The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

World’s greatest psychic helps you

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Dear June

My wife and I would have celebrated our golden wedding anniversar­y this year. We met as teenagers and were never parted for more than a few days in the years we spent together. I am totally bereft and long to see her again. She had dementia and didn’t recognise me during the last few months of her life. It was painful to watch as she slipped away, firstly her mind and then her body. Is she all right now? Will she know me when I join her? Ken, Livingston.

June Says

To stand by and watch helplessly as someone you love slips slowly away, both emotionall­y and physically, can be heartbreak­ing and emotionall­y devastatin­g.

Dementia affects the physical body and once the body dies, the soul/spirit is free and is no longer trapped within it.

Once the soul/spirit is free, it returns to the character and individual it was before any physical illness occurred.

Your lovely wife will be able to see things as clearly as she did before her illness and will recognise you.

She knows how much she means to you and is very aware of all the love and care you gave her.

As she comes forward, I sense she had a confident, social character which everyone loved.

I am very aware of the colour turquoise and want to surround her with it as she draws closer.

She is accompanie­d by an older woman who I feel would be a mother figure and I am impressed to say they were very close.

Did your good lady’s mother pass with the same condition as your wife? They want you to know they have many happy memories and their minds are no longer clouded.

I hear a piano playing and I’m shown a picture of a smiling lady – this photo is sitting on top of an upright mahogany piano. Do you recognise the piano?

Is there RAF connection­s? I was shown an old aircraft with an RAF bullseye.

You shared a lifetime and it is understand­able you feel lost without her.

She has gone on ahead to get things in order for when the time comes for you to join her.

She will be waiting for you with open arms and a smile.

VERDICT

My wife was a very sociable person who was full of fun. We had many friends and loved being surrounded by people. Her favourite colour was turquoise. Her mother also passed with dementia and she was heartbroke­n as she watched her deteriorat­e. They were a very close family and she looked after her mother until she had to go into a home. I am overjoyed they are together again. We were both in the RAF and that’s how we met. She used to play the piano and her photograph still sits on it at home.

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