lack of Clear Reporting Mechanisms: In some institutions, there may not be clear guidelines for reporting patient abuse, leading to misclassifications.
- Institutional Pressure: Organizations might want to protect their reputation, leading to downplaying or misrepresenting incidents to avoid scrutiny.
- Misinterpretation of Events: Situations may escalate quickly, and the context can sometimes blur lines between patient aggression and staff mistreatment.
- Staff Misconduct: In cases where staff are abusive, they might label their actions as reactions to workplace violence, diverting attention from their misconduct.
- Training Gaps: Without proper training on recognizing and addressing abuse, staff might fail to categorize incidents correctly.
My nuerosurgeon blocked me after I wrote, "ME, MYSELF AND I: PROMOTING WORKPLACE VIOLENCE OVER PATIENT ABUSE" Geandson, are your Spidey senses tingling yet? "Blocked me" means someone has used a digital tool to cut off your ability to contact or see them on a specific platform (like phone, social media, or email), creating a boundary to stop unwanted communication, often stemming from conflict, the need for space, or a desire to end interaction, and while it can be hurtful, it's a way for the blocker to control their digital life and peace.
Betrayal is as close as a wife and as far away as the doctor-nurse-patient relationship. Why don't you contact the government? Won't the DC Mayor or DC Police Chief come to your aid? In Washington, D.C., patient abuse is a criminal offense and a serious regulatory violation. Victims and those who suspect abuse can take immediate action through several specialized city departments. If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, call 911. For reporting abuse in specific settings, use the following resources:
- Elderly & Vulnerable Adults (18+): Contact Adult Protective Services (APS) at (202) 541-3950. This 24-hour hotline handles cases of physical, financial, and emotional abuse or neglect.
- Children (Under 18): Call the Child and Family Services Agency (CFSA) at (202) 671-SAFE (7233) to report suspected child abuse or neglect.
- Healthcare Professionals & Facilities: To file a formal complaint against a specific licensed professional (e.g., doctor, nurse) or facility (e.g., hospital, nursing home), use the DC Health Complaint Portal.
- Nursing Homes: Contact the D.C. Long-Term Care Ombudsman at (202) 434-2140 for advocacy and assistance with issues in residential care facilities.
- Metropolitan Police Department (MPD): Filing a police report is necessary for criminal investigations. Contact the MPD at (202) 727-9099.
- Office of the Attorney General (OAG): The OAG’s Elder Justice Section prosecutes cases of elder abuse and financial exploitation.
- Crime Victims Compensation: Victims of violent crimes in D.C. may be eligible for financial assistance through the Crime Victims Compensation Program at (202) 879-4216.
Notice they are all phone numbers. Not e-mail address. The Mayor, the DC Police Chief. the DC Council, the DC Government Agencies, and the Advisory Neighbor Commissioners (ANC) don't respond well to e-mail requests and recommendations. A formal complaint has been lodged against MedStar, ask your mother. I sent her a copy.
Why not sinply call, even I have a cell phone and I am a toddler? Using an iPhone with a toddler involves balancing entertainment with developmental needs, requiring parental controls like Screen Time and Guided Access to limit apps and lock the screen to a single app, while also managing content and potential overstimulation. Parents often debate the benefits versus risks, but tools exist to make phone sharing safer and more controlled, preventing accidental purchases or exiting videos. I haven't had a phone since my stay at MedStar. The doctors recommended that it be taken from me because I was bothering my wife by calling her after hours about what the nurses were doing. He will be alright. You can trust us! He won't bother you anymore in the middle of the night! Betrayal requires a bit of deception and acceptance of convenience. You should not take a patient's phone because it interferes with their privacy, autonomy, and connection to support, though restrictions are sometimes medically necessary in behavioral health for safety (like preventing self-harm or contact with drug dealers) or to reduce anxiety, requiring clear, proportionate policies and supervised "tech time" in some facilities. While healthcare providers use phones, patients' phone access involves distinct privacy/liability risks (HIPAA, image misuse) and potential for distraction or triggers, necessitating balance between patient rights and clinical needs, notes Browne Jacobson. Doctors and nurses generally don't take a patient's personal phone, but hospitals can restrict phone use, especially in sensitive areas like behavioral health, for safety, privacy (HIPAA), and medical reasons, sometimes confiscating personal devices and providing facility phones instead. While nurses can't legally confiscate personal property without cause, they manage phone use by enforcing hospital policies that prioritize patient well-being, which might mean restricting access to personal devices if they pose a risk or interfere with care. Just think my grandson is better protected than his grandfather.
No phone, no reporting. Patient abuse, especially against the elderly in care facilities, is significantly underreported due to systemic issues like poor policies, fear of retaliation, victim or staff reluctance, and a perception it's "part of the job," despite federal mandates for reporting serious incidents like physical or sexual abuse. Reports show substantial failures to report to police or agencies, with some estimates suggesting nearly 1 in 4 or 1 in 5 severe cases go unreported, highlighting a widespread gap between law and practice in protecting vulnerable patients. The Maryland Department of Aging reporta:
"Five things everyone can do to prevent older adult abuse
- Listen to older people and caregivers to understand their challenges and provide support.
- Educate one another about the signs of abuse and how to get help.
- Report suspected abuse or neglect as soon as possible.
- Build a community that fosters social connections and supports.
- Reach out to professional services for support where available."
I say use your five senses.
I believe my constitutional rights are alive with me as I am alive. No one, no matter how great the accolade for nurturing, has the God-given right to take away the God-given rights of another. The myth of one call prevails in the land. "You are owed one phone call" is a popular myth from movies, not a universal legal right, though many jurisdictions do guarantee arrested individuals the right to make calls (often multiple) to contact family or an attorney, with California's law requiring at least three calls within hours of booking. The actual number and timing depend on local laws, but it's a right to make calls, not necessarily to have them happen immediately or without limitation, and it's distinct from legal service or scams. Dickerson Law Firm, PA reports, "The “one call” rule is a myth with no basis in law. In the United States, there is no federal statute or constitutional right granting arrested individuals a single phone call. The rules surrounding post-arrest communication vary from state to state and even jurisdiction to jurisdiction." In DC, post-arrest communication involves immediate rights advisement, a 3-hour limit for police questioning before arraignment (D.C. Code § 5-115.01), recorded jail calls that can incriminate, and critical guidance from a defense attorney to navigate speaking with police, family, and the court, while the MPD handles release/booking, aiming for least restrictive options. If a criminal falsely believes he or she has "one call" to protect himself or herself then, why can't a free man have access to communications to defend himself in patient abuse natters.
I don't want ill will towards my wife, grandson. She saved me from the merciless medical and science systems that assaulted me many times. Her health insurnce ended coverage of my care in June 2024. Her job folded due to personal corruption and government malfeasance in August 2024. Several DC charter schools have closed recently (e.g., Eagle Academy in late 2024, Hope Community in 2025), often due to financial mismanagement, low enrollment, or academic issues, leaving families scrambling for new placements. The DC Public Charter School Board (DC PCSB) tracks these closures, with over 80 schools shutting down since 1996, and new legislation is being considered to improve financial oversight and training for charter school boards to prevent future sudden shutdowns. The Eagle Academy Board made the tough decision to close the school. Rather than find employment elsewhere, she chose to stay home and take care of me. For this, I am eternally grateful. Grateful (adj.) means
1550s, "pleasing to the mind," also "full of gratitude, disposed to repay favors bestowed," from obsolete adjective grate "agreeable, pleasant," from Latin gratus "pleasing" (reconstructed in Watkins to be from suffixed form of PIE root *gwere- (2) "to favor"). "A most unusual formation" [Weekley]. A rare, irregular case of English using -ful to make an adjective from an adjective (the only other one might be direful "characterized by or fraught with something dreadful," 1580s). Related: Gratefully (1540s); gratefulness.
I am thankful to God for my wife. Some in agitation against God and oue family feel it there divine will to encourage her to divorce me or leave me in my broken conditipn at a state institution or corrupt hospital system. Those that attempt to mislead her are molded by Susan B. Anthony and her desire to put women's soffrade over Black suffrage. Susan B. Anthony was a complex figure regarding Black rights: she was a dedicated abolitionist who worked with Black leaders like Frederick Douglass, but later prioritized women's suffrage, sometimes to the detriment of Black suffrage, leading to accusations of racism and racism within the suffrage movement, as she opposed the 15th Amendment (granting Black men the vote) unless women were included, alienating some Black suffragists. “There is no slave, after all, like a wife...Poor women, poor slaves… All married women, all children and girls who live in their father’s house are slaves.” ~ Mary Boykin Chesnut, A Diary from Dixie, 1861. She is a wife unto God not unto man. However, her heart is hardened to observe my natural rights.
They-nurses and doctors-say you scuffled with them?
I was weakened from my stroke and I asked for an escort to the bathroom as I had earlier in the day. The nurse advised that I would have to use a urinal likened unto a Male Urinal With Glow In The Dark Lid. I advised that I preferred an escort to the bathroom. She advised that she wasn't going to do that. No other reason than she wasn't. Then, she suddenly changed her mind. Unknowingly to me, two technicians had sneaked into the room. A male and female. I did not see them until after the assault. The nurse lifted me by my right hand. She held my hand and raised it above my head. When I was fully standing and my hand was fully outstretched above my head, the nurse let go of my hand. Then, I was either hit or pushed in the stomach and landed on all four on the bed. The male techician was glaring down at me and responded, "I wouldn't have done that if I was you." He then instructed, "Lay him on the bed." They all ran out of the room after cutting off the light. Another nurse ran into the room and yelled, "We'll check on you, later!" My roommate, Paul, yelled out, "That's four! Hey, Ken, that was four!" Later, the nurse involved in the original assault returned and said, "Who's going to believe you over the doctors and nurses." No other doctor or nurse checked on me through the night. I awakened paralyzed on my left side and my hand curved to my chest. I was greeted in the morning by a nurse who said, "We thought you were going to die last night." That Friday afternoon, Dr. Claudia Brown and the Nurse Supervisor met with me in my room where they admitted that the nurse and technicians should not have done what they did. I was taken for a Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and told that my stroke was so great that it put me at risk of my ability to walk, ability to talk and my blood pressure would have to be checked always. Blood pressure is the force of blood against artery walls, measured as systolic (top number, heart beating) over diastolic (bottom number, heart resting), e.g., 120/80 mmHg; normal is under 120/80, while high blood pressure (hypertension) is consistently 130/80 mmHg or higher, often called the "silent killer" due to lack of symptoms but increasing risks for heart disease and stroke, so regular checks are vital. Causes include genetics, lifestyle factors (diet, exercise, smoking, alcohol), age, and weight, while management involves lifestyle changes like diet, exercise, and sometimes medications.
An assault can cause a stroke, either directly through physical injury to blood vessels (Traumatic Brain Injury/Cerebrovascular Injury) or indirectly from extreme stress leading to high blood pressure or clotting issues, with victims of violence having a higher long-term risk of stroke. Physical impacts can damage neck arteries, creating clots, while the psychological trauma can trigger PTSD, further increasing stroke risk years later.
Yes, doctors and nurses can lie or omit information about patient abuse, sometimes due to pressure, fear, burnout, or even misguided "therapeutic" reasons, though it's a breach of ethics and legal duty, with cover-ups often involving falsifying records like failing to document injuries or symptoms, which can be revealed by discrepancies or patient harm. While most healthcare professionals are committed to patient well-being and honesty, situations like covering for colleagues or institutional failures can lead to deceptive practices, making documentation crucial for preventing and identifying abuse. Grandson, if you research my essays, my story stands. I have not lied.
Grandson, when I'm in Heaven, don't let me hear you said this crock or allowed this crock to be said to you and you accepted it to forgo your God-given natural rights! In religious and theological discussions, the question of whether "God wants" someone to sue for abuse, including patient abuse, is often a matter of interpretation of scripture and individual conscience. There is no single universal "religious" answer, as different interpretations offer varied guidance:
- Recognition of Civil Justice: Many biblical scholars note that the Bible recognizes the existence of civil claims and establishes types of compensation required for harm. The judicial system is often viewed as a mechanism ordained by God to address injustice and protect the vulnerable.
- Protection of the Vulnerable: Many believers argue that pursuing legal action is an appropriate way to seek justice for those who have been wronged or abused, acting as a form of protection against evil and mistreatment.
- Disputes Between Believers: A specific biblical instruction frequently cited is 1 Corinthians 6:1-8, which discourages Christians from taking fellow believers to secular courts, suggesting these disputes should be settled within the church. However, this is often interpreted as applying to internal community disputes rather than criminal acts or cases involving non-believers or large institutions.
- Balance of Grace and Justice: Religious counsel often emphasizes a balance between forgiveness and holding wrongdoers accountable. Seeking restitution is not necessarily seen as an act of revenge, but as a pursuit of restoration and safety for others.
- Alternatives to Litigation: Scripture does advise settling matters quickly with an adversary and prioritizing peacemaking or mediation where possible (Matthew 5:25, Proverbs 25:8).
God does not offer a scripture to mankind that says "a man should or can not sue a corporation for corruption and abuse by its agents against you." I have been abused and deserve compensation. Patient abuse compensation involves seeking damages (economic for bills/lost wages, non-economic for pain/suffering) through civil lawsuits or state victim compensation funds for costs like medical care and counseling, with amounts varying greatly depending on the abuse's severity, leading to settlements ranging from thousands to millions, often requiring legal help to navigate claims against providers or facilities. The Bible speaks of compensating a person for their loss. In Exodus 21:18-19, when one man struck another, the injured man was to be compensated for his loss of time (from work). The man who struck the crippling blow was to see that the injured man was completely healed and compensated.
Dean Burnetti of Your Christian Law Firm in "Should Christians Pursue Legal Actions?" writes, "Should Christians sue at all? I believe that a lawsuit is justifiable as an option for a Christian, depending on the individual situation, which should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
First, the party should try to settle the dispute outside of Court.
Secondly, this only applies to disputes between Christians. Paul never meant that a Christian cannot or should not go to Court to obtain justice against a non-Christian. However, in general, Christians should still seek to settle their disputes between each other and between themselves and non-Christians outside of the Court.
Finally, not all sins are crimes; but all crimes are sins. The church handles sins; but crimes are handled by the State. Yet, both the church and the State are the governing authority that God has provided over us.
As Christians, we must stand up against evil. Although it may not always be popular, Christians must be willing to hold evil accountable. Therefore, we cannot ignore using the legal system to take a stand against evil."
Grandson, I believe and know that I have a right to defend myself in a court of law and no one for the sake of love and care have the right to take my rights away. In this, I have been betrayed by wife, family, friiends, government and others. I seek justice and others seek silence and injustice. The Word says, "to walk humbly." The key scripture for "walk humbly" is Micah 6:8, which states God requires us "to do justice, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God". This verse emphasizes that true faith involves not just rituals, but actively living righteously, showing compassion, and maintaining a humble, God-dependent attitude, recognizing our need for Him. Other scriptures like Ephesians 4:1-2 and Proverbs 22:4 also speak to humility, linking it with gentleness, wisdom, and right conduct. Never let anyone take away your ability to communicate or your natural rights.
Although I am paralyzed and bed-ridden, I believe that I can be cured. Three years of my life, I can never get back but I can live again. Stem cell therapy for chronic stroke is an emerging regenerative treatment aimed at restoring motor and neurological functions in patients months or years after their initial injury. As of 2026, it remains largely in the experimental and clinical trial stages, though recent research indicates it may "jump-start" the brain's natural repair processes even in long-term cases. I believe my rightful compensation would cover this. Stem cell therapy costs vary dramatically, from under $2,000 for simpler Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP) injections to over $50,000 for complex systemic treatments, with many localized orthopedic procedures falling in the $4,000 to $25,000 range, depending heavily on the type of cells (your own vs. donor), condition severity, number of treatments, facility, and location. Expect to pay more for procedures involving bone marrow or adipose (fat) extraction or treating widespread diseases like Crohn's or MS. I believe my compensation will provide for my legacy-you. Pray for justice. Let it rain.
Grandson, you will be betrayed.
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