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Medical Heretic & Holistic Physician
I am a New York‑based virtual holistic physician, medical journalist, and fiction writer dedicated to defending individual rights in healthcare. Drawing on my medical background, my work is defined by a lifelong commitment to medical advocacy—defending the individual against coercive systems of psychiatry and the corporate influences that sustain them.
Currently, I focus my professional efforts on three critical pillars:
Clinical Advocacy: Through my virtual telehealth practice, I offer Holistic Lifestyle & Nutrition Coaching that nurtures good health in body, mind, and spirit. Rather than practicing traditional primary care medicine, I offer holistic wellness alternatives that prioritize the "whole person" over a diagnosis, supporting your bodily autonomy and informed consent.
Journalistic Advocacy: As an independent reporter at DrMandelNews.com (MandelNews.com), I primarily investigate and expose psychiatric abuses. My mission is to give a voice to the silenced and to ensure that human rights remain at the forefront of medical discourse.
Creative Advocacy: As an author of speculative fiction short stories, I explore these complexities through narrative. My writing serves as a series of cautionary fables, using imaginative storytelling to examine the consequences of institutional overreach and the enduring importance of the human spirit.

Holistic mental health coaching offers a gentle, human‑centered path to emotional well‑being—one grounded in compassion, dignity, and whole‑person understanding. Guided by a warm, present practitioner, coaching becomes a stabilizing force that helps people feel safe, valued, and empowered. Many individuals seek this approach because it n
Holistic mental health coaching offers a gentle, human‑centered path to emotional well‑being—one grounded in compassion, dignity, and whole‑person understanding. Guided by a warm, present practitioner, coaching becomes a stabilizing force that helps people feel safe, valued, and empowered. Many individuals seek this approach because it nurtures mental health without reducing people to labels or imposing interventions that can feel harsh or disconnected from their lived experience. Holistic coaching restores the healing power of human connection, offering a preventive, life‑affirming alternative that aligns with the natural rhythms of wellness.
A compassionate coach begins with presence. In the ocean‑blue spirit of The Holistic Pulse—calm, steady, and deeply human—the practitioner listens with full attention, creating a sanctuary where clients can explore their inner world without fear of judgment. This emotional safety is foundational. When people feel genuinely heard, their nervous system settles, their stress decreases, and their capacity for insight expands. Holistic coaching honors the whole person rather than isolating symptoms. Clients are supported in strengthening daily practices that nourish mind and body: hydration, balanced nutrition, restorative sleep, movement, sunlight, creativity, and meaningful connection. These lifestyle anchors form the bedrock of long‑term resilience.
Many individuals turn to holistic coaching because they have experienced systems that felt cold, rushed, or dismissive of their humanity. Some describe encounters where their distress was met with labels instead of understanding, or where powerful interventions were applied without addressing root causes such as trauma, isolation, chronic stress, or unmet emotional needs. Others felt pressured, unheard, or pathologized—experiences that can compound suffering rather than relieve it. Holistic coaching offers a different path, one that refuses to treat people as problems to be managed and instead recognizes them as whole beings capable of growth, healing, and transformation.
Prevention is one of the greatest strengths of holistic coaching. Instead of waiting for distress to escalate into crisis, coaching helps individuals cultivate protective habits that keep them grounded and balanced. Early signs of imbalance are met with gentle guidance rather than drastic measures. Breathwork, mindfulness, grounding techniques, and nature‑based practices help clients regulate their emotions in daily life. Exploration of purpose and values provides direction and meaning—powerful shields against despair. This proactive model treats mental health as a living ecosystem that thrives when nurtured consistently, much like the steady rhythm of waves along a calm shoreline.
The relationship between coach and client is a partnership, not a hierarchy. In the ocean‑blue ethos of The Holistic Pulse, the practitioner stands beside the client, not above them. This collaborative stance helps individuals rediscover their strengths, navigate transitions, and build confidence in their own inner resources. The coaching relationship itself becomes a source of healing—warm, steady, and deeply human. Clients often describe feeling more empowered, more understood, and more capable of shaping their own future.
Holistic mental health coaching offers a life‑affirming alternative for prevention, empowerment, and long‑term wellness. It provides care rooted in empathy, lifestyle medicine, and whole‑person understanding—without resorting to interventions that can feel destructive or dehumanizing. For many, it represents a return to the kind of compassionate connection that has always been central to healing. As more individuals seek mental health support that aligns with their values, holistic coaching stands out as a gentle, empowering, ocean‑blue path toward lifelong well‑being.

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Planet 37XV was never meant to be a home. It was a sentence.
When the first prison transports descended through its copper-colored skies, the passengers were told they had been given a second chance. Rehabilitation, the broadcasts promised. A new beginning beyond the mistakes of the past. No one believed them.
Ever since President Derma si
Planet 37XV was never meant to be a home. It was a sentence.
When the first prison transports descended through its copper-colored skies, the passengers were told they had been given a second chance. Rehabilitation, the broadcasts promised. A new beginning beyond the mistakes of the past. No one believed them.
Ever since President Derma signed the Forever Mental Healthcare Proclamation in 2155, the New Earth Confederation had transformed psychiatric diagnosis into something far darker than medicine. A diagnosis no longer described an illness—it defined a person's worth. Once branded mentally unstable, a citizen ceased to be a citizen at all. They became a liability. Some disappeared quietly. Others were publicly executed. The fortunate ones—if such a word still had meaning—were exiled to the distant Ophelleus System, where worlds like 37XV swallowed people whole.
The Great Nuclear War of 2100 had shattered civilization into frightened fragments. The Confederation rebuilt humanity with steel, surveillance, and fear, convincing the survivors that safety required obedience and obedience required enemies. The "mentally unfit" became those enemies.
Phineas and Erma had never belonged there.
Erma's crime was speaking too loudly. She had organized peaceful demonstrations against disappearances, demanding investigations into psychiatric facilities that had become political prisons. Cameras recorded every speech. Algorithms catalogued every sentence. Eventually the diagnosis came: Delusional Opposition Disorder. The words sounded clinical enough to reassure the public, but everyone in power knew they were nothing more than a political weapon.
Phineas knew that better than anyone. As one of the Confederation's physicians, he had been ordered to approve hundreds of fabricated psychiatric evaluations. He refused. Medicine, he argued, existed to heal—not to erase dissent. The refusal cost him everything. Within a week he received a diagnosis of his own. Neither of them stood trial. One sunrise they were citizens. By sunset they were cargo.
Planet 37XV greeted its prisoners with endless rust-colored plains stretching beneath a bruised sky. Iron-rich dust drifted constantly through the atmosphere, staining clothing, skin, and lungs alike. Razor winds swept across barren canyons with enough force to strip paint from metal. Water was rationed. Food arrived frozen. Hope never arrived at all.
High above the camps floated the orbital deterrence grid, a lattice of defense satellites whose silent presence reminded every prisoner of the same truth: escape was impossible. The guards repeated it every morning. The drones repeated it every night. After enough years, even the prisoners began repeating it to themselves.
Camp Helion never slept. Prisoners labored fourteen hours each day mining rare superconductive minerals before collapsing into cramped barracks for a few hours of restless sleep. Meals consisted of nutrient paste served in dented steel bowls. Medical examinations existed not to heal injuries but merely to determine whether workers could survive another shift. Over time, people stopped introducing themselves. Names suggested futures. Numbers were safer.
Yet somehow, Phineas and Erma refused to let the Confederation take the last pieces of their humanity. Each evening they shared whatever little they could spare—a saved portion of lunch, a childhood memory, a whispered joke hidden beneath blankets while surveillance microphones struggled against the relentless desert wind. Sometimes they simply held hands in silence. The Confederation could confiscate food. It could confiscate freedom. It could not quite confiscate love.
The idea of escape arrived so quietly that neither of them could remember who first suggested it. Perhaps no one had. Perhaps hope simply refused to die. Planning became an act of rebellion—not because success seemed likely, but because imagining freedom reminded them they were still alive.
During their third year, Phineas deliberately volunteered for maintenance duty after noticing an aging engineer named Tobias assigned to shuttle infrastructure. Unlike most Confederation employees, Tobias still looked prisoners in the eye. Over months of shared repairs and cautious conversations, the old engineer admitted he had once designed civilian spacecraft before militarization consumed everything. While pretending to repair electronic security locks, he quietly taught Phineas how they really worked. "They've made these systems look complicated," he muttered one evening with a weary smile. "They're not." Every lesson was committed to memory. Nothing was ever written down.
By the fifth year, Erma had become an expert not in machines but in people. She memorized guard rotations, observed which officers drank themselves numb after their shifts, and learned who fell asleep during patrols and who secretly hated their assignments. Human weakness, she realized, was far more predictable than any computer system.
Two years later, expansion work beneath Camp Helion uncovered forgotten maintenance tunnels dating back to the colony's earliest days. Night after night, Phineas and Erma explored the abandoned passages, marking intersections with scratches too small for security scans to detect. Eventually they discovered exactly what they had been searching for—a forgotten maintenance conduit leading directly beneath the military shuttle hangar.
Their final piece of luck arrived in the form of a young Confederation worker named Lysa. Unlike the others, she apologized when prisoners were injured. That alone made her dangerous. Weeks passed before she trusted them enough to speak honestly. "I thought the broadcasts exaggerated," she confessed one evening while distributing work assignments. "They don't." Months later, without making eye contact, she slipped a forged transit authorization beneath Erma's food tray. "If weather interference ever disrupts orbital scans," she whispered, "that will be your chance."
The chance came during their tenth year.
A planetary dust storm unlike any before it rolled across 37XV. Atmospheric lightning crippled communications, navigation satellites drifted offline, and emergency lighting replaced primary power throughout the colony. For three precious hours, the prison blinked.
They moved without speaking.
The forgotten tunnels echoed beneath their footsteps as they navigated toward the shuttle bay. Every creaking pipe sounded like approaching guards. Every shadow threatened betrayal. Finally they reached the maintenance ladder leading into the hangar.
Rows of Confederation transports rested beneath dim emergency lights like sleeping beasts. Outside, crimson lightning illuminated the storm through reinforced glass. Erma's hands trembled as she presented the forged transit pass. Ten years of imprisonment had taught her to expect failure. The exhausted guard barely glanced at the credentials before yawning and waving them through.
Inside the shuttle, the cockpit smelled of machine oil and recycled air. Phineas's hands shook as he activated the systems Tobias had taught him years before. One switch. Another. Navigation. Power. Thrusters. The engines awakened with a deep mechanical growl that seemed loud enough to alert the entire colony. For one terrible moment, nothing happened. Then the warning lights disappeared. Flight authorization accepted. Somewhere in orbital command, someone assumed they belonged there.
The massive hangar doors slowly opened.
Beyond them waited the storm.
Beyond the storm waited the stars.
The shuttle surged upward, kicking enormous clouds of rust-colored dust across the landing platform. Lightning flashed around them as the vessel fought through violent turbulence. Warning alarms filled the cockpit while the atmosphere clawed at the hull. Then, all at once, gravity loosened. The clouds fell away.
Planet 37XV shrank beneath them.
The prison became nothing more than a scar across a dying world.
Erma stared silently through the viewport. She had not seen an unobstructed sky in ten years. A single tear traced its way down her cheek before drifting weightlessly through the cabin. She hadn't realized she still remembered how to cry.
No pursuit came. No interceptor craft. No missiles. Either the storm had hidden them, or the Confederation had become so certain escape was impossible that no one imagined anyone would try.
Ahead stretched the endless stars—not as distant lights, but as destinations.
Their course was set for Ortheus 45YT, a neighboring world spoken of only in whispers among prisoners. Some believed it welcomed refugees fleeing the Confederation. Others insisted it was merely another prison wrapped in prettier lies. Hope often sounded like rumor.
Erma rested her head against Phineas's shoulder as the navigation computer prepared for faster-than-light travel.
"Do you think Ortheus is real?" she asked quietly.
Phineas looked through the canopy at the vast sea of stars surrounding them before answering.
"It doesn't matter."
She looked up at him.
"If it isn't..."
"We'll keep going."
"And if nowhere is safe?"
A tired smile crossed his face—the kind earned only through surviving the impossible.
"Then we'll build somewhere that is."
Silence settled gently over the cockpit. Not the silence of prisons, but the silence of open space. There would be uncertainty ahead. Perhaps danger. Perhaps even another war. But for the first time in a decade, their future belonged to them.
The shuttle slipped into faster-than-light transit, leaving only a ribbon of blue light where it had been.
Behind them, Planet 37XV continued its lonely orbit around an indifferent star, still believing no one ever escaped.
Ahead lay Ortheus 45YT.
Whether it offered sanctuary or another trial remained unknown.
But uncertainty was a privilege.
Because uncertainty meant possibility.
And after carrying the weight of ten years, possibility was enough.






There is no need for a dramatic, cinematic coup when the slow grind of systemic attrition works perfectly. The architects of the current American sociopolitical and financial systems are winning their war against dissent, not by making a loud declaration of victory, but by quietly dismantling the lives of anyone who dares to look outside
There is no need for a dramatic, cinematic coup when the slow grind of systemic attrition works perfectly. The architects of the current American sociopolitical and financial systems are winning their war against dissent, not by making a loud declaration of victory, but by quietly dismantling the lives of anyone who dares to look outside the perimeter.
We are witnessing a multi-tiered processing of human beings. Dissidents and outliers are no longer just argued with; they are economically and physically neutralized. The modern toolkit of control is diverse and devastating:
* **Economic Evisceration:** Processing individuals directly into unemployment and homelessness, stripping away the material stability required to mount any meaningful resistance.
* **Institutional Pathologizing:** Affixing erroneous psychiatric labels to non-conformity, followed by toxic drugging and interventions designed to dull the mind and break the spirit.
* **The Iron Fist:** Utilizing police brutality and false incarcerations within broken, hazardous jail systems that act as modern-day death chambers.
* **The Invisible Border:** The psychological warfare of persistent stalking, badgering, and the deployment of high-tech, intrusive monitoring systems designed to ensure a dissenter never knows peace.
### The Illusion of Permissibility
Right now, the victors of this quiet war are celebrating a profound irony. They allow pieces of dissent—like this very commentary—to exist online and offline. But this is not out of a respect for liberty. It is a calculated propaganda tool used on the global stage to score points against adversarial foreign powers, maintaining the hollow myth of "free speech."
The tyrants can afford this leniency because they have already won the psychological battle. They look out at a population where there are fewer and fewer healthy, independent men, women, and children who even possess the energy to tune into dissent, let alone act upon it. Apathy, exhaustion, and distraction have done the heavy lifting.
### The Dark Horizon
We can already envision the next phase of this architecture. The window of "permissible dissent" is closing. In the not-too-distant future, the pretense of propaganda will no longer be necessary.
We are rapidly moving toward an era where the mere act of questioning the system will be codified as a serious crime. When that day comes, the digital and physical records of resistance—these commentaries, these warnings, these cries for awareness—will not just be ignored. They will be blocked, scrubzed, and permanently destroyed.
God help mankind, because the machine is running perfectly, and the silence it leaves behind is deafening.

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