Thread: dowsing
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Old 05-07-2016, 06:47 AM
  #13  
NatalieF
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Join Date: Nov 2015
Location: New Brunswick, Canada
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Originally Posted by jetayre

I asked the question because I taught dowsing at the American Society of Dowsers for over 20 years and always enjoyed meeting people and introducing them to the concept. I always thought it was just for water (my father did that for people). Then I went to a convention and discovered you could dowse for any thing and the race was on. The fascinating thing is that you can dowse for anything WITH any thing. Sticks, rods, pendulums, blade of grass, pencil, etc. we worked with the British Society of Dowsers and others around the world. There was so much to learn. It all gets down to what you believe and don't believe and what and how you were taught. My father would only dowse for water. He didn't get into the other stuff' " as he put it and would refer people to me. Some feel strongly about it religiously but it has been used forever for water from sheep herders to all animals. Some have a natural "instinct" for hunting, water, survival etc. It is fascinating and I love to teach it.
Oh that is so awesome! Everything is energy. We can all learn to feel, sense, read that energy if we develop that sense. Animals do it instinctively. Humans are the only animal that teaches itself to routinely ignore instinct. (how many times have we heard "oh it's all in your head") If an animal does that, it dies.

If you go on that principle then dowsing makes a ton on sense. After all, most of us only use 10% of our brain capacity. I believe energy work is tapping into some of the other 90%. There was a fellow that researched dowsing and pyramids in relation to gardening in the hopes of improving food production to help eliminate starvation. Apparently he had some pretty incredible results and wrote a book on the process and had an educational garden.
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