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RE: Everything I know About Filmmaking I Learned From Jorge Luis Borges

in #writing9 years ago
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Ok, so I read that (nice writing, I might add). Here is how i would (and might) go about treasure hunting. First, remote view the easiest most accessible find for the current "you" to be able to access. Then, do some extra work with detailed drawing (remote viewed landscapes can be quite accurate--I have 1st hand knowledge of that). Then try to get an idea of where that might be located (what the drawing looks like, and RV what the nearest land feature looks like), then get a map of the area. Make a grid on a blank sheet of paper that fits over the map. put the map away. Write down your intentions on paper of where to find the (whatever it is), and use a homemade dowsing rod, holding it in one hand while using the other to point at parts of the grid till the rod moves (one concentrates on the focus of the target while doing this). You figure out what part of the map that pints at, and head out to that area with two dowsing rods. When you get there, you, again write down your intentions (speaking it as you write is important--forgot to mention that--it's a subconscious thing). Then, walk around the area letting the rods point in the direction you want to go. When they cross or spread wide apart, you are there. You can even dowse for how deep to dig. Once you find your (whatever it is), Bob's your uncle! This is, of course, an overly simplified version of what one does, but you get the picture. My son and I have dowsed for lost tools. His friend even hid his pack of cigarettes, and he found them instantly with dowsing rods. I have found water with them as well. They work for what ever you put in your mind to find, including yes or no questions...something to look into. ~Cheers~

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