Radiesthesia
A very old and highly respected branch of extrasensory activity that relies on physical organs for readings that they would ordinarily not give is radiesthesia--better known as "dowsing" or "water-witching". A person with this talent--really a form of psychic ability, too--can discover the rpesence of water or metals undergound merely by holding a forked stick in his or her hands. Instantly, the dowsing rod moves as if pulled by magnetic forces in the ground. The wood itself has no powers, but when the sensitive picks it up, he or she becomes a human water detector. Ancient civilizations referred to this type of activity as using a "divining rod".
Some people prefer to employ a pendulum--a heavy object at the end of a piece of string--to obtain similar results. In either case, the instrument itself is nothing without the user--that is, it is merely an indicator or a person's psychic ability to locate hidden magnetic fields, geophysical disturbances, and other forms of soil radiation.
A geologist and prefessor in Halle, Germany, evaluated 450 university studnets and their reactions over geophysical disturbances commonly detected by sensitive dowers. He found that about 10 percent of all students were able to obtain a reaction with a dowsing rod, and that all of thems howed increased blood pressure and a higher pulse rate over reaction zones. This should not be surprising. At its core, all of life is essential radiation, or the continued distintegration of small particles at a high rate of speed.
We know that many illnesses can be traced not to some elusive bug, but to continued exposure to earth radiation. Certain types of cancer, for instance, can have that origin. We know also that the position of a bed can influence the soundness of sleep; if by chance you sleep over a disturbed area, the radiation will penetrate into you unconscious mind and register there. Even as we search the skies and the far corners of outer space, we are duty-bound to investigate inner space--ourselves--and the planet we inhabit. The truth is that we know precious little about the nature of our earth, not even what it consists of all the way down. The nature of force fields that exist in the earth is likewise unknown; even less do we understand the responses of plants, animals, or the human body to these force fields.
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