Father Anthony J. Fitzgerald, S.J., Jurisprudential Wizard Vol. 30: Inner Work A Fantasy Novel By Anthony J. Fejfar, B.A., J.D., Esq., Coif © Copyright 2007 by Anthony J. Fejfar “Well,” Dan thought, “only one more week to go until I get transferred to Dickson Hall.” Dan looked back at his time on Ward 3G and remembered both the good and the bad. On the good side, to Dan’s surprise, Dr. Wolf started Channeling into his mind to help him with his mental health condition. Dan didn’t think that Dr. Wolf, consciously knew that he, Dr. Wolf, was channeling, but Wolf was. Dr. Wolf channeled to Dan that, he, Dr. Wolf, wanted to do a Kabbalah inner work session with Dan. Dan channeled back, “Oh, you mean with levels?” “Yes,” said Dr. Wolf. “That is sort of like Critical Thomism,” said Dan, “we call that a Chakra Stem Alignment.” “Alright, let’s try that,” said Dr. Wolf. “I am reading your Chakra Stem now, and am not getting much, so let’s start from scratch. You are supposed to put on your Chakra Stem, that which is really you. The one thing I don’t recommend is that you put God on your primary chakra stem. This seems to upset a lot of Satanists and atheists and might keep you on the ward. Dan chose Being at level one on his primary chakra stem and Substance at level zero. He then followed critical Thomism and put Experience at level 1.1, Understanding at level 2.1, and reflection and judgment at level 3.1. At level 4, Dan chose Being and formal operations; at level 5 Creativity and Hermeneutics; and, at level 6, Intuition. The two
used embedded neuro-linguistic commands so that the chakra stem programming would not be easily broken or changed. They then shifted over to a secondary chakra stem, which paralleled the first, and started over, repeating the process about 5 times. By the time they were done, Dan felt that his mind and personality had really solidified. He was doing better. Although he really didn’t think there was much wrong with him in the first place, he was definitely doing better. Dan shifted his mind as was back on the ward with one week to go. He then remembered the incident that he didn’t like. The janitor had come onto the ward and complained that someone was clogging the toilet with toilet paper. The janitor told the patients, “Some one is clogging up the toilet with toilet paper. If this happens again, I am taking the toilet paper out of the bathrooms and you will have to wipe yourself off with your bare hand after you have finished shitting.” Dan was shocked. Dan said, “You know, this sounds like Nazi Germany, you are committing a human rights violation. This is exactly the type of thing that put away the Nazis at the Neurenberg Trials after World War II.” The janitor didn’t say anything more to the patients and later apologized to Dan. The next week, Dan got his clothes together in big plastic bags and was escorted by a psychiatric aide over to Dickson Hall. Everyone in Dickson Hall had a ground card so they kept the door on the ward to the outside grounds unlocked from 8:30 a.m. until lunch at 12:00 noon. Then everybody went to class from 1:00p.m. to 3:00p.m. When he was on 3W the afternoon classes were typically boring. But now he had a better schedule. He had ceramics, recreation, and work in the green house most days. He still had a couple of groups where they talked about psychiatric medication and problem
solving. After class they were free to go outside from 3:30p.m. to 5:00p.m., and then from 5:30p.m. to 7:00p.m. The nicest think about Dickson Hall was that there were soda vending machines in the lobby, and then wooden lawn chairs in the courtyard in the front of the building. When the weather was nice you could grab a soda and sit down and enjoy the fresh air. Dan now had a new psychiatrist, Dr. Kuzniak. She was pretty nice. After Dan was in Dickson for a month, she found that Dan was “not a danger to himself or a third person,” and could be discharged at some point in the future. Jim Chandler was the social worker. Chandler sat down with Dan and told him what it would take to get out of Dickson and into Group Home care in town. (to be continued).