| Essay
8
Earth Currents: The Cause Of ‘Geopathic’
Illness
A Short Analysis
by Roy Vincent
I came to
live in my present house in 1971. Finding it was the result of a happy
coincidence of someone wanting to emigrate and myself actively looking
for somewhere with land and grazing for my horses. Two hectares of land,
and a setting on the western slopes of the Cumbrian fells that has visitors
using such words as ‘paradise’ (although they may be speaking
of my cooking, which is out of this world!).
I am on a narrow plateau and surrounded entirely by farmland; the seas
are visible to the west, while east the ground rises to a high ridge.
I had to make some adjustments in that there are no mains water, gas,
or sewerage. The gas comes in bottles; the septic tank gurgles and belches
knowingly, and happily looks after itself. The water? Yes, the water –
and here I begin my tale.
My first water supply had been installed by the previous owners and involved
a large tank some distance inland that was fed by small streams that wandered
down the fellside. It was good to have a private supply that was free
from any additives, and miles from any source of urban or industrial pollution.
In time, and as I got older, the servicing of the installation began to
be tedious, involving as it did clambering over stone walls when there
was possibly ice or other hazards. And so I considered the possibility
of a borehole on my own land. I was fortunate to find a dowser who lives
not far away, who came with a cohort of children, and together we strode
up and down my two fields. The dowser, Jack, had the traditional forked
twig that he had pulled from the hedge, while the rest of us carried bundles
of canes and followed close on his footsteps. Back and forth he walked,
the twig dipping downwards from time to time while we ran to push in a
cane at the spot.
In a comparatively short time, the pattern emerged of rows of canes that
demonstrated the presence below each row of an aquifer. There were eight
or nine all told, and all indicating the underground flow of water from
the high ground toward the sea. One stood out from the rest, for as Jack
approached, and was yet four or five metres off, the twig began to vibrate,
and then shot downwards alarmingly as he came immediately above it. We
plotted the course of this underground stream and were relieved to find
that it deviated away from a neighbour’s property, and was obviously
not the source of his spring.
The arrival of the drilling rig and the sinking of the borehole provide
material for a saga yet to be written, although I have told it often enough.
It is still difficult to describe my relief and joy at seeing great jets
of water soaring above the rig as the compressor did its work. The main
aquifer is at twenty-five metres depth, and sits under clay and sandstone
and on top of a bulk of granite – each layer in its way telling
the story of past volcanic activity and glaciations. “It’s
the best supply that we’ve found in the Lake District,” said
both the well-borer and the pump man – and for a county that seems
to have more than its fair share of water, that is quite an accolade.
It is the most beautiful water – cold from its underground sources,
with just a hint of its mountain origins and sometimes a trace of iron
from the ore beds that lie a short distance inland, and which were last
worked in a very basic manner by long-dead miners several centuries ago.
Upstream, the aquifer passes under my boundary bank, or dyke as it is
known locally, then below a narrow road and under the dyke that forms
the boundary of my neighbour’s land. His dyke has a hedge on top
– except above the aquifer, where nothing grows. My boundary has
a row of venerable pine trees, that stand tall – except where they
grow or grew above other aquifers. One has died in my time here, another
is quite stunted compared with the rest, and the one that had been planted
directly above the main aquifer had grown in a strange way. From its base,
it had grown almost parallel with the ground before finally directing
itself upwards. The contorted shape became the tree’s downfall,
for, heavily burdened by wet snow, it was wrenched and twisted by winds
and eventually came down in the field.
The trees and their history, together with my neighbour’s hedge,
provide me with an ever-present and visible demonstration of the existence
of what have become generally known as ‘earth currents’. Now,
as I am writing, it is a warm and sunny day, and I have just come in from
the field where I have spent some time lying on the ground directly above
the aquifer. I did not really have to do that, for I already knew what
I would feel, but I did it simply to add to the credibility of my account.
Over many years, I have been made aware of the fact that I am very sensitive
to the presence of electrical or electromagnetic fields and phenomena.
It is difficult to quantify the effects – even to describe them
in such a way that others can identify if they also are not similarly
sensitive. Such words as ‘tingling’ and ‘currents’
come to mind, together with an inner sense of apprehension or disquiet.
The underground stream is a conductor of natural electricity. Its very
movement may be the generating source of the current. The proximity upstream
of the iron ore and the adjacent sandstone might create an electrical
battery, the water providing both the electrolyte and the conductor.
‘Earth currents’ and ‘earth radiation’ have become
the accepted general terminology used in describing what is a real, identifiable
and measurable phenomenon. More scientifically, they are called
‘telluric’ currents, described below in Encyclopaedia Britannica.
“Telluric Current - also called Earth Current, natural
electric current flowing on and beneath the surface of the Earth and generally
following a direction parallel to the Earth's surface. Telluric currents
arise from charges moving to attain equilibrium between regions of differing
electric potentials; these differences in potential are set up by several
conditions, including very low-frequency electromagnetic waves from space,
particularly from the magnetosphere incident upon the Earth's surface,
and moving charged masses in the ionosphere and the atmosphere. Telluric
currents are often used by geophysicists to map subsurface structures,
such as sedimentary basins, layered rocks, and faults. An anomalous current
density or gradient may be indicative of a subsurface structural feature.”
Measurement requires precise and not very portable instrumentation and
away from the scientific world recourse is more often made to the practice
of dowsing or divining with the easily carried twig, rods or pendulum.
It is most unfortunate that in some quarters, earth currents have been
identified with another and completely different phenomenon, namely ‘ley
lines’. Ley lines are not earth currents; earth currents are not
ley lines. The term ‘ley line’ was coined by a man called
Alfred Watkins, who describes his findings, and why he used the term,
in his book The Old Straight Track. They relate to the straight-line
routes used by people in times long past, before the development of large
towns and cities, before land was enclosed, before there was a network
of roads and when travel was on foot or pony with pack animals or porters
and the direct route was the most economical of effort. One of my hobbies
is to find and follow them in this wide-open country around my home, much
of it never having seen the plough. I use a map, compass, rule and pencil,
not dowsing rods or a pendulum, and the tracks can often be seen as the
sun slants across a hillside, or a light powdering of snow settles differently
on their surface compared with the surrounding terrain. Happy are the
moments when I might come across a long disused ford or stepping stones,
or find a series of mark stones that had guided feet from times long before
the Romans came.
One unfortunate consequence of the association and confusion of earth
currents with ley lines is that archaeologists, who could learn much from
the alignment of the routes and the places that they once connected, become
apoplectic at the mention of ley lines, while those practitioners who
are involved in the provision of health care, ignore the phenomenon of
the currents and their consequences for health, and dismiss the whole
as so much hocus pocus.
It is not only the trees that suffer developmental and health problems
when in the proximity of a current, although their behaviour and that
of house plants can sometimes provide clues. All organic life
may be affected, and the fact that plants and animals respond should be
sufficient to demonstrate that health deterioration is real and not simply
a subjective human reaction. The term ‘geopathic stress’ has
become the most commonly used general description of the result of persistent
exposure to the electrical field associated with earth currents. Although
the phenomenon has been known of in a number of parts of the world and
in different eras, the first comprehensive description that I have found
is in a book called Earth Currents: Causative Factor of Cancer and Other
Diseases. The author, Gustav Freiherr von Pohl, provides many studies
of the sleeping locations of individuals or families who had suffered
serious, long-term ill health, the ailments being many and varied. Apart
from the more obvious of cancer and cardio-vascular conditions, the inclusion
of instances of deteriorating mental health particularly concerned me
within the context of my general writing.
I have mentioned my own sensitivity to electrical phenomena, and it was
my own reactions that confirmed to me the involvement of geopathic stress
in the illness and subsequent death of three whom I knew or got to know
well. My cousin had developed very severe muscular rheumatism and had
been given high doses of a steroid to relieve it. On one visit, and sitting
in a room where I had not previously sat, I began to experience a very
painful backache. Puzzled, for there was no obvious cause, I made an excuse
and changed my seat, at which the pain declined. I felt certain that the
cause was some form of earth current, and as the room was that used most
frequently by my cousin, with her bed immediately above, I have no doubt
that the resultant stress led to her illness. Her diet of steroids had,
however, proved to be too great, for her spine disintegrated, collapsed
and she could breathe no more and died. Significantly, the dog belonging
to a friend with whom my cousin shared the house, would not remain in
the room in question, but left immediately if ever taken into it. The
room in which the friend slept was subject to much less stress, but even
so, she developed the most atrocious and unconscious habit of grinding
her teeth. This latter is another indication of the existence of geopathic
stress, and is unconscious and not subjective. Dogs detest these locations
while cats seek them out – again, another potent indicator.
The behaviour of houseplants was an effective indicator of the stress
at the head of the bed of one young woman whom I got to know. The plants
deteriorated rapidly if placed on the bedside tables, and recovered if
moved into other parts of the flat. Esther had developed a malignant brain
tumour from which she subsequently died. While she and her partner were
together in the flat, one used to wake in deep depression with the feeling
of a ‘heavy weight on the chest’, while the other had frequent
teeth-grinding nightmares. Esther moved back to her parents’ home,
and after treatment lived for a further year, succumbing eventually to
meningitis. Her partner moved the bed within the room, and enjoyed relaxing
sleep. My own reaction when I stood at the original bed head was to experience
deep nausea.
There were no external signs in John’s house, but the fact that
I could not sleep in the bed in which he had slept formerly, alerted me
to the fact that something was wrong. It was not, however, until someone
actually dowsed the house that it was demonstrated that a ‘stress’
line in fact ran the length of what had been John’s side of the
bed. The line went the full extent of the house, and crossed another,
the crossing being beneath the location of his relaxation chair. After
a long fight, and sustained by the utmost dedication of his wife, Vanessa,
John sadly died of the leukaemia that he had contracted.
I have no way of knowing what precisely were the causes of these particular
earth currents, for there are many possible driving forces. The earth
is, in fact, a huge electrical machine. It has a magnetic core, and rotates
within the stream of electrically charged particles that pour out from
the sun in never ending flow, the ‘solar wind’. One characteristic
of a rotating electrical machine is that it generates so-called ‘lines
of force’ over its surface, and that is just what occurs over the
surface of the earth. There are two ‘grids’ – the Hartmann
and the Curry - and where they cross or interact with underground aquifers,
zones or lines of geopathic stress are created. If the earth’s surface
was regular and homogeneous, perhaps not as many currents would flow,
but it is this irregularity that, with other influences, creates the random
configuration that is so hard to predict.
The variability and unpredictability of strength and direction of the
grids and water generated currents become very apparent in the illustrations
that accompany the case studies given in von Pohl’s book. A further
collection may be seen in a book called Earth Radiation by Käthe
(Katy) Bachler. The author, a schoolteacher in Austria, had trained as
a dowser and had studied the phenomenon of earth currents and their relationship
to problems of health. Also qualified in science and mathematics, Ms Bachler
approached her investigations with the rigour of a scientist. She had
become convinced that the erratic and unsocial behaviour of some children,
and the underperformance of others, had its roots in geopathic stress
experienced at school or home, or in both. Her proposed study was recognised
by the Superintendent of the Schools District of Salzburg, and the Authority
allowed her to pursue a full time investigation in the classrooms and
the homes of many children.
It is impossible to supply detail of cases from either book in this limited
essay – the books themselves are a small selection of many thousands.
However, one conclusion that stemmed from the Bachler study was that children
never sat in the same place for more than a month, but were moved around
in the classroom at regular intervals. It is worth quoting briefly from
the preface to the book that was written by the Superintendent.
“She wanted to find out whether there was a measurable connection
between geopathy and academic failures in children of school age. Heretofore,
this had been a field regarded as charlatanism.
We now have the results of her work. This book is recommended for sceptics
as well as supporters. Maybe they, too, will become convinced that there
are indeed geopathic influences, and that by eliminating them, some people
can be helped immeasurably. In particular, pupils and students can now
become achievers in their studies.”
There is a further introduction written by the then Archbishop of Salzburg,
aimed at setting to rest any doubts that Christians might have about the
use of dowsing. He warns against the use of dowsing for evil purposes
and personal gain, but gives his blessing to those who use the gift for
the benefit of others. The Archbishop concludes by “…warmly
recommending to believing Christians the work of Ms. Käthe Bachler,
and especially her book…”
It is most unfortunate that both books are very hard to find, and are
probably not in print. Anyone reading them may be struck by the fact that
neither investigator talks about eliminating, removing or reversing the
currents and their effects. Where, in the quotation above, the Superintendent
writes of ‘eliminating them’, he should, in fact, have written
‘avoiding them’. The whole thrust of the work and analyses
of both authors is to find good places for people to sleep and
work in. Many to whom I have described these phenomena in the past make
an immediate assumption that the whole house is a bad place. This is patently
not so. In the case of John above, the lines were no more than a half
metre wide. The zone in Esther’s flat was solely at the bed head
– plants that wilted when on the bedside tables flourished very
healthily elsewhere, and the bed, when moved, provided a fully restful
sleeping place. In the main, there are more good places than unhealthy
ones.
I repeat what I wrote earlier, neither author suggests that the geopathic
zones can be eliminated or ‘cured’. I have been to ‘workshops’
where one has been told of practices such as driving in wooden stakes,
or copper pins. Others where individuals have claimed to ‘visualise’
the zones away. Rational thought and an appreciation of the causes and
driving forces of the earth currents should convince most people that
the areas and lines of stress cannot simply be ‘wished away’.
The aquifers beneath my fields have been flowing, probably without cease,
since the last ice-age, and no action that I can think of will cause them
to change direction or cease producing their electrical field. My house
itself is almost completely benevolent, and I can understand why the site
was chosen so many centuries ago.
Some aquifers are seasonal, and so dowsing on one occasion may provide
a different result from that obtained on another. The Somerset Levels
provide an interesting anomaly, because the direction of flow is governed
by the state of the tide in the adjoining Bristol Channel. The tidal range
is very great, and at high tide the pressure from the sea pushes the flow
in the aquifer inland, while at low tide, the water is allowed to drain
in the normal seaward direction. Electrical currents are created in the
stratospheric zones above the earth, and are transferred by a process
known as induction into the plane of the earth below. Inevitably, these
currents will be at their strongest in suitable conductors such as flowing
water and in ore deposits, but as the currents are the result of the sun
creating electrically charged particles in the ionosphere, they only exist
during daylight hours. They are strongest at local noon, and die away
at dusk. There are other major variables resulting from the movement of
the moon and the changing seasons.
It has long been acknowledged that it is pointless trying to locate and
evaluate earth currents at full and new moon, because of strong gravitational
and other influences a these times. Watching something as unlikely as
a travel documentary crystallised this understanding for me. A group on
men were exploring a particular region in the Australian outback where
water is at a premium. They had stopped to fill up with water and petrol
at a very remote store. As they were discussing with the store owner the
additional availability of water further into the desert, he told them
that in many locations the ground-water came to the surface at new and
full moon i.e. in that very flat desert plain, the moon exerted a virtual
tidal influence over the subterranean water. The corollary of that is
that wherever it occurred, water in underground aquifers would be subject
to exactly the same influences, with a consequent effect upon any attendant
earth currents.
What I am really trying to say is that dowsing and locating geoelectric
zones and currents is not a simple and casual practice that can be picked
up without considerable thought. Even though the process of dowsing with
rods or a pendulum is easily demonstrated and many find that they can
do it, that is not the end in itself. If one sets out to find the good
or bad places in a house or place of work and thereby advise people, one
is taking on a very serious responsibility. The case studies of both Ms.
Bachler and von Pohl relate to many grave and life-threatening illnesses,
and also to those normally classed as ‘mental’, and both worked
in consultation with the appropriate physician. It is interesting to note
this acceptance and collaboration coming from the medical profession and
the Church in central Europe. In Britain, there is almost universal scepticism,
or downright ridicule.
The tendency to ridicule stems in no small part from the influences that
I mentioned earlier – namely the desire of many to look for mystical
associations and, through the confusion with leylines, linkages with such
places as stone circles and ancient sites. The use of the term ‘geomancer’
is calculated to reinforce the ‘magic and mystery’ (although,
in truth, I cannot understand why anyone would use that term in this context.
Geomancy is the method of divination that interprets the random shapes
that appear in earth that is thrown onto a surface, and later, it is the
interpretation of a collection of dots randomly made on paper). There
is nothing magical about earth currents, nor the geopathy associated with
them. It takes a small amount of science to understand how the phenomena
develop, but it takes a lot of realism and dedication to use the knowledge
for the benefit of sick people.
In Britain, one of the most dedicated individuals in this field is Rolf
Gordon. His son died from cancer, and Rolf is certain that the root cause
was the geopathic stress experienced by his son where the latter slept.
Apart from writing a very useful and practical book, Are You Sleeping
In A Safe Place?, Rolf founded the Dulwich Health Society with the
aim of disseminating knowledge and of promoting the use of what appears
to be the one device available that can minimise the local effect of geopathic
currents. The device, called a ‘Raditech’, is plugged into
the electrical mains in the house and, based on what is called a ‘Lakowsky
coil’, it generates a neutralising field. Anyone believing that
this is just a bit more hocus-pocus, may be interested in this simple
anecdote: I supplied one of these units to some friends to use in their
house where there were several geopathic zones. The much older mother
who had lived all of her life in this same house, but who knew nothing
of the new device, descended the stairs the next morning with the remark
that she had just had the best night’s sleep that she had ever had
since childhood.
The effects upon mental and nervous health are often quite difficult to
assess, for they can be complex in that the dividing line between the
actual physical effects of the geopathic stress and the resultant subjective
reactions may become blurred. At the simplest level, a physical feeling
equivalent to that experienced during times of apprehension may be created
in a person. Even though there may be nothing in the person’s life
actually to cause worry, the constant feeling of being worried may engender
a permanent state of anxiety for which medical help may then be sought.
On a personal level, I can only speculate about the very first home of
my parents. It was built on land that had been reclaimed from freshwater
marsh that drained into an inlet of the sea close by, with the possibility
of water movement continuing to occur beneath it. In giving birth to my
brother in the house, my mother came close to dying from a haemorrhage
that followed his birth. My brother cried incessantly, and was often pacified
only when beneath overhanging trees. Both the failure of blood to clot,
and the incessant crying of infants are key symptoms of the existence
of geopathic stress. There are many cases recorded of infants cramming
to one side or end of their cot in their efforts to avoid the source of
their distress, or perhaps sleep-walking or seeking the bed of a sibling
or parents. I am acquainted with one child from before the time that I
first became aware of these phenomena, which cried incessantly when put
in its cot, and struggled so hard in its distress that it developed a
hernia. His mother’s character changed markedly while living in
this particular mobile home. The child became pacified and the mother
her normal self when shortly they moved to a new dwelling. The reaction
of my brother when beneath the trees is a possible confirmation of the
electrical nature of all that I am considering, for it is well known that
certain trees are one of the many sources of negative ions (electrically
charged particles) and that these are necessary for normal health and
development. One consequence of the nature of certain geopathic zones
is that they have been shown to create an excess of positive over negative
ions. Wide research has demonstrated that the reverse ratio is essential
for harmonious life and development. This, however, is a much wider topic
and beyond what I intend in this essay.
Again, I can only speculate on the possibility that where my brother and
sister-in-law slept there was a geopathic zone. The fact that both developed
cancer within a comparatively short time of each other, and that my brother
later had a minor stroke, makes me think that it is probably so –
a number of writers on the topic assert most definitely that in virtually
every case of cancer that they have investigated, there has been the presence
of geopathic elements.
Further speculation was fuelled in my mind when I read his Memoirs, by
the former Foreign Secretary, Lord Hurd. He described his choice of his
present home, and the fact that when he and Lady Hurd first inspected
it they found running water below the floorboards in one room. Also in
the book are two illustrations – one of Lady Hurd during her recovery
from leukaemia, juxtaposed with a view of the house, which stands alongside
a seasonal stream. The association of water flow and cancer really hit
me when I came to that part of the book.
There is however, no room for speculation in the instances of two families
with which I am well acquainted.
Family 1
Morag and Jock, plus children Tom and Amy. Morag developed breast cancer,
and after appropriate treatment was beginning to recover, when a colon
cancer was discovered. Husband Jock has suffered depression for some time
and has not worked for several years. The illnesses can be traced back
to when they moved into their current house. Fig 1 represents a dowsed
scan of their bedrooms. The crossings within their bed are some of the
worst that I have seen illustrated in the various books to which I refer
you. Jock invariably woke in a state of deep depression, but did not do
so when he slept in a bed in bedroom 4. They have installed a Raditech
of appropriate strength, but that was very recently, and too late to improve
Morag’s chances, and she is now declining fast in a Hospice. The
better quality of sleep that Jock is now getting with the device installed,
has helped him to cope with the personal tragedy now unfolding, and to
devote full time attention to the two young children, whose beds at 2
and 3 are thankfully clear of adverse stress.

Family
2
Maggie, Ben and daughter Ruth moved into their present home approximately
five years ago. In that short time, Maggie has had a hysterectomy, suffered
a period of clinical depression and developed breast cancer. Ben had a
recurrence of a psychiatric problem that was well controlled, has deserted
Maggie, and they are now divorced. Ruth changed from a reasonably compliant
early teenager into a belligerent and non-cooperative person. Without
then realising the implications (for the scan is very recent), Maggie
had moved her Bed 1 from the disaster zone to the one clear area of her
bedroom. With appropriate treatment, she has fully recovered from the
breast cancer, and has recovered from the deep depression that had threatened
to end her employment. Since receiving the scan of the geopathic zones,
Ruth has been persuaded to move her Bed 2 to a clear area, and as this
has happened only within the last fortnight, it is not yet possible to
assess her reactions.
Finally, I have only recently been made aware of a remarkable development
in the fortunes of one particular family following their change of house.
The father, (A), is the brother of one of my close friends who has regularly
commented upon the circumstances and health of his brother, and the state
of his marriage. ‘A’ had inexplicable blackouts from time
to time, and had a marriage in name only, the union being maintained essentially
for the children. The wife, as reported, behaved like a virago, and refused
normal relations. One child suffered from petit mal, while his sister
had psychological problems. Following the change of houses which occurred
three or four months ago, there have been no instances of the problems
of ‘A’ or his son that would have been expected in that time,
and the son’s medication has been greatly reduced, and will soon
be stopped; ‘A’ and his wife have resumed normal marital relations,
while the young girl is appearing to be free from the stresses that were
at the root of her previous condition. Neighbours at the original location
suffered from recurring and serious health problems, indicating the possibility
of both properties being affected by local geopathic conditions, if indeed
geopathy is at the root of all the difficulties, something that I am not
now able to confirm by dowsing.

Conclusions
Cancers and other physical illnesses are the ones most often cited when
describing the effects of exposure to geopathic influences. Equally important
because of their increasing prevalence and often devastating consequences,
are the ‘cancers of the mind’ – the clinical depressions,
anxiety states and other serious nervous and psychiatric illnesses, and
the non-specific behavioural problems in children. Esther and her partner
between them had ‘deep depression’ on waking after night-time
‘teeth grinding nightmares’. Jock habitually awoke depressed
when in the marital bed, but had refreshing sleep in a bed that is free
from geopathic influence. Maggie developed clinical depression and Ben
suffered aggravation of a controlled psychiatric condition, while Ruth
underwent a change in personality in their new home. Personality change
followed my friend’s daughter moving into a particular dwelling,
while her infant son became greatly distressed when in his cot –
both improving after removing to a different home.
Käthe Bachler’s findings are so very relevant in the face of
wide ranging ‘social’ problems that are occurring in our schools.
Disruption, indiscipline, attention deficit are some of the possible consequences
of children sitting for long periods in geopathically stressed zones.
Unfortunately the existence of geopathic illness is not generally accepted
in Britain, and the ever-ready fix-it drug is available as the panacea
to cure all ills when often all that is required is the relocation of
the bed or sitting place. Cost free remedies, without side-effects - and
remarkably successful.
Book
references:
The Old Straight Track - Alfred Watkins Abacus Books 0-349-13707-2
This is the source book for anyone who is really interested in the truth
about ley lines, for it is written by the man who identified the phenomenon
and coined the actual term ‘ley line’.
In his introduction Watkins wrote: “My main theme is the alignment
across miles of country of a great number of objects, or sites of objects,
of prehistoric antiquity. And this is not in one or a few instances, but
in scores or hundreds. Such alignments are either facts beyond the possibility
of accidental coincidence or they are not. These lines of necessity include,
and mix up in the first place, human efforts and place-names of widely
different periods of time; it is the task of other branches of archaeology
to work out the full chronology of the matter, and I only attempt those
few obvious deductions as regards periods which the mechanism of the sighted
track reveal.” “One definition seems to be needed. A trackway
is a path across country for man and horse, often with no more structure
than made by the users’ feet, but perhaps stoned or ‘pitched’
in soft places. My subject is not that of Roman roads.”
Earth
Radiation Käthe Bachler Wordmasters 0951415107
The author wrote: “Many factors can disturb health and well being,
like the weather constellations, one’s lifestyle, a bad diet and
infections. Many of these factors can be eliminated once recognised. In
addition, there are other environmental factors less familiar to most
people, such as the influences from the earth itself – that is geopathic
influences. I want to report about geopathic influences, since very few
facts and conclusions have been presented in this area. Yet it would be
of great value for people to know more about them. Much energy could be
preserved, much suffering alleviated, much emotional turmoil eased, and
many people could lead a useful and happy life if those damaging influences
could be removed from their lives.” “It is my sincere desire
that the realisations on which this book is based will be instrumental
in giving help and hope to many people who have suffered from illness
and depressions. I am thinking especially of children who are unable to
bring about change without the help and understanding of the adults around
them.”
Earth
Currents: Causative factor of cancer and other diseases
Gustav von Pohl frech verlag, Germany 3-7724-9402-1
The author
wrote in 1930: “My observations set down in this book about negative
electrical earth currents are in the main virgin territory for medical
science”. “After speaking at a congress for physicians in
May 1930 and again when a journal for cancer research published a treatise
about the emergence of cancer through earth currents, many physicians
came to visit me at my home. All, except one, who studied my work and
reports were convinced about the accuracy of my research and promised
on their return to check and keep up this research themselves”.
“Unfortunately there is no technical instrument at present that
will measure the degree of intensity of earth currents. We depend at the
moment on the expertise of the experienced dowser for the investigation
and diagnoses of different intensities of earth currents. I emphasize
experience, for many call themselves dowsers (or diviners) only because
the divining rod moves in their hands, have no idea why and on which object
the rod dips in its various ways below the earth, and neither do they
appreciate the strength or type of currents. The latter is the important
issue.
About 25 years ago when I lived in North Germany, I had arranged a scale
of currents from 1 to 12 analogous to the Beaufort wind scale. When I
studied dowsing in the Alps in Bavaria and Switzerland, I found the earth
currents so strong that my scale had to be extended to 16 degrees.”
Anyone who wishes to obtain a copy of either the von Pohl or Bachler book
should enter the author’s name on the Internet. The last time that
I looked, I found that there were steps being taken to organise reprints.
Are You
Sleeping in a Safe Place? Rolf Gordon Dulwich Health Society
0-9514017-0-X
The Author’s
son died of cancer in 1985. He subsequently found that at one stage his
son’s bed had been located over a strong underground vein of water.
“I only realised later the harmful effect of geopathic stress, caused
by these underground veins of water, must have had on my son’s health,
and I immediately decided to investigate. I found to my astonishment that
considerable research had been carried out in Germany over the last 50
years, which supported the theory THAT ONE IS UNLIKELY TO DEVELOP CANCER
UNLESS ONE HAS SLEPT OR STAYED FOR LONG PERIODS OVER HARMFUL EARTH RAYS.
One doctor, Dr. Hagar of Stettin, has found the theory borne out in 5,348
cases. Equally this was shown to be the case in respect of most other
serious illnesses.
Why, I ask myself, is so little known about the harmful effects of earth
radiation on health? The answer must lie in the mystique surrounding them
(they have only recently been measured according to the established laws
of physics), the scarcity of published evidence in the English language
and the consequent refusal of literally (sic) minded people to believe
in such phenomena and because so few people are aware of the dangers or
can locate the currents accurately”.
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