* This story is related to a barren couple I met on a plane in the USA in 2003 who were in counselling in the hope that it would bring about a child, and organ regeneration in terms of a book I have been reading about a Russian guy who regenerated his gallbladder due to a shamanic journey.

Jerome and Jeana


An infertile couple need to sell/pawn a family heirloom saxophone to pay for the legal costs of their nephew who is on trial for murder. In the end, a museum pays for the legal costs when they trace the sax back to the family – this amounts to much more than the price they initially paid for sax – and the nephew is eventually acquitted but was actually framed by fellow gang members.

Alternatively, the nephew’s parents approach the museum when they see a picture of the saxophone online and the museum also gives the saxophone back to the family.

Eventually the acquitted nephew takes up sax lessons and extracts himself from his street gang and the family donate the sax back to the museum.

Jerome and Jeana finally get pregnant which is completely unexpected and a miracle.

Jeana had had a hysterectomy and that body part grew back spontaneously. This is not a miracle in Russia.

The act of donating the saxophone cleared emotional blockages and allowed this to happen after Jeana stumbled upon a book about organ regeneration.

see: 5:43 above – uterus regeneration at 57 y/o

The couple call their son/daughter whatever was the name of the saxophone.

A sequel is possible based on the life of the child who becomes a museum curator, artefact researcher or miracle healer. The story can start with shots of the saxophone being used in 1940’s NYC. Alternatively, another instrument can be used such as a piano or violin.

src: SimplyAugmented.com

“The museum believes it was the horn Parker played on his seminal album Charlie Parker with Strings, released in 1950 on Mercury Records. It has no pictures to prove it, but Reece says it’s a high probability that he was playing that horn most of the time from 1947 until he pawned it shortly before his March 1955 death. ‘He had a substance abuse problem and he was known for pawning several of his instruments to acquire funds to support his addictions,’ Reece says.”

The Long Journey of Charlie Parker’s Saxophone


 

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