The timing of events with the Lunar Gestation Cycle supports an understanding of the long-range impact of Solar and Lunar Eclipses as the related matters of an event develops along a predictable pattern. An example of this method can be found in the story of a woman who suffered a car accident within days of the Solar Eclipse October 24, 1995. An injury to her brain was overlooked by the initial physician at the time of the accident. Over a nine-month period the woman returned to the diagnosing physician with complaints of headaches, fatigue, sleeplessness and other symptoms but the doctor prescribed no change in her treatment.
On July 23, 1996, the day of the First Quarter Moon, the woman consulted a second doctor who found the injury to her brain after a battery of tests. The second doctor treated her over the next nine months without improvement and referred the patient to a surgeon. A successful operation corrected her condition a few days before the Full Moon on April 22, 1997.
Two
and a quarter years after the initial diagnosis, the patient filed a malpractice
suit against the original physician for negligence. The suit was filed near
the Last Quarter Moon of January 20, 1998, which was nine months after her
operation.
The following is a list of this particular "Moon Family".
Learn more about these events in my book Lunar Shadows.
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