PENDULUM DOWSING
Created | Updated Dec 6, 2004
The effectiveness of dowsing with pendulums and the existence of Ley Lines are controversial, and while skeptics are still waiting for scientific proof, many dowsers are happily finding answers, objects and Ley Lines without the scientific community's endorsement.
Throughout history, mankind has experimented with many different ways to explain the present and foretell the future.
One such method is dowsing - using implements to find information or to locate sources of water or other materials. Pendulums are one type of dowsers tool and are simply a weight suspended from a thread and can be used to give answers to questions or as an indicator when looking for something. Anyone can make a pendulum and find the answers to a huge range of questions - such as compatibility with another person, suitability of career, place of residence or general health and so on with dedication and practice.
Pendulums can be made from anything, as long as they are heavy enough to hold the thread taut.
The thread should be black as it is a neutral colour. The most accurate pendulums seem to be wood or crystal these substances act neutrally and dont influence the responses of the pendulum.
Some pendulums are hollow allowing small objects or minerals to be placed inside, this is a form of "sampling" that means using a sample to determine a energy source and to get the pendulum to locate a similar energy.
Pendulums are especially useful when dowsing indoors, such as over maps and charts, to find ley lines, or finding lost objects or persons, in relation to a map or chart.
Some dowsers use pendulums to search for things that are not visible to the human eye, without having to be at a location, with startlingly accurate results in some cases.
HOW TO READ A PENDULUM
Reading a pendulum means interpreting the movements to determine the answer to a question.
A pendulum has two natural rhythms or movements, circular or side to side. Each of these movements is a way in which the pendulum is communicating with a positive or negative response.
But different people get different responses, as to which means yes and which means no.
To some circular means yes and side to side no - and equally vice-versa. To determine which is yes and which is no for anyone, the simplest way is to ask a question like "is my name.....?" saying a true name, the answer will be the yes response, then repeat this excercise saying a false name to get the no response.
"Insert GTB's experience here"