The Boston Herald
Michael Lasalandra, Health Reporter
I first heard of Rhonda Lenair back in 1992 when I was the medical writer at The Palm Beach Post newspaper and her mother called me suggesting I do a story on her daughter’s unusual technique for getting people to quit their addictions. I don’t usually bite on cold calls like that one, but there was something in what she said and how she said it that grabbed my attention. Skeptical but intrigued, I did the story. And I didn’t forget her.
A year or so later, a friend was having a problem and I suggested to her that Lenair might help. The friend went to see her, was cured, and my interest in Lenair was piqued again. I wrote another story about her in 1996 a few years after taking a position as medical writer at The Boston Herald.
During the course of researching Rhonda Lenair and The Lenair Technique, I talked with dozens of people who said they had been cured of long time alcohol, drug and tobacco addictions. The patients whom I had talked to were credible. I began to believe. In 2001, I did yet another story on Lenair’s prowess in treating alcohol addictions. The story led to another friend’s being treated for a drinking problem – a problem that was overcome quickly and easily in just three sessions with Lenair.
Let it suffice to say, as a medical writer for more than 12 years, I have seen and heard a variety of claims, from physicians and healers of all sorts, mainstream and alternative. Basically, I’ve seen and heard it all. But nothing I’ve seen in all these years has ever come close to matching Rhonda Lenair. She’s the real thing.”