
Intuition and Dis-ease Treatment
© Copyright 2003 by John Hammond, USA
(Explore Issue: Volume 12, Number 6)
The sense of Intuition is a very strong tool that can be used to discern knowledge. Applying wisdom to the discerned knowledge, mankind has vast powers that for the most part go untapped. This article provides an example of how this intuition may be tapped through dowsing.
Stand facing someone you know, about six feet away. Walk towards the person and stop when you want to. Do the same thing with two other people. How far away did you stop?
- With your arm fully extended and your outstretched fingertips just close enough to touch the other person.
- Arm fully extended, fist closed and just touching the other person.
- Elbow extended and touching the other person.
- Hugging.
Some folks you hug; others are arms-length—some are at arms-length plus more space. The question is why. Why did you stop with a hug, or so far away that you could only touch? The reason is that your intuition told you where you—and perhaps the other person—would be comfortable.
We use our intuition every day to make decisions, and we do so without physically “thinking it through.”
You’re at a party and two persons walk into the room, neither of whom you know. One you want to hug; the other you cannot wait to get out of the room. Your reaction to most people, especially if they are of your cultural group, does not generate a strong first response—they fall into the fingertip-to-elbow-length comfort zone.
Everyone has the sense of intuition and uses it, to make decisions in the moment. This “instant time” is called Kairos, as opposed to Chronos, which is clock time.
In 1935 a French priest named Abbe Mermet wrote a book1 on dowsing. Dowsing is nothing more than recognizing ones intuitive abilities, and putting them to work garnering information from the Cosmos. Drop a pebble in a pond—the ripple goes out and never stops. The same is true of all the information ever created in the universe. It is one’s intuition that senses the ripple. According to Abbe Mermet, most people can go beyond sensing how far to stand from another person. They can detect and measure any information that is, so to speak, rippling in the pond.
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