Since the premiere of E!’s new series Hollywood Medium With Tyler Henry (Sundays at 10pmET on E!), a lot of fans have been asking how to contact Tyler Henry. The star of the series had quite a following prior to the start of his show, so he already has a waiting list.
“As far as getting or booking a reading, I do have a manager who takes appointments, and so I have a website —[updated: www.tylerhenryhollywoodmedium.com] — where people can reach me and book a reading,” he tells us. “But I currently have a waiting list, about six months, that we’re working with, but I definitely am looking forward to new clients, so I’m open to it.”
“I remember when I was first starting, around 16, I had a woman who came to see me who was very skeptical, and I told her that she had a susceptibility to an intestinal hemorrhage that I, I saw was a rupture, and hemorrhage,” Henry explains. “And she was a little cynical and she laughed, and then I was contacted by her a couple weeks later, and she told me that she was hospitalized because she dealt with an intestinal rupture very shortly after meeting, and so that was really a wake up call for her.”
When pressed to explain how exactly he saw that coming, he explains the process as being more of a visualization and his body’s own physical feelings.
“Medical intuition goes around a couple different subjects. So, it’s clairvoyant in the sense that I receive information about people’s health through visions that I get, and there’s also a very strong physical component where I really click on the physical attributes of the illness. So, for example a chest pain or a head pain. But in this particular case I was just given an intense stomach pain, and then had a visual image of an intestine rupturing.”
Clearly it’s not easy to deliver any troubling news about a person’s health, but Henry has learned to work through that.
“I would say that there are for sure subjects that come up in readings that can definitely be really heavy, sensitive; and me being a complete stranger to these clients, and meeting them for the first time, it’s a little tough sometimes to say, ‘Oh, you know, I have to now tell you about a very personal aspect of your life.’”
I would think most people would appreciate the heads up so they can look for symptoms and would maybe be more readily willing to get help. What do you think?