From CBN:
“There is no medical explanation.” That’s what Father Karl Pung of Saint Mary Cathedral in Lansing, Michigan, said about a parishioner who spent nearly 13 years in a wheelchair.
The woman, who was also on a ventilator after suffering for years with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) and autonomic dysfunction, believes she was miraculously healed last month — and Pung agrees. In a video released by the Diocese of Lansing, Dani Laurion said she was at a special healing service at Saint Mary Cathedral on March 15, 2022, when something astonishing unfolded as she lifted her hands to God in worship. “I reached up, and I just said, ‘I need you, and I need you to hold me and just take care of me,’” Dani said.
From National Catholic Register:
Along with Doug, Dani’s mother, and a friend, Dani sat in the pew at the cathedral with the rest of the congregation and participated in the prayer and worship music that evening, March 15. As she lost herself in the worship music, Dani remembered that Healy had encouraged the attendees to put their hands in the air, like a child “asking your dad to pick you up.” So, Dani did just that.
“I just put my hands up and I just asked God to just hold me,” she remembered. Mary Healy, who was leading the proceedings, was giving words of knowledge, a common feature of healing services. Healy described words of knowledge as “a revelation from the Lord about something He‘s doing, something that you don’t get by natural knowledge…You speak out what you think, specifically, the Lord is healing.”
From Catholic News Agency:
April 2022 would have marked Dani Laurion’s thirteenth year confined to a wheelchair. But instead, for the past month or so, Dani has been strolling around Lansing as if those dozen infirm years had never happened.
At a Catholic healing service held at St. Mary Cathedral in March, she felt moved to stand up and walk on her own. In that same moment, she was able to eschew the ventilator that she had worn, constantly, for months up to that point. Dani says it’s a miracle, and her husband Doug — who has worked as a nurse for the past 37 years — agrees.
From Fox47:
In Saint Mary Cathedral in downtown Lansing, Danielle Laurion said she experienced not one, but two miracles.
“Almost 10 years—better part of 10 years on and off—I was in probably, was it seven different facilities?” Danielle looked to her husband, Doug, who agreed. “When I was out of there, I was living in Cheboygan in a senior community.” In 2017, Danielle had a tracheostomy. “That was put in because of repeated pneumonias and infections in my lungs,” Danielle said. Since the start of this year, she has been on a ventilator 24/7 due to excessive dynamic airway collapse and tracheobronchomalacia. She said she has not been able to breathe on her own.