Posted: Fri Apr 11, 2008 4:22 pm
Linda Brown,
Your reference to" every turn of the river "
I have been looking through this recently,
http://www.goroadachi.com/timerivers/
Sorry its back to my dowsing now, one of the stange things I find is to do with the path of water, both above ground and below.
I can follow both with dowsing, the above ground seems a silly thing to say, as its visible, but its path is not visible to that which it follows.
I live near the banks of the cherwell, it becomes the Thames in Oxford, my dogs love walking its banks, and I in my strange little way note everything, I note the geometry relevant to the rivers course and where it changes course, I note the precision that the river matchs the geometry that is detectable, I note the position of the willows on the river banks, the patterns shown in their bark.
I note how all nature is composed and relates to what our normal senses are blind to.
This type of knowledge brings with it a burden, a responsibility that sometimes I wear heavily.
I want to shout from the hilltops, but realise the response, the more I realise the consequence of the dual nature of creation, the more I respect those that have absorded the responsibilty, and shunned the stardom.
They are the true heroes and wizards.
Kevin
Your reference to" every turn of the river "
I have been looking through this recently,
http://www.goroadachi.com/timerivers/
Sorry its back to my dowsing now, one of the stange things I find is to do with the path of water, both above ground and below.
I can follow both with dowsing, the above ground seems a silly thing to say, as its visible, but its path is not visible to that which it follows.
I live near the banks of the cherwell, it becomes the Thames in Oxford, my dogs love walking its banks, and I in my strange little way note everything, I note the geometry relevant to the rivers course and where it changes course, I note the precision that the river matchs the geometry that is detectable, I note the position of the willows on the river banks, the patterns shown in their bark.
I note how all nature is composed and relates to what our normal senses are blind to.
This type of knowledge brings with it a burden, a responsibility that sometimes I wear heavily.
I want to shout from the hilltops, but realise the response, the more I realise the consequence of the dual nature of creation, the more I respect those that have absorded the responsibilty, and shunned the stardom.
They are the true heroes and wizards.
Kevin