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#06 – Geopathic stress, ley lines, Earth grids, underground water and health.

Continuing on with the deep topic of earth energies and health. In this audio release I tackle the concept of geopathic stress, how it’s formed, and consider some the negative consequences. Along with discussing some of the many earth grids which have been uncovered. Along with the sacred healing properties of certain types of water.

Boom! Enjoy, enjoy!

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Podcast transcript

The following text is a A.I created transcript of the podcast, so it may not be a completely accurate representation of my spoken words.

Episode number six. Geopathic stress, ley lines, grids and underground water. Hello welcome. Just continuing on with the series concerning earth energies and the effect on the human body. Today’s episode will be looking at geopathic stress as the main focus.

It’s the main buzzword for this topic and this all stems from an idea of a geopathology which is the stress and ill health created by geopathic stress on the body. In terms of the mainstream definition from Wikipedia it says it’s the theory that links earth’s inherent radiation with the health of humans, animals and plants.

We can view earth energies and the shape of the landscape and even the form of the underground, how that’s constituted as being a stress, being a negative aspect to human health or animal health or plant health.

There is obviously an opposite side to this as well. The geology of the landscape physically and spiritually can be healing. You can have ideas of geospirals, spring water, holy wells, positive ley lines.

All these things can be really healing to the human body. It’s an interesting combination that’s subject to a real mix between energies of the invisible, things you can’t see, forces you can’t see and the physically noticeable in terms of water.

There’s that strange interaction that occurs which can create a negative or positive outcome to human bodies. As I mentioned also to animals and plants. plant life. But interestingly, there are particular animals or plants that actually thrive in areas of what we would call harmful or negative energies.

As an example, cats seem to seek out negative areas to sleep in. It seems to benefit their bodies in some way. Of the forms of geographic stress that not necessarily stem from invisible energy or the form of the landscape or the constitution of what’s going underneath, under their ground, it can come specifically from things like underground oil, rock minerals, creation of natural radiation.

I mentioned many times in this podcast that granite has a natural radiation and that potentially being harmful to people. This subject seems to be divided between the two different editions on this planet.

You have the European edition, which feels quite recent in terms of some of the knowledge that start to serve this within the collective. But then if you look at more of the far far Eastern traditions, they’ve had more of this.

in their history. It’s more documentation. There’s more kind of information out there that’s been known about. In terms of the European traditions, the grandfather of this whole geopathic stress movement, it tends to be Gustav von Pol, I hope he’s pronouncing his name correctly, but he was researching a Bavarian town called Vilsberg.

Again, apologies for the pronunciation, in 1929, and he was looking at a link at earth radiation and cancer on people. Then he can start to ponder here why it is happening. Obviously, there is this earth’s natural vibration, but in some way it’s maybe being distorted by the water courses, the drainage, the geological faults.

This physicality may be creating this stress on the human body. Moving our focus over to the far east in China, there’s a lot of documentation which I’ll talk about later in terms of geopathic stress.

It was probably implemented at the time it defined their building policy, like how they locate buildings was decided and where the geopathic stress was in the landscape, which is completely different to how obviously it’s perceived within the mainstream, like Western traditions.

In terms of this episode, you’re going to be looking at the two sides, the Western understanding of geopathic stress, a little bit of the far eastern Chinese cultural ideas of geopathic stress. You’re also going to look at potential solutions to your health in terms of healing.

Again, I mentioned BBC before, I’m going through quite an intense healing journey. Part of that process has been involving me grounding in the garden, so taking my shoes and socks off and actually just connecting with the landscape.

I found a real steady improvement in my health because I’ve been doing this practice every single day. I’ll be looking into the benefits of grounding and the science behind it as well and some of the figureheads that I discovered.

some of this recent burgeoning information. In terms of where I’m getting this information from, I mean it’s fragments, bits from the internet that I’ve just discovered and researched, my own experience, some recent books that I’ve been reading as well basically informed me a lot of this conversation as well.

And a lot of it is subjective, as I’ve mentioned before, like, thousands have a lot of different approaches and defining energy and how it works and how it affects the body. So it’s kind of quite subjective and you’ve got to bring your own experience into it as well.

You have your own biology and I think sometimes how certain energies affect you might not affect people the same way as well. So I think there’s a lot of personal subjectivity on the subject as well.

But I’m sure I will bounce around many different subjects in a chaotic way and hopefully create some kind of cohesive thread of understanding of like maybe what’s going on to a degree. So let’s begin.

So, Earth Energies. This all links to the subjects, I guess with Ley Lines really, is what people commonly describe them as. And for the western side of traditions, a lot of the knowledge has surfaced only quite recently, as far back as the 1920s, is when this subject really kind of grew into the collective consciousness through a guy called Alfred Watkins.

And at the time he was driving the Leo Minster, and he was looking at a Roman camp on his weekend, on his day off. And he got out of his car, and he had a vision, he had a vision of a series of straight alignments between various ancient monuments.

He started to see a correlation of the straight lines between standing stones, hill forts, churches, across the landscape. And so, this ignited his interest, and he wanted to research this more. And he then decided to create this organisation called the Straight Track Club.

And this inspired people around the country who started to get together, and actually find straight lines in terms of this alignment between these ancient monuments like he had found and discovered. As many of you are aware, Ley Lines now tend to be associated with a lot of UFO activity, spirits, ghosts, just mysterious goings on, as well as having that kind of energetic component linking up these various monuments.

A lot of the research that was kicked off during the 1920s, unfortunately, then dropped out during World War II, because obviously a lot of the men and other people are away at war. So, all of these investigations of the landscape pretty much ceased, and it was forgotten about for a number of decades, until around about the 1960s.

There was a real information, and research can be quite subjective. depending on the dowser. Various dowsers over the years have gone out under their own steam, under their own inspiration, just trying to learn more about this subject with dowsing rods and other forms of divination.

Again, some of the information can be quite different from the dowser that I found. But some of the people I’m going to mention within this podcast, Maria Wheatley, Guy Underwood, Hamish Miller, and Hugh Newman, and an American dowser called Sig Longreen.

Sorry, Longreen. It was through Maria Wheatley’s work and research that I became aware of Sig Longreen, who’s an American dowser, and he came up with an interesting categorisation for lays, specifically.

One of the first categorisations he had were called tea lines, tea lays, and they were topographical lays. And all these involved were just no energy involved, nothing aerial energy, no Earth energy.

They’re purely just alignments of… sacred sites such as standing stones or mounds etc there was no energy involved at all. His second classification we called energy lays or e -lays and these were actually transmitting energy so these were aerial energies or underground energies and they transmitted between stones, mounds etc and other kind of sacred sites.

And the third classification he had astrological lays or a -lays and these aligned to astrological events such as solstice, beltane and the very fourth one the final one the big one was the t -a -e -lays and this was the whole shebang this was topographical this is astrological and also energy based as well and these are areas quite sacred special areas such as avbury in wiltshire these these are you know hold that classification.

But a lot of the dowsers and the people that are understanding these energies are looking at it with a female and male expression you know seeing these two powerful currents you know yin and yang which just starts to fuse some of the western traditions with eastern mysticism as well and the feng shui masters called this lung mai which is dragon’s breath and in china buildings were actually built along dragon lines to sort of maintain that harmony within the buildings themselves and the same sort of female and male expression yin and yang dragon lines within the uk and other countries it can it coil around these adjacent lay lines around these sacred sites and researchers hamish miller and paul boardhurst in the 1980s were coined as being the main discoverers of this this positive male yang energy line called the and the female yin mary negative line which both of them cross the south of england and ends up on the north coast and it’s one of the most famous lay lines within united kingdom and links up a lot of the sacred sites you know such as in Stonehenge, etc.

As these female and male lines sort of dance around the landscape, sometimes they can be quite far apart. But when they cross and when they intersect, that’s when something quite magical has happened and it’s quite a powerful spot on that.

Again, places like Avery, this is where the convergence of those two male and female expressions come together. I know I described as the male and female expression as being potentially negative or positive.

That’s not meant in a disparaging way or a negative way, but there are potential lay lines or energy lines that are harmful to the human body or cause disease and they can be described as negative or positive, but it’s not anything to do with the male or female expression.

It’s just potentially maybe down to the health of it is something interacting with it artificially that’s actually creating this disease. And again, within the West, we’ve only been really aware consciously, well, in terms of the mainstream.

normal people being aware of these energy lines and this whole system for the last 100 years. So it’s hard to gauge exactly what’s come before, but how much of modern technology in terms of electrification, radio waves, microwave, wave, wi -fi, all of these things, how much is that contributing to ill health of some of these energy lines?

Is there an artificial component to this that’s kind of creating this sickness? Or do you get lay lines that are sick naturally, you know, that are negative, that cause ill health naturally for some particular reason due to the geographic stress emanating from underneath the earth?

And I can’t really talk about my own experience and not saying this is correct or not in terms of the information I’m about to talk about, but it’s during that period of time, sort of during all the government lockdowns when there’s very little to do in terms of like being able to meet people inside.

So I spent a lot of time in the South Downs just, you know, walking because it was a brilliant summer as well that year as well, really warm and hot, brilliant weather. So I spent a lot of happy times exploring the landscape and one of those adventures, it took me to the long man of Wilmington, which is again on the South Downs, you know, probably only about half an hour, three quarters an hour’s drive away from Brighton at the time.

And the long man of Wilmington is this huge figure that’s been carved into the side of the hill and he exposes the white chalk underneath. Now it’s been sort of, in terms of the modern times, it’s been manipulated a little bit.

I’ve seen to remember they have like a bit of white breeze block or some kind of tile there now over some of the white bits. But yeah, it’s been there for a very long time. Again, it’s probably hard to date exactly when.

But I was very aware on the back of the hill, the actual long man himself on the side of the hill, but if you go right to the top to the peak of the hill, There’s a huge earthworks there, there’s a Tumnus, there’s a long barrow, round barrow.

So there’s a lot of sacred activity going on there. And as I’ve mentioned before, getting conspiratorial, there is an underground waterworks there as well, which always seems to factor in some of these sacred sites.

I don’t know why, maybe I’m just looking too deep into the subject, but there always seems to be underground waterworks there. And someone quite hilariously graffitied on the side of the building, illuminati base or something, you know, just playing into the idea.

But it wasn’t until later when I read in about this whole area that actually there was a lay lie, I did feel it, I did think about it at the time, because there’s an immediate alignment between these sacred areas in terms of the long round barrow and the actual kind of figure itself.

But there’s a larger alignment, which links up a Benedictine Priory. and two churches sent Mary and also sent Peter’s. Now there are many theories about who the Long Man is. It could be linked to giants.

There’s various stories and myths to do with giants around that particular area. Other people have spoken about Beowulf, Thor, Apollo, but I prefer to go with the Alfred Watkins, you know, the guy who originally discovered this ley -lined activity within the landscape.

He perceived the Long Man of Wilmington being a dog man, and the dog man is holding sighting stage. This is a sort of a very ancient form of ley -lined hunter, essentially, and these stays were used.

They were his tools of divination, essentially. Now all of these sites are supposed to be, you know, pre -Roman, and there is what they, a lot of the mainstream archaeology sort of says it’s a Roman road, but as I’ve mentioned before, like in Chester, where I am at the moment, they have a lot of Roman roads, but people have said, you know, maybe the Romans were just literally copying the roads that were already there that were put in by civilizations before them.

And so yeah, again, maybe this road stretches far back beyond Roman times, you know, particularly with all these ancient sites scattered around the landscape itself. But anyway, the day that I went there for the first time, it was a glorious sunny, sunny day, like really hot and warm, and I spent a lot of time just like hanging around, just looking around, looking at the view, and then I realised I started to feel quite sick, like I was lying on the ground, I really started to feel a little bit ill, a bit queasy, and I was like, that’s strange, because initially I had a real kind of relaxed feeling about that area, and then I just started to sort of look around, and I noticed actually directly in the same line of sight, there was a massive, there was a huge aerial tower in the distance, right on the same line, and then I just started to theorise later, is this kind of interference, this artificial interference, you know, maybe creating that disease within that energy life.

itself. And then you can start to ponder, you know, was that randomly placed there, you know, unconsciously? It was just, okay, was this a good place to put a radio area or is there something more nefarious, more negative that actually knew what they were doing?

These are just my own theories and experiences. I’m not saying they’re true totally, but just, yeah, it’s an interesting thing to think about considering in terms of the health of lay lines and how it affects human body and the effect that I was having in that experience.

And again, referring back to another personal experience, as I’ve mentioned before, I was living in a village Ditchlin, which is slightly outside of Brighton, has its own little church based on a mound.

There seems to be a series of churches all in a line if you look on the map. And initially I was living in a flat, right, there’s a small roundabout in this village. I was living a flat just right on the corner.

And I loved it there. I was really, really settled and then unfortunately, the guy actually owned the place, decided he wanted to sell, so I had to move out and then luckily, just up the road, there was an apartment a flat just a few doors up and I thought, this is this is synchronistic, this is amazing, just it’s the same price and means I don’t have to move my stuff too far away and I’m really liking living in Ditchelling as well, so I was really happy to move there.

And then I moved in and again I was, you know, struggling my health at the time and I moved into this new place and, you know, I found it a lot colder than the previous place, you know, which is fine, I can kind of deal with that, but while I was there, I was really feeling the energy and bearing in mind that this new place I’ve moved into is directly behind the church and I was a little bit concerned, the fact that this church has a very, very old graveyard as well in the sort of the periphery of the church and I was aware that the energy coming from the cemetery is not particularly great, but, you know, I thought maybe the stars were lying and this flat was meant for me, so maybe it’s going to be fine, so that’s kind of why I moved in and I could really feel the energy of this place in my body itself and initially, I thought it was positive, but as the months kind of went on, I started to understand that this actually was negative affecting my health and my healing journey was being suppressed quite significantly, it was also just draining me full of energy as well, there’s that zero energy and so it was only till I left there to sort of move in with some family to kind of continue on healing, I realised actually how much of this flat had actually been draining my energy and I guess it’s because it’s right on this energy line and it’s behind the cemetery and all of these factors are really affecting me quite badly, so I’ve now had to sort of move all my stuff out of that place, move it into storage until I’m properly better at getting completely healed.

So there’s another personal experience, you know, there was no real artificialness involved, Again, I’ll highlight the fact there’s a, on that same line that links up the church, which is called St Margaret’s Church to, I think it’s Kema, Kema Church, in between both of them, right on the line, there’s another underground water treatment facility.

Again, maybe I’m just looking into it too much, but I don’t know whether that’s affected in some way, but you know, that’s there. But I actually do put maybe this, you know, the unhealthiness of it down to potentially the cemetery that was there that wasn’t helping.

But maybe there are other factors at play that I don’t really understand. But I mean, I’ve mentioned it previously before, but a lot of these churches are all built on mounds, so they have the propensity to have been really quite early sacred places for some worship, you know, potentially.

And there are remnants of, you know, standing stones around a lot of these sites as well, denoting potentially the worst standing stones there for ceremony or other area, you know. for ceremony or other spiritual happenings, whatever they may be at that particular time.

Actually, I just remembered in terms of that first apartment, I did really like living there, and you know, both of them I really like living there. They were both really lovely places, but the second place, obviously, there was something going on in terms of the energy lines or the energy coming from the cemetery that’s actually causing ill health for me.

But the first one, it was only recently I had like an epiphany, but although it was good, it was a great place to live. It was a little bit noisy because it was on the main through there for the village, and it was quite a lot of traffic noise from the bedroom window.

So that was kind of downside. And I did have problems sleeping there. We actually had quite bad dreams there sometimes and wake up in a real panic, real terror. And this might not be part of your belief system, but I had some spiritual healing from someone.

She was saying that you were being sort of messed around in your sleep. This is why this was going on. This is a lot of spiritual or spirit activity was going on in this building that was causing you problems.

And actually looking back, I was like, yeah, because the only way I could get a good night’s sleep, I would actually have to sort of cleanse the area. I’d have loads of little bags. You know, you get those sealed up sandwich bags.

I’d just fill it with a cup of Himalayan salt. I basically have two under my pillow and then salt bags all around my bed underneath the duvet. And this is literally the only way to get a night’s sleep.

So whatever I was doing, it was obviously then helping to protect me through the night. So looking back wasn’t the best place. I think obviously that village is very old and particularly there’s a lot of sort of dead people buried there due to various cemeteries being around.

So yeah, even though it’s a dichotomy, isn’t it? Because there was great beneficial energies there and it was in the countryside and it was, you know, it’s such a beautiful spot. But you know, there was a downside to it definitely, which now again with hindsight, I kind of see.

So the message is, kids, don’t live behind the cemetery to make your life easier. Yeah, I think, interestingly, you get a lot of those films, particularly in America, they talk about old Indian burial grounds and obviously there’s something in that, you know, living close to sort of dead bodies is not the greatest.

And I always find that weird about churches actually, just talking about it, just the fact that, you know, you’ve got this sacred spot and then you just put loads of dead people in the ground and then particularly the cathedrals, there’s just dead people everywhere, there’s dead people in the floor, there’s dead people in the walls, it’s like literally a building covered in dead people.

So yeah, I can understand they want to be close to God and that’s the whole idea behind it, but in terms of the energies being beneficial, it kind of denigrates any positive nature. I would guess of being in that particular building if you’ve got that kind of level of death energy floating around.

Maybe that’s my own personal opinion, just kind of, I could be totally wrong about that. But yeah, that’s just, just my opinion. But I mean, I did say that, you know, some dowsers perceive certain ley lines being negative or positive.

Um, there is research apparently that in the 1970s, they tried to grow mustard seed. They grow a certain amount of mustard seed on a ley line and they’d grow other mustard seed outside of a ley line.

And it appeared the seed germinated or, and their growth of restricted, you know, the ones that are actually planted on the ley line. So it wasn’t that great for them. So, you know, could this then be scaled up?

You know, the idea of living close to a ley line, is that good? And you can look at places, you know, perceived as vortexes where you have various any light and energy lines converging, such as Aisbury, Glastonbury, or the US listeners, you know, Sedona, really powerful, energetic places.

And some people say, you shouldn’t really live there. Again, these are the sacred places you go there for ceremony. You get your benefits, then you kind of leave. But I’ve heard a lot of stories, particularly with Glastonbury and Aisbury, of people’s lives just falling apart.

They’re just being kicked out of the area. You know, it’s just too much. And it can create problems for people mentally. So they start to then lean towards addictions and alcoholism. So there’s a real, even though these places are quite energetic, that there’s so much light there.

It also seems to attract a lot of darkness as well, weirdly. And the same, you know, could be said for Brighton as well. I mean, exactly the same as that real creativity and spirit and energy about the place, but it does have a very dark underbelly to it as well.

But going back to the old Europeans editions, a lot of the time when people were building houses, apparently they would see where, you know, particularly in rural areas, they would see where sheep were laying at night.

And that could indicate a good place. used to build your house, because it’s free from geographic stress, because there’s an innate mechanism within these animals that kind of dictates where they lie down.

So they know it’s not going to cause them harm if they stay there too long. So if they’re sleeping there at night, then it’s a good indication that that place is a good place to build. And more specifically, not just building the entire building, but actually where you should place your prospective bedroom as well, because if a sheep’s been sleeping there or horse has been sleeping there, then it could be, again, an indication of a really good energy area to be.

But in terms of that negative or positive effect of the ley lines on the human body, it can change, it can constant flux, and these energy places are really affected by various like forces such as the full moon, sunspots like sun activity.

This creates more intensification within these energetic areas. certain weather activity can also trigger certain energies within the lines themselves. In terms of my own personal experience, I guess in terms of the Earth energies, I’ve only been really absorbing and reading about this subject probably over these last, I don’t know, not long, sort of five, six years maybe.

So not a long period of time, but I have been aware of like even before that and at very energetic places and looking back one of my first experiences with this idea of energy lines, not really being consciously, could never really describe or understand what was going on.

But I remember the very, very first time I went to Glastonbury and it was actually for the music festival, the Glastonbury Music Festival, massive event. And I went when I was about 17 and it was where various people from the art college I was at the time.

And we drove down in my car and were able to actually buy a ticket for HMV, this music shop over the counter for about 60 or 70 quid. Now you could never do that. I mean, the tickets cost hundreds of pounds and you have to book like months and months in advance.

It’s all done on the internet and they sell out so quickly. But back then it was a lot easier to kind of get in. Anyway, it’s probably one of the first ever excursions I’d been on with friends without, you know, family essentially.

So we drove down to the Glastonbury. I remember walking around just feeling a real palpable energy vibration. And at the time I knew nothing about the energetic areas of classroom. I knew nothing about that in terms of like mega lifts and ley lines.

It just didn’t even enter my consciousness at all, but I was very aware of the energy. I can still remember that moment. But obviously over the years, especially recent years, I’ve become more spiritual and more conspiratorial.

So I kind of know more about these things. And so I’m able to experience more in Brighton. And it took me to places because I started to have an understanding of this and start, I wanted to learn doubting, went to places like Wiltshire.

I started to have more experiences and then returning to Glastonbury, because before I’d never really been to Glastonbury, the town itself, it’d always just been to the music festival. But going to Glastonbury itself, the times I’ve been there, my heart has just sung.

It’s just a really palpable, really visceral experience. And in terms of an experience like beyond this country, the United States, again, I’ve mentioned it many times before, I’ve been to California quite a number of times, I remember I’d flown in and then we were staying, we were going to visit family, I’d gone with my family as well.

We were staying in a motel quite close to LAX, the airport. And it was just, you know, cheap hotel, it was nice, it was fine, we stayed the night there and the idea was then to drive to see family in Palm Springs.

And I remember I was just doing my spiritual practice in the morning the next day and just I could feel, I mean, this area was just quite run down, very industrial looking, not particularly attractive, but.

I could just feel the energy pulsating from the land as I’ve meditated. I was doing various key kind of exercise. It was really, really powerful. I always remember it. And I have no idea what was creating that powerful energy experience in this motel in California.

I guess I know there’s a lot of underground water under the desert, vast areas of water, which some people perceive as being what’s called ying water, spring water, highly oxygenated water, very, very different to rain water.

So maybe this is what’s affecting it. But anyway, this kind of brings us onto the next topic of geopathic stress and earth energies of, in terms of how water affects this. Now, again, this tends to be a subjective thing.

I was taught by Maria Reaton. She’s a really big advocate for having two types of water. You have a male expression, you have a female expression, the male being the yang and the female being the yin.

And for the yang, that would be rainwater and rainwater could have fallen thousands of years ago. So the timescale is kind of could be anything. It could be thousands of years again, or it could be as recent as today.

That’s how they define yang water. Then you get the female expression, which is yin. And some people actually call this primary water. And this gets into a lot of interesting research. There’s a lady called Deborah Tavares, and she speaks a lot about this.

And she perceives this yin water, this very healing water that’s very abundant has been hidden from humanity. We all talked about scarcity as a scarcity of resources. You know, maybe the opposite is completely true.

Maybe it was just total abundance. And this idea that actually water is actually created in the earth’s crust. You know, it’s not like a finite research. It’s just constantly there. And humanity could tap into this at any time.

You know, it’s a real abundance of water just underneath the ground. You just need to know where to look. And there’s no need to drink river water. processing sewage water or like desalinating sea water, like there’s really, really powerful spiritual water underneath, you know, where you stand on this land in water, primary water, it’s abundant everywhere.

And this primary spiritual, highly energized female water, you know, is that what people are interacting with, holy healing, you know, water wells at these holy sites where you get these healing waters.

Is this what this year in water is? Now I’m going to start bringing in more of Maria Wheatley’s work in, and she’s really into the idea of the ying and yang water. And she speaks a lot about geospi- and this is really like positive energy is really healing to the human body, what are called geospirals or blind springs.

Apparently in America they call them water domes, but it creates this very harmonic surface pattern on the earth, like a spiral. This is due to high pressure near the water. It just can’t permeate through rock strata, it’s just impermeable.

So it just domes up and starts to escape through various fissures within the landscape itself and this creates this energetic pattern. I don’t know how, but apparently according to her, it creates this energetic pattern, it’s a geospiral.

When she claims that stonehenge on the altar stone underneath, there’s this seven -coil spiral, this geospiral is found directly underneath the stone. The same mechanism can be found at other stone circles across the world, long barrels, dolmens, cairns, iris towers.

I spoke about that recently as well, pyramids, medicine wheels. Also, you get solitary stones a lot in Scotland and she claims that this marks the spot of some of these blind springs themselves. It marks this really energetic, really healing place to be.

Maria also mentions that a lot of these geospirals can be found in a lot of European churches and cathedrals and is actually set underneath the altar. That’s the specific place where these geospirals are found and it’s probably why the churches and cathedrals are actually positioned there because, you know, again, these were ancient sacred sites that span way before Christianity.

But this healing spring water, this yin water can be found really around the UK. And a lot of the times it’s been forgotten about, you know, and this is the same around the world. This primary water, this miracle healing water can be found in countries like France, Mexico, Germany and India.

And what happens is you get large numbers of people flocking to these places for healing, for spiritual advancement in terms of the science and the scientific understanding, like how people, you know, trying to explain some of these ideas of like healing and what happens at these places with these waters.

Some people have theorized it actually has dissolved hydrogen gas within the water itself and it’s either the molecular high hydrogen reacts due to the alkalite earth, metals and this combination kind of creating that hydrogen gas or it’s actually from gas produced from bacteria or either algae as well.

Some of the famous locations around the world for these heating waters, there’s one Lordes in France, a fountain there, was discovered in 1958 by a 14 year old girl called Bernadette and she had a vision, she had a vision of Mother Mary who appeared in a shallow cave and the vision told her that a church should be built on this space in its position and people will visit the hill at these sacred waters, these sacred wells and that apparently is what happened.

This church was built and it became this sacred site, this sacred area of spring water and people had these miraculous healings, these cures. Moving on to another location, Nordenau fountain in Germany and this is placed 100 kilometres east of Dösseldorf and against pure waters, yin water, healing waters discovered in a cave which is apparently a disused slate mine, and an old woman who was blind in one eye just covered her eye with this water and then miraculously she regained sight.

And so this created this whole culture of people again visiting this fountain to get healing and it apparently healed various ailments, an ex -miner you know healed his back problems, there’s a whole list of them.

This is just a couple of sacred places obviously, the whole world scattered with stories like this so it’s not unique to these European countries. So yeah I mean there’s obviously evidence there, there’s situations there of people healing through these waters for some reason, but these are the positive stories, you know these are the miraculous healings through these female expression of the waters which is yin water, what about the negative?

And this all then surrounds the idea of yang water, the male expression of water, and again this is water that has fallen you know 100 years ago, thousands of years ago or as recent as today, so broad time span.

But a downer called Alf Riggs, he did a lot of discovery and research into this particular area and looked into the causes of ME and he found a lot of the negative health implications came from this underground yang male expression water.

I will link some of this research in the description so you can kind of read deeper into it because it is it is quite technical and quite scientific so yeah I’ll leave you to do that in your own time.

Further research into this area was looked at by Dye Underwood and he was a British geophysicist and also Dye Dowser and he discovered it was his idea that underground streams that actually cross at right angles can produce severe geographic stress, severe ill health and long -term exposure can create serious illness and even short can cause like things like depression and just really, really low mood.

In terms of the shape and the form of these energies that are creating this geographic stress that stems from this underground water, you know, it creates this reversed circle here you described, like an outward spiral, and interestingly there’s a correlation between some of our ancestors.

That outward spiral actually represented a lack of spiritual protection, so there was a strange correlation between the two. And according to Maria Wheatley, some of the things she said that actually places of execution were actually situated above some of these places of geographic stress.

Gallows in Tower Hill London, she claims, is actually placed above this area of geographic stress and also what are called blind houses, which I’d never heard of before, but they were essentially for condemned people or prisoners.

And again, they were essentially buildings with no real windows there at all, it was just… on purpose there to create as much disease and as much depression and ill health as possible because they were for these condemned people, these prisoners as part of their punishment.

But they were placed structurally right above these very toxic positions where you had this very toxic energy emanating from underneath due to the geographic stress, again from the Yang water itself.

When you look into a lot of the research to do with geographic stress, there’s a hell of a lot of information coming from places in countries like Germany and Russia. They seem to have a really open mind to these concepts in terms of geographic stress and earth energies and how it affects the human body.

As I mentioned at the beginning of the podcast in South Germany in the 1930s, the grandfather, the proposed grandfather of a geographic stress Baron Gustaf von Pol. Again, sorry if I messed that name up, but he located around about 54 homes where people had actually died of cancer in this particular town.

He was able to map the sites and he could map the detrimental energies within the landscape and that correlated with some of the homes of these people that actually died of cancer. Even more fascinating, he was able to pinpoint the real points of extreme geographic stress and where it located with these people’s bedrooms.

That actually decided he was able to then pinpoint where the cancer was in the body due to where their bed was placed within the landscape. He actually published the book of his findings. I couldn’t seem to find it.

It’s quite an old one, I think. It’s called The Radiation, The Causative Factor in Disease and Cancer. Maybe you can have a better look at finding it. He wrote a lot of his research within that book itself.

Then there’s another academic as well, Swiss doctor Hans Jenny. We’ve mentioned her before. She was the academic who discovered cymatics, you know, the formation. of sound when you physically vibrate sand on this vibrating plate, it reorganizes into these beautiful patterns.

Anyway, but Dr. Hans -Jenny, as well as the cymatics, she did an experiment over a span of about 12 years involving 24 ,000 mice. She tested her radiation zone and she would try and place these mice of this radiation zone and she’d notice they’d want to flee, they’d want to run away from this area.

They had this innate ability within their body to feel the disease and to try and get as far away from it as possible. But she made them forcefully to live within this radiation zone and once she discovered it created lower birth rates and also higher infant mortality across the mice over the various generations.

It was a real measurable effect. Then again, back in Germany in the 1960s, Heidelberg University and Technical University in Munich did a comparative study of a house in Necker Valley and apparently this house had three generations who had all died of stomach cancer and they brought along with them these academics various instruments and were able to measure the intersection of an underground water course and a geological fracture underneath the ground and they actually tested mice in wooden cages over this area of geographic stress that was underneath the house and they found that the mice became a lot more restless a lot more violent their behavior is really deeply affected.

I mean all of this begs the question you know what is going on you know scientifically and apparently some physicists engineers have theorized that neutron radiation which is generated deep within the earth rises up and interacts with the earth’s magnetic field so yeah maybe this is kind of part of what’s causing the disease this this geographic stress.

Moving over to Russia some of the scientists there from the Institute of Hygiene and Occupational Disease they talked about there was a dangerous presence of microwave radiation coming from some of these underground water courses and also they claim that some of the sites show ionization changes acoustic anomalies and gamma radiation and this all according to them decreases the geomagnetic field intensity.

What can make this problem even worse when you have this junction of water veins a serious problem can be created when this energy is then emanating through radioactive rock you know like granite and they were able to use really super sensitive measuring devices to measure this radiation right above the water veins in the earth because what caught my eye about some of this research especially in terms of like affecting you know the geomagnetic field in the geomagnetic field covers the entire earth and it protects us from cosmic energies.

Now there’s a correlation between some of these um you know it’s just biopathic stresses and energy lines with high strangeness, you know, like ghost activities, et cetera. And what I find really interesting is that, again, with this reduction in the geomagnetic field, some people have theorized that some of these places like Skinwalker Ranch or other areas where you get a lot of high strangeness in terms of UFO activity and, you know, what they deem as skinwalkers, you know, these weird interdimensional entities which are able to phase in and out of reality.

These dog men with bright red eyes and, you know, a whole host of really strange activity. And I was listening to a talk by a researcher called Linda Moulton Howe. She’s done a lot of research at the high strangeness and she was talking to, apparently, an insider and they were discussing how areas where it has really low destabilized magnetic fields, geomagnetic fields, where you get this high strangeness.

So it kind of correlates this between all these things in terms of like… geographic stress and the magnetic field being affected and also this link to the high strangers aspect as well. Another researcher, again European, this was before World War II called Pierre Coady.

He was a French engineer and he found a link between ionising radiation and cancer. He was actually able to measure it using an electrometer and he found regular disturbances of energy underneath beds of 7000 cancer sufferers and he found radiation levels were 10 times higher than normal beds.

So this is why it’s kind of creating that disease, creating that cancer within the human body. And he also found it doesn’t matter that you’re maybe sleeping on the ground floor, this energy rises up at great height so you can be on the first or second floor and you’re still getting a real hit of quite negative energy to your body.

So what are the solutions to this? I mean obviously this is a regular thing, it doesn’t matter where you are, you know there is geographic stress and it causes people disease, it causes cancers, it causes a whole host of other conditions as well.

Again I’ve mentioned before there’s a lady called Judy Jack I’ve been quite interested in. I’ve bought various books, I haven’t read all of them yet but she’s got a lot of books to do with geographic stress and earth energies in the human body and she was just relaying.

I just dipped into one of her books you know for the purpose of this podcast and she was talking about how she had a house and she started to understand that she had quite severely bad geopathic stress coming from underground water and her friend gave her a solution to how to mitigate this and she advised to bury calcium ascorbate in a jar and bury it on the line of the water course itself and Judy Jack claims that it rectified the problem.

She found that a couple of years later she had to dig it up and she’d noticed that this, apparently it’s like basically vitamin C but this was able to mitigate some of the harmful energies but she had to replenish it.

replace it to put more of this calcium back into the joint and bury it in the ground again. According to her, it worked. I’ve no idea if it does, but this is what she claimed. But in terms of more of a technical way, scientific way, a mainstream way approach to this, how would you mitigate against some of this geographic stress?

A German professor, K .E. Loltz, and he came from a technical university and he wrote a book called Want to Live Healthily. Again, I couldn’t really find this book, but apparently he wrote it, maybe it was quite a while ago.

But he was able to measure the student’s skin resistance when they stood over some of this unhealthy underground water. And again, this just indicated disturbances in their body, some of this ill health that it was creating.

So his solution that he developed, he created what was called an interference Dopple transmitter. I hope I said that right. But he would use it over such as some of these geographic stresses, these sites, And according to him, it overrides his microwave radiation.

He saw it as microwave radiation. That was what was creating these cancers of this disease. And this device kind of mitigated these effects and reestablished a normal background radiation within the field of the area.

But on the flip side, a lot of these energies we’ve been discussing have an obvious effect on the human body negatively, but there are certain animals that seem to seek out these energies, that they seem to thrive in.

This is only through my reading that people are saying that ants are attracted by these energies. They like to build their nests in these negative areas. Whereas again, animals like sheep, dogs, goats, cows, they will move away from these harmful areas.

They seem to be repelled by them. Again, household cats, as I mentioned earlier, they seem to seek them out. They seem to like to sleep in these areas. And it’s not just animals. It can be plants. It can be trees as well that are attracted by certain energies in the northern hemisphere.

People have said deciduous trees, such as oak and elm, can be found more over geopathic stress, like watercourses. But in comparison, on the flip side, beaches and berch, they’ll stay away from these geopathic stresses.

I’ve just explored quite a lot of the European understanding. Again, this is still quite recent history as we’ve kind of uncovered some of this information is all quite new. But for the Chinese, this is kind of old news.

I believe I had an understanding of this for a very, very long time. I discovered this website called landandspirit .net and it’s from this couple that seem to live in Sussex as well in Forest Row. And they seem to have a lot of information to do with geopathic stress.

So I’d be quite interested to kind of learn more about them. But they have an article on their website and it’s called Backgrounds Geopathic Stress, the History of Geopathic Stress Research. They have sizable chunks of information to do with.

diabathic stress and the Chinese traditions. And so I’m going to read a few extracts from their website. The article starts from the Chinese. I’m sorry, in advance, I’m going to butcher some of these names.

But it starts, Chinese emperor, Chawang Yu, 2205 to 2197 BC. So very long time ago, proclaimed an edict affected to this day, which reads, no dwelling shall be built until the earth diviners have confirmed the intended building site to be free of earth demons.

So I guess they’re referring to geographic stress. Then another extract, it goes Chen Su Zhao, again, sorry for the pronunciation, butchering these names, 1332 AD. In the subterranean regions, there are alternate layers of earth and rock and flowing spring waters.

These strata rest upon thousands of vapors, which are distributed in tens of thousands of branches, veins and thread -like openings. The body of the earth is like that of a human being, ordinary people not being able to see the veins and vessels which are disposed in order within the body of man.

Think that is no more than a lump of solid flesh. Likewise, not being able to see the veins and vessels which are disposed in order under the ground. They think that the earth is just a homogenous mass.

I’ll of course link this article in the description. There’s more to it. I’m just reading sort of particular extracts. There’s another aspect. Christopher Bird, the divining hand, 1979. It was believed by the ancient Chinese that water flowed in subterranean courses called veins of the dragon or lung mai.

Passing to and fro outer sight, the hidden veins of water served like the bloodstream of animals to remove impurities from the body of the earth and to deposit curative minerals within it. The earth’s circulatory system was matched by ever undulating network of currents in the atmosphere.

The currents running through the mai or channels carried the cue or vapors. I said cue there, but I actually make key. So obviously that’s similar to the energy of piranha, you know, the same thing. So there you go.

I mean, it’s a really good encapsulation. I think that Chinese had a really deep understanding to a geographic stress and it correlates a lot with what European researchers have been looking into as well.

So yeah, that’s, you know, we’ve kind of covered ley lines like earth energies and then the water aspect as well. You know, the geographic stress was created on the water, whether it be male or female and the healing properties of that water as well.

But there’s another aspect in terms of like what’s called the energy grid, which is similar to a ley line, I guess, in a way, but it’s also very, very different. It seems to sort of span the landscape, but it seems like strangely these grids are always seem a little bit more artificial to me.

But these energy grids cover the planet from pole to pole. Oh, and there’s a variety of different ones and there’s a lot of which have been discovered. Some of the first ones that were kind of popularized was one that was discovered by Dr.

Ernest Hartman. The second one’s quite well known from Dr. Manfred Currie and another one, more recent one, is called the Benkegrid. And they are all like walls of geographic energy emanating from deep underground and rising up into the sky.

So they’re quite, you know, titable. And again, there’s a certain duality dichotomy with these lines, because depending where you are, some can be okay for the health, but then others can be actually really stressful to the human body and cause a lot of illness and disease as well.

So again, it’s a kind of yin and yang thing. So let’s kick off with the Hartman grid, which was discovered in 1950s by Dr. Hartman. And the reason he discovered this, he was actually taking a blood sample of blood tests for sedimentation.

And he found that it varied depending on where the blood samples were actually taken in terms of where the patient was physically stood within a particular room, within a physical space. And he discovered it could either be, the patient could be sort of positioned on a positive or negative element of the grid, of the Hartman grid.

And this would affect the sedimentation rate within the blood test itself. It could either increase or decrease the sedimentation. And sedimentation essentially is the immune response to inflammation.

So obviously, the grid in some way, shape or form is a listing, a type of immune response, depending where you actually stood within the grid itself. After further investigations and study, he was able to decipher that actually the grid was a line to north, south and east, west.

And the lines tended to be 10 centimeters wide. Some people actually think they have a cosmic origin, like the radiation coming from the skies. That may or not be true, but definitely the grid itself intensifies and alters due to the sun’s activity.

And also the weather as well can also affect the Hartman grid itself. For the majority, most of the Hartman grid is actually quite harmless. But there are particular areas like crossing points that can intensify the harmful nature to people’s health.

It’s been proposed that every 10th line, a double negative line occurs, and this can be injurious to health, to humans essentially. So that’s the Hartman grid. Also in the 1950s, they discovered the Currie.

And it’s quite interesting how they’re sort of discovering all these grids all in the same decade. Yeah, but this was discovered by two people, Dr. Manfred Currie and Dr. Whitman. Seems that Dr. Currie got all the glory on this one.

But yeah, people propose this grid is actually terrestrial in origin and theorized that it is actually stemming from the core magma, the radiations of the earth and the rotation. in the magnetic field is actually causing this grid.

The grid itself is actually apparently set at 45 degrees west of north and tends to be around about 13 to 14 centimeters in width. And the actual dimension themselves can actually vary depending on what latitude you are in, you know, within the planet itself.

So that does fluctuate on occasion. Again, these grids can cause health issues. The positive line crosses another positive line every seven meters. And this can create, you know, disease, disharmony within the human body itself.

So it’s always best to avoid those particular crossing points again. If we look to mainstream science, whether there’s any kind of validation for these particular grids, you know, unsurprisingly, not really, there’s no real validation.

But I did find a snippet of information, apparently a telecommunications expert called Hans Gertz, I think was able to record some of these grids. and he used a low frequency electromagnetic energy experiment to, you know, decipher some of these fields.

So there is some data out there to kind of correlate that these grids exist. And talking about the Hartman grid and the Currie net themselves together, both of these types of grids are intensified by the sun’s activity and the weather.

But apparently it’s only the Hartman grid that is actually affected by the moon. So the Currie net remains unaffected by it. I guess that’s due to the fact that maybe a lot of the energy is created from the telluric currents from the earth itself.

As I alluded to before, I do find these grids strange just because of the very straight like nature of them. And if you look at nature, it always tends to have a very sort of curved form, very symmetrical form, but it’s very, very rare that you get anything straight lined like this.

And if you’re looking at lay lines, even though on a map from a distance, they look very, very straight. But in reality, when you’re actually on the ground, they tend to meander, they sort of twist and shape around the landscape.

So they’re not particularly straight in themselves. So yeah, I do find these grid patterns interesting for that, the fact that they do feel quite artificial. Again, I could be completely wrong, but it’s just something I’ve been thinking about recently.

And it’s just the accuracy of these measurements. They obviously vary strictly at very set distances in terms of the widths, these grids. So I find that quite puzzling as well. So yeah, I mean, I’ve actually implemented this within my own life.

I’ve, you know, there’s been periods when I’ve had problems of sleep and it can be like a myriad of things. It can be something going on in your body. Obviously, you know, your general lifestyle, how you eat, how you drink, et cetera, these can all affect it.

And a big aspect to it as well would be the energy lines in terms of where you’re sleeping within your bedroom. And I have got my dowsing rods out numerous occasions because I’ve had problems sleep and I find myself waking up.

random times in the morning and so I found it pretty helpful getting my dowsing rods out finding where these curry lines are and the Hartman grids are and then trying to adjust my bed and my sleeping position accordingly just so I’m not my you know main torso is not kind of lying in one of these lines I mean let’s be honest the kind of the width of the lines are actually quite short so inevitably your bed is going to be lying on these lines there’s no way you can avoid that but if you have a preferred sleeping position then it’s good to try and sort position the bed so it is you’re sleeping in between these lines you’re not directly on one of these these grid patterns and what I found quite interesting it make makes sense to me people have said that your body will naturally shift away from these lines when you’re sleeping so if you do have a favorite side of the bed this could denote that you actually your your body’s avoiding naturally some of these grid lines just so you don’t get the seas you don’t get this harmony in your body itself And it’s not just where you sleep, obviously where you sleep, depending on how many hours, maybe six, eight, nine hours, obviously it’s quite a big part of your day in one particular position in your house or your flat or wherever.

But it can also be where you work as well. I mean, if you work in an office building, you’re probably quite restrictive in terms of like where you can sit. But if you’re lucky enough to work from home, obviously you can organize your home working environment and you can do the same test with dowels and rods or pendulums as well.

You can try and find out where some of these energy lines are and then position your desk and chair accordingly so you’re avoiding them. And then in my last flat, again, where I spoke about in terms of realizing there was quite a harmful lay line or some form of energy line going through my house and it was literally going directly through the desk that I was sat at.

And so yeah, again, I used my doweling rods to really shift. It was a bit of a pain because the living room really wasn’t that large. So yeah, this is the challenge sometimes, just trying to rearrange your room because obviously you’ve got a factory where windows are and doors and then also where energy lines are.

It can be a little bit of a challenge to kind of find that sweet spot. But when you do, it definitely helps. Now in many ways, it is quite a complex world because we’ve been talking about all these different forms of energy lines, lay lines, different classifications.

I mean, I’ve mentioned two energy grids, the Curry grid and the Hartman grid, but there are many more. There’s some quite interesting work. I was watching a video from Hugh Newman on YouTube, but also he’s got a little book that I bought recently.

He goes through all the different types of grids and there’s quite a lot to kind of get your head around, which is fascinating. But we can simplify things as well. There’s a real beneficial effect with us as human beings, just being outside in nature and just grounding ourselves.

So just taking your Susan Socks off and just literally connecting with the earth itself. This is another real issue with modern life because, you know, we’re coating ourselves in a lot of the time unnatural fibers, unnatural materials for our shoes and also our clothing as well.

And we’ve severed that connection between the Earth’s energies and our body. And it seems very inherent to be healthy. We need to be connected every now and again. And, you know, I’m not a saint at this.

I’ve been really, really bad at this. And recently I’ve made a real concerted effort to ground myself more. And I’m just because I’m in my family home at the moment, they have a garden. So it makes it a lot easier for me to get outside.

They’ve got a relatively good sized lawn. You know, I can go out there with my bare feet and just ground into the Earth. And it really helps. I spend a lot of time on a computer as well. Now, you can feel, you know, the electric, you know, the electromagnetic really builds up within your field and getting outside and putting your feet on the ground just really helps to dissipate some of the energies.

And what I’ve also discovered as well, it just really helps, in terms of like the lymphatic system, this is my own findings, I’ve got no data or information to kind of back this up, but, you know, it’s well known the lymphatic system moves through the body’s movement, which is why it’s good to exercise, it gets your lymphatics moving, and the lymphatics is basically the sewage waste of your body, it kind of gets rid of all the gunk, all the toxicity.

But what I actually have found is that grounding also seems to sort of get that lymphatic moving as well, it must be the electromagnetic connection really helps kickstart the lymphatic. So as well as movements, the connection with the land is also really important.

It can be a tricky exercise because, you know, there’s been times where I lived in flats where, again, I don’t have a garden, so I don’t have access to a private nature space. So yeah, I have to go out into kind of the public nature and, you know, pick your spots and obviously sometimes it could be a little embarrassing if you’ve got your shoes and socks off and you’re kind of lint on the tree grounding with your eyes closed, you might look a little bit weird.

So yeah, I’ve definitely tried to find private spots to kind of do this. But the benefits are so great, it’s good to do it, definitely if you can, if you can, if you are able to get out there. But I mean, a lot of the effects many people will know is that it reduces information within the body, reduces pain, helps your sleep, definitely has helped my sleep.

It increases blood viscosity as well and people with what’s called electron deficiency, it really helps solve that issue as well. And apparently what tends to happen within the modern environment due to electromagnetics and this kind of artificial environment where we’ve wrapped ourselves around, it creates quite unhealthy blood.

It’s sort of, the blood cells tend to clump together and what they found under a microscope when people have grounded for like 30 -40 minutes, it really starts to decouple some of these blood cells, they all start to unclump and they start to flow through.

really, so it really helped with the blood flow, definitely. I’m a huge proponent of the idea of an electric universe and the fact that we’re electric beings, everything’s connected, you know, the planet, the stars, they’ve all got these kind of electrical filaments that are kind of passing these energy between each other.

And it’s the same thing with humanity. If we’re basically cutting ourselves off from this natural environment, we’re losing that electrical connection to the universe. And that’s a massive element again to our modern life where we’re losing those free electrons, this reservoir, this huge reservoir, the free electrons that are animating from the Earth, which our bodies definitely need.

I mean, many of you will know, cute modern environment is quite perilous now. We have electromagnetic radiation, we have computer, we have mobile phones, or there are mobile phone masses, there are 5G lamp posts, there’s TVs, there’s Wi -Fi, there’s Bluetooth, there’s power lines.

Yeah, I mean, I think over the… decades and years, as more and more of these technologies have been introduced, it’s definitely been harmful to humanity, but I think bodies have sort of tended to try and shift to kind of deal with the issue and the problem, so you know, cued off the human body for putting up with it.

But definitely it’s quite an unhealthy environment and hopefully in the future, as we try and understand that these energies are harmful, we can try and mitigate them and start to create technologies that are a lot healthier.

There’s a book that talks all about this. I haven’t actually read it yet, but I do want to read it. It’s called The Invisible Rainbow, A History of Electricity and Life, and his name is Arthur Fitzberg, another name that I’ve butchered.

But yeah, I don’t know like completely what the book’s all about, but I definitely know the gist of it, and it talks about you have these moments in time where these new technologies have kind of come out to humanity, such as radio waves or electrical pylons, and there is a definite correlation between certain conditions then just suddenly explode through the populations and other factors and other reasons have given for these medical conditions and the medical establishment completely ignore the electromagnetic side of things.

And you know, he proposes this author that there’s so many conditions of disease that are attributed to some of these electromagnetic technologies every time they’re released. So in the modern day era, we’re living through Bluetooth, we’re living through Wi -Fi, 5G, 6G, whatever is to come.

These are all like, you know, future concerns, definitely. But all these EMF radiation, these fields, these electromagnetics, they are what are called positively charged and positively charged sounds like good, but actually it’s kind of the opposite.

That’s detrimental to the body and what your body should be seeking is negative ions. And they come from natural contexts, they come from nature, they come from beaches, loads of negative ions, you know, at the sea if you go to the beach, lots of them.

Really, that’s why people go there. they feel relaxed, they feel chilled out because of these negative ions, and these negative ions reduce depression, they reduce anxiety. And I think they’re really spearheading at the moment, especially on the South Coast, there’s a real movement for wild swimming because salt water anywhere is a huge cleanser to the field.

And then when you’re down on the sea, just for modern life, the stress of the modern life, it really just rejuvenates people. Grounding, again, in terms of Western traditions, really, it’s become re -understood now.

All this information is being rediscovered. Has this been suppressed? It’s just purely just been forgot about a few amnesia through the years. But I mean, a lot of cultures, I’ve spoke about in previous podcasts, potentially, suppressed architecture, harnessing some of these Earth energies and using some of these energies, the positive energies that come from the Earth to ground the building, but also the humans.

they inhabit the building as well, so it kind of maintains that connection with the earth. It doesn’t sever it. And also, you know, they didn’t have a lot of the plastics we have now, a lot of the natural materials they wore on their feet, on their, you know, on their body, tended to sort of maintain that connection.

And you can call it Earth Chi, you know, Earth Piranha, all kind of the same energy, but just different names for it. And, you know, the Native Americans, some of the sort of various tribes, some of them did actually build various cohabitations, you know, buildings, and they still had that understanding that they needed these buildings to still be accessible to the earth.

Like, you know, their bodies always needed to be connected to the earth. They had that inherent understanding. But in terms of some of the Western cultures, figureheads that have really revitalized and started to spur on research into this area of grounding and the results of it, one of the first people, again, looking at Germany, a naturopath called Adolf Just.

And he was apparently a real advocate for the natural way of living. He proposed that everyone should be eating organic foods. I mean, this is just kind of obvious stuff, but back then it was obviously quite revolutionary, you know, fresh air, sunlight, exercise, as well as walking barefoot in nature.

He proposed all of these things for natural, healthy living. But after doing a little bit more research into the subject, I actually discovered as an individual called Clint Obermann, he’s an American guy, and he’s perceived as being the modern, again, father of grounding.

And he had an original career, actually as a grounding systems expert in the cable television industry in America. And he started to research grounding as a human benefit, as a benefit to people’s health, because he had an understanding that to get apparently a good TV reception, the electrical signal needed to be grounded for it to work.

And so he started to theorize, is this the same for humans? In order to increase our signal, you know, in able to increase our health. humanity, do we actually need to be connected directly to the ground?

So it’s through his understanding and the benefits of grounding that he founded an organization called Earth FX Inc. And it’s specifically set up to kind of research and development within the ideas of grounding and creating technologies.

And he’s patented a lot of technologies to do with the system itself. And I mean, I employ it a lot. I’ve bought myself, you know, numerous grounding blankets for my beds, and then also grounding pillows and grounding map for my desk.

It’s important to say it’s not as good as the real thing, because you buy these grounding blankets. And essentially, you plug it into your plug, into your electrical plug, and obviously, your electrical plugs are grounded.

And the feeling is, it feels like a little bit artificial, it definitely helps your body, it definitely helps get your body moving while you’re sleeping, and I’m using it now, but It’s not the same as being outside in nature, I need to point that out, but they are really beneficial, really helpful.

But you can get all manner of grounding tools now, you can get grounding shoes, grounding blankets, you know, just lots of things on the market now. But one of the hazards of grounding, which I found, because, you know, I’m recording this in February, so it’s been raining quite a lot.

And with the rain comes various slugs and worms, so it’s just quite a little bit of anxiety because I’m not a big fan of slugs, especially when they start to crawl on your feet, it’s not the nicest thing.

And what’s been interesting about doing this is that I’ve discovered, because I take my phone out with me, I probably shouldn’t, but it’s just, I just do it for like 10 minutes in the afternoon, and 10 minutes before I go to bed.

And so I set the timer on my phone, I just find that the slugs really do get attracted by my phone because I put it on the floor and the ground and the grass. And the slugs, I’m always having to pick my phone up very carefully just to check on the side of it because inevitably every single time there’s a slug stuck to it, and they tend to avoid my feet.

And it isn’t very nice when I feel like a little, you know, wiggle underneath my toes from a worm. It’s not the greatest, so it does, it’s the only thing that kind of puts me off it, if I’m being honest.

But, you know, these are small gripes, you know, the benefits, you know, completely outweigh that. And again, a weird thing that I’ve noticed, you know, and it’s just a strange time dilation. When I’m inside, like 10 minutes can feel like 10 minutes, but outside, you know, it goes so quickly.

It’s really strange. So that’s everything I can say about this topic in terms of geographic stress. I think we’ve covered, you know, briefly most areas. I think in terms of being able to mitigate how these geographic stresses, you know, affect your life is quite good.

I mean, I’ve really started to do my own investigations where I’m at the moment, I bought one of those. those laser pointers where you can kind of measure the size of rooms and I’ve been making a general floor plan of the house I’m in at the moment.

And the idea is that I want to try and then map some of these areas of geographic stress, get my dows and rods out, get my pendulums out, find where the underground water is, if it’s yang water, is it unhealthy water?

Maybe there’s somewhere that’s healing within the house that’s good. Definitely discover where these grids are in terms of the Hartman grid, the Curry grid, and just note it down on a paper actually on a floor plan just so you know.

But then maybe you can then position your bed and your desk and your sofa in various positions to kind of, you’re going to spend seriously long periods of time there where it’s good to sort of find a sweet spot in your house where you’re not being affected by these energies.

So that’s enormously empowering. But in terms of the restricted living conditions as well, and you know this is what I found, this is why I keep bouncing around different places because I just feel like I’m so sensitive to energy it’s quite hard for me to find somewhere where my body actually likes.

It is quite daunting you know really you’re stacking up all these various energies and harmful things and how it can affect your body it can be a little bit overwhelming and you know but knowledge is power and hopefully as a species we can move forward we can start to understand these these ideas can start to percolate into this collective consciousness and maybe we can start to build habitations and cities and towns and you know dwellings and communities that take in these energies like they did in ancient China you know the kind of the rulers of the time understood this and they started to implement public you know servants to kind of help people to decide where some of these dwellings should go so it wasn’t causing them harm.

But referring back to the website land and spirit that I recently found there’s a nice little conclusion to do with geographic stress and actually how important it is and it goes like this it says how many lives could have been saved and how much suffering could have been avoided if the understanding of the importance of the influence of geographic stress upon life on earth was more widely recognized.

I think that sums it up like how important it is. So there you go something to ponder well on think about test in your own life when you have time. As always it’s been really great talking to you. You can catch me on reconsidersimon .com and also on various video platforms on YouTube I’m on mumble and on Odyssey I’m a bit chucked and you can find me on all the major podcast platforms as well.

I’ve been reconsider Simon and have a good morning night or afternoon wherever you are in the world thank you very much take care bye Thank you.

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