Lauren Przybyl thought Helen Sipes would be mad at her the first time they met.
She had good reason to be. Earlier that day at preschool, Przybyl’s daughter, Alexandra, had punched Sipes’ daughter, Sidney, in the stomach.
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Kristin Tamke, left, gives Shannon Beatty a reading during a psychic fair outside Dublin Roasters Coffee on Sunday.
Staff photo by Katina ZentzKristin Tamke, left, gives Shannon Beatty a reading during a psychic fair outside Dublin Roasters Coffee on Sunday.
Kristin Tamke, left, gives Shannon Beatty a reading during a psychic fair outside Dublin Roasters Coffee on Sunday.
Kristin Tamke, left, gives Linda Perez a reading during a psychic fair outside of Dublin Roasters Coffee on Sunday. There were psychics, tarot readers, jewelry, crystals, and cards.
Cards are spread on a table as Kristin Tamke gives a reading during a psychic fair outside Dublin Roasters Coffee on Sunday. There were psychics, tarot readers, jewelry, crystals, and cards.
Helen Sipes gestures at a table filled with items during a psychic fair outside Dublin Roasters Coffee on Sunday. There were psychics, tarot readers, jewelry, crystals, and cards.
Mary Crowe holds a crystal during a psychic fair outside Dublin Roasters Coffee on Sunday. There were psychics, tarot readers, jewelry, crystals, and cards.
Megan Lee, also known as Mystical Megan-Lightworker, practices sound healing during a psychic fair outside of Dublin Roasters Coffee on Sunday. There were psychics, tarot readers, jewelry, crystals and cards.
Lauren Przybyl thought Helen Sipes would be mad at her the first time they met.
She had good reason to be. Earlier that day at preschool, Przybyl’s daughter, Alexandra, had punched Sipes’ daughter, Sidney, in the stomach.
But Sipes wasn’t angry.
“She probably needed it,” Sipes said. “It was probably her fault anyway.”
Almost a decade later, Alexandra and Sidney laughed underneath a large tent set up outside Frederick’s Dublin Roasters Coffee as their moms told the story.
The two girls, both 13, are best friends now. So are Przybyl and Sipes. And as of a few years ago, they’re also business partners.
On Sunday, Sipes’ online shop, The Simple Life, was one of half a dozen vendors participating in a pop-up psychic fair in the parking lot of the North Market Street coffee shop.
The Simple Life sells items that Sipes says are meant to boost users’ spiritual health. Przybyl supplies her with decorative wall hangings, and other macramé and crocheted pieces. She also sells products such as candles, herbs, incense, sage and rosemary smudge sticks.
Sipes, whose grandmother was a medium in Michigan, has been interested in all things spiritual since she was a young girl. She started her online shop in 2016, and hopes to open a brick-and-mortar store in downtown Frederick.
“We’ll probably be co-workers for the rest of our lives,” she said, smiling at Przybyl.
A few feet away from the shade of Sipes and Przybyl’s tent, Mary Crowe squinted in the bright sunlight. A table packed with minerals and gemstones sparkled in front of her.
Crowe, who also works in real estate, sells crystals and rocks through her online shop Druzy Girl. She traveled from Bumpass, Virginia, north of Richmond, to participate in Sunday’s psychic fair.
Though she’s relatively new to the game — she started her shop less than a year ago — she’s always loved rocks. She used to collect pyrite, also known as fool’s gold, off a beach in Connecticut.
One of her favorite things about being in business is chatting with her customers about the stones they’re purchasing and where they plan on putting them when they get home.
“It’s just like [how] horse people like other horse people,” Crowe said. “Rock people like other rock people.”
Erin Nelson drove out from Charles Town, West Virginia, to visit the psychic fair. She’s a medium and palm reader who likes to support her fellow vendors.
She picked up some blue turquoise, purple fluorite and jade from Crowe’s booth on Sunday. She plans to place some of the rocks in the room she uses for palm reading at home and show the smooth palm stones she purchased to her husband and daughter.
“They like to hold them and carry them sometimes,” she said, “instead of a stress ball.”
Reiki master and tarot card reader Kristin Tamke organized Sunday’s psychic fair. She didn’t have time to put her sign out before customers started arriving just before the event was scheduled to start at 10 a.m.
Though Tamke has since moved to Manassas, Virginia, she lived in Frederick for about a decade. She started hosting events outside of Dublin Roasters a couple of years ago. Besides psychic exhibitions, she’s also organized fairy and wizard festivals.
The paranormal has always fascinated Tamke. She started honing her skills as a card reader after visiting a few psychics and mediums, and watching their predictions come true, she said. Now, she says she’s honored to help people contact deceased loved ones and seek guidance in major life decisions.
Joy Kesselman is a faithful customer of Tamke’s.
She met the card reader while she was still living in Frederick. Tamke is gifted and has “great energy,” Kesselman said. She popped by the psychic fair, hoping to run into her.
“I haven’t seen her in years, so I’m due for a little Kristin juice,” Kesselman said, making Tamke laugh.
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(36) comments
I drive by Dublin Roasters fairly often and have thought about stopping in. But not after this. Not any more than I would go to Chick-Fil-A.
The coffee at Dublin Roasters is good, Royce. I avoid Chick Fil A because of their over-salted food.
Leviticus 20:6
6 "'I will set my face against the person who turns to mediums and spiritists to prostitute himself by following them, and I will cut him off from his people.
Says the Bible that has horrors of gawd killing scads for no good reason. Curb your fictitious crap.
Greg - tell that to the psychics at the Dublin too!!
Everyone has this potential.
That was Yahweh's self-appointed spokesfolk trying to eliminate competition. Magic spells are just prayers by a different name
I can prove that all prayers are answered. Sometimes the answer is yes. Sometimes the answer is no. See? Wasn't that easy?
But can you prove who does the answering?
By the way, are you familiar with this video about … let’s see if I can get this past the nannybot…. “Smooching Hank’s Derrière”? The dialogue was written by a Christian minister.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zaFZQBb2srM
Not so far, public, how about you? Any idea how the universe works?
The universe pretty much follows the laws of physics so far as I can tell.
You're funny!
Thanks. Learned it at an AME church when I was a youngster. Then I learned to think for myself.
Thanks for the link to that KHA video. Hard to believe it was written by a believing Christian.
It reminds me of my general observation about belief in the supernatural, whether orgnized into a religion or not. It's all because somebody said so. Hank said so. Yahweh said so. How do we know that? Easy, because somebody said so.
Believing Christians know that there is room for doubt. Are you familiar with “doubting Thomas?” Faith is a choice not everyone makes. If it were just hardwired into you there would be no free will. This film makes you think, but what it makes you think probably varies a lot.
Dwasserba: Atheists also know there is room for doubt. Probably know it better than do most theists. I have noticed that people raised in any given organized religion find it very hard to acknowledge their doubt, and when they eventually accept their doubt, they find it difficult to come out, maybe as difficult as it is for gays to come out. Perhaps the most courageous are the priests, ministers, rabbis and imams who have reasoned their way to atheism or, at least, to agnosticism.
Dwasserba,
Biblical scholars are pretty confident that the doubting Thomas story was a later addition to the text. One hypothesis is that so much time had gone by without Jesus showing up again like he said he would that people were indeed doubting the veracity of the resurrection. So some “evidence” was invented.
Boyce, Glad you enjoyed it. Good luck on getting your million dollars!
Is Leviticus where two daughters get impregnated by their dad? Oh, that's Genesis. Leviticus just says women are worth less, and that God shuns those with disabilities.
It is a shame that Christians who have this talent cannot share it.
What balderdash! No one can prove that so-called psychic abilities exist, the merchants here are either preying on the gullible or have been gulled themselves.
Your same thinking can be applied to all to all religions too, Royce.
In the meantime, The Dude abides.
Yes, of course.
So...spirituality now has to do with being psychic? That's a stretch. The only thing psychics can see coming is the next person they are going to fleece. I'm psychic...I see stupid people.
"Greg F May 15, 2022 3:30pm
Hooray for you. Nobody cares what you think" [lol][lol][lol][lol]
Mike I said…I see stupid people…you are one I see today.
Such as when you look in the mirror? Get Bent, Greg, sound familiar?
Like
It’s harmless. No salesman will call.
Oh my geesh
Oh, Jeez? ISWYDT!
So neither one of you can define spiritualism either? I thought it was just me? Isn’t Psychic spiritualist an oxymoron?
Is psychic spiritualism an ability to sense beyond our five defined senses or beyond our standard three dimensions?
Spiritualism..the ability to improv and dig up details so as to fleece other’s pockets.
threecents..perhaps
Is psychic spiritualism an ability to sense beyond our five defined senses or beyond our standard three dimensions?
And how would a psychic know what they are sensing was beyond their five senses...I wasn't aware we could sense beyond our five senses....? Same thing with the standard three dimensions..what evidence could a psychic present that they are sensing beyond what they know?
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