Description
COURT CASE:
- experiencing angina pectoris
- experiencing chest pains
- experiencing chest pains that result from myocardial ischemia
- experiencing chest pains that result from having inadequate myocardial blood and oxygen supply
- having an imbalance between oxygen supply and demand
- atherosclerosis causing, contributing to, and/or exacerbating our angina
- coronary artery spams causing, contributing, and/or exacerbating our angina
- conditions increasing myocardial oxygen consumption causing, contributing, and/or exacerbating our angina
- experiencing tight squeezing, heavy pressure, and/or constricting feelings in our chest
- our blood blow being partially and/or fully obstructed from getting to our heart
- myocardial ischemia
- experiencing an abrupt interruption of oxygen to the heart muscles
- stable angina (exertional angina)
- experiencing angina when we participate in activities that involve physical exertion
- experiencing angina when we experience emotional distress
- our chest pain having a stable pattern of onset, duration, severity, and relieving factors
- unstable angina (pre-infarction angina)
- our chest pains having an unpredictable degree of exertion or emotion that increases in occurrence, duration, and severity over time
- having chest pains that are unpredictable
- having chest pains that occurs with increasing frequency
- having chest pains that are easily provoked with minimal or no exertion
- fatigue
- shortness of breath
- indigestion
- anxiety
- having chest pains that are not relieved with nitroglycerin
- a thrombus formation causing, contributing to, and/or exacerbating our myocardial ischemia, and causing our chest pain
- vasoconstriction causing, contributing to, and/or exacerbating our myocardial ischemia, and causing our chest pain
- having chest pain that is new in onset,
- having chest pain even when we’re at rest
- having chest pain that has a pattern of getting worse
- developing unstable angina after having chronic stable angina
- variant angina (Prinz-metal or vasospastic angina)
- experiencing coronary artery spasms
- experiencing chest pains even when we’re at rest
- experiencing an ST depression in our ECG results
- intractable angina
- having a chronic, incapacitating angina that is unresponsive to interventions
- pre-infarction angina
- experiencing angina due to having acute coronary insufficiency
- having chest pains that last longer than 15 minutes
- worsening cardiac ischemia
- experiencing chest pain that occurs days to weeks before a myocardial infarction (heart attack)
- pain
- chest pains
- experiencing chest pains that are unrelieved by rest
- experiencing chest pains that are unrelieved by medications
- experiencing chest pains that are unrelieved by emotional healing prayer
- experiencing chest pains that are unrelieved by prayer
- experiencing pain that develops slowly
- experiencing pain that develops quickly
- experiencing pain that is mild and/or moderate
- experiencing substernal, crushing, and/or squeezing pain
- experiencing chest pain that radiates to our shoulders, arms, jaws, neck, or back
- experiencing chest pain that intensifies despite us taking deep breathes
- experiencing pain that lasts less than 5 minutes
- experiencing pain that can last up to 1520 minutes
- dyspnea
- pallor
- sweating
- having heart palpitations
- having tachycardia
- dizziness
- syncope
- hypertension
- having digestive disturbances
- our ECG results show ST depression, or T wave inversions during an episode of pain
- feeling chest pain or experiencing changes in our ECG results or experiencing changes in our vital signs when we do a stress test
- anger
- fear
- anxiety
- stress
- nervousness
- panic
- sadness
- grief
- being brokenhearted
- us and/or our ancestors taking vows and/or oaths in Freemasonry to have our hearts ripped out of us
- having ancestral soul fragments who were impaled in the chest and/or heart
- blood sacrifices in our bloodlines
- sun worship in our bloodlines
- placing word curses on us by saying, “fuck my life (FML),” “kill me now,” “shoot me,” “my heart can’t take it,” or “my poor heart.”
- having human agents of darkness release suffering and death spells against us
- cannibalism
- the category/kingdom of fear, sadness, and pain spirits that cause, contribute to, and/or exacerbate the aforementioned problems
- the category/kingdom of spirits that cause, contribute to, and/or exacerbate the aforementioned problems