Press & Profiles

The Toronto Sun Asked Why People Turn to a Medium in the Hardest Times

Toronto Sun · June 24, 2020

By Rita DeMontis

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The Toronto Sun asked what people really come to me for when the world feels frightening. It is rarely about predicting the future. It is reassurance, and closure.

Angel Morgan, Toronto medium, in soft candlelit amber tones.

In the spring of 2020, when everything felt uncertain, the Toronto Sun's Rita DeMontis noticed something. People were not only calling their doctors and their families. They were calling mediums. She asked me why. My answer then is my answer now. In the frightening moments, people are not usually asking me to predict the stock market. They are asking to feel held. They want to know that a loved one who crossed over is at peace, and that they themselves are going to be alright.

I have never seen myself as someone who works in a bubble. I am one layer of a person's care, alongside the therapists and counsellors and doctors who do their own vital work. I think of myself as a holistic communicator. My role is to set the table for the message, to bring through the reassurance and the closure that let a grieving heart finally exhale. Over thirty years I have learned that comfort is not a small thing. Sometimes it is the whole thing. And the people on the other side, the ones who loved us, are so often reaching back with exactly that.

If that is where you are, mediumship sessions are a place to begin.

What people are looking for today is reassurance, and closure.

Angel Morgan, Toronto Sun

If you are carrying a grief that needs somewhere to land, come and sit with me for a mediumship session.

Related

Questions people ask

Yes. For many people a mediumship session brings reassurance and closure, a sense that a loved one who has passed is at peace, which can be a meaningful part of grieving alongside other support.