At 17, Amy Tippins was dying of liver failure. A transplant saved her life.
After the surgery, she noticed “some of my traits had changed.”
Amy suddenly found herself drawn to hands-on home projects she’d never cared about.
“What gives?” she thought. So she tracked down the obituary of the stranger whose liver she’d received and discovered something staggering:
“Not long after surgery, some things about myself and some of my traits had changed… I really started to love projects like replacing flooring on my own. I never saw flooring being put in. I never saw anything like that being done.”
“I knew he was 47 and that he had been killed in a car wreck in Columbus, Georgia. So I went to the library and I started looking up obituaries for that time. And I backed into his obituary.”
“What I discovered is he was a police officer. He was 47, and his name was Mike. His sister told me that he did a lot of his own home renovation. He also liked to work with his hands. He liked to do projects.”
“When I found out who my donor was, it made a lot more sense on why some things about myself and some of my traits had changed after transplant.”
Is a donated organ just an organ? Or can it actually change who you are?
Conventional medicine laughs at the idea. But is it really so crazy?
Let’s take a look at the evidence. 🧵
White people are terrified of being seen as racist.
If white guilt permeates the online world and our schools, then our adults will feel guilty too.
This helps neither whites nor ethnics.
My ARC speech:
@LucasGageX@razorsharprep@YouTube I knew this guy was a grifter, you were in it for the money. You found your way to get some $$$ and flipped easier than a coin.