Our efforts have steadily borne fruit and we can now
address the known observations related to pyramids generally. We have specific conjectures.
1
The earth itself exhibits sonic
resonance frequencies that we presently do a poor job of detecting it at all. These sonic frequencies will naturally
conform to a north south east west alignment scheme as that is integral to the
Earth itself.
2
A properly designed and positioned
pyramid will allow this energy to be focused inside the pyramid. The bigger the better of course.
3
It follows, as already suggested by
others that using this energy to drive piezoelectricity in granitic blocks will
produce an electromagnetic potential that we assume draws directly from the
Earth as well.
4
We do not understand gravitation energy
or chi energy either. It is possible
that they are one and the same. Once
again this device would serve to concentrate such energy and again we cannot
measure it.
5
Can sonic energy naturally focus chi
energy allowing it to be used? We have
hints that this is so.
This all opens avenues for empirical research. The pyramid is thus a very useful starting
point.
Pyramid
Power
January 8, 2014
Julian Websdale, Contributor
The most
celebrated pyramids are those at Giza, built during the fourth dynasty, of
which the largest is the one that housed the pharaoh Khufu, better known as
Cheops. This is now called the Great Pyramid.
Some years ago
it was visited by a French hardware store owner and author named Antoine Bovis.
It is said that Bovis took refuge from the midday sun in the pharaoh’s chamber,
which is situated in the centre of the pyramid, exactly one third of the way up
the base. He found it unusually humid there, but what really surprised him were
the garbage cans that contained, among the usual tourist litter, the bodies of
a cat and some small desert animals that had wandered into the pyramid and died
there. Despite the humidity, none of them had decayed but just dried out
like mummies. He began to wonder whether the pharaohs had really been so
carefully embalmed by their subjects after all, or whether there was something
about the pyramids themselves that preserved bodies in a mummified condition.
Bovis made an
accurate scale model of the Cheops pyramid and placed it, like the original,
with the base lines facing precisely north-south and east-west. Inside the
model, one third of the way up, he put a dead cat. It became mummified, and he
concluded that the pyramid promoted rapid dehydration. Reports of this
discovery attracted the attention of Karel Drbal, a radio engineer in Prague,
who repeated the experiment with several dead animals and concluded, “There
is a relation between the shape of the space inside the pyramid and the
physical, chemical, and biological processes going on inside the space. By
using suitable forms and shapes, we should be able to make processes occur
faster or delay them.”
Drbal remembered an old superstition which claimed that a
razor left in the light of the moon became blunted. He tried putting one under
his model pyramid, but nothing happened, so he went on shaving with until it
was blunt, and then put it back in the pyramid. It became sharp again. Getting
a good razor blade was difficult in many Eastern European countries at the
time, so Drbal tried to patent and market his discovery. The patent office in
Prague refused to consider it until their chief scientist had tried building a
model himself and found that it worked. So the Cheops Pyramid Razor Blade
Sharpener was registered in 1959 under the Czechoslovakian Republic Patent No.
91304, and a factory soon began to turn out miniature cardboard pyramids.
During the 1970s they made them in Styrofoam.
The edge of a
razor blade has a crystal structure. Crystals are almost alive, in that they
grow by reproducing themselves. When a blade becomes blunted, some of the
crystals on the edge, where they are only one layer thick, are rubbed off.
Theoretically, there is no reason why they should not replace themselves in
time. Sunlight has a field that points in all directions, but sunlight
reflected from an object such as the moon is partly polarised, vibrating mostly
in one direction.
This could
conceivably destroy the edge of a blade left in moonlight, but it does not
explain the reverse action of the pyramid. It can be surmised that the Great
Pyramid and its little imitations act as lenses that focus energy or as
resonators that collect energy, which encourages crystal growth. The pyramid
shape itself is very much like that of a crystal of magnetite, so it may build
up a magnetic field. Author Lyall Watson kept a
Wilkinson Sword blade sharp, for 4 months of continuous daily use, using a
miniature pyramid.
A model pyramid
can be made using the following method:
Cut four
pieces of heavy cardboard into isosceles triangles with the proportion base to
sides of 15.7 to 14.94. Tape these together so that the pyramid stands exactly
10.0 of the same units high. Orient it precisely so that the base lines face
magnetic north-south and east-west. Make a stand 3.33 units high and place it
directly under the apex of the pyramid to hold your objects. The sharp edges of
the blade should face east and west. Keep the whole thing away from electrical
devices.
In 1968 a team
of scientists from the United States and from Ein Shams University in Cairo
began a million-dollar project to X-ray the pyramid of Chephren, successor to
Cheops. They hoped to find new vaults hidden in the six million tons of stone
by placing detectors in a chamber at its base and measuring the amount of
cosmic ray penetration, the theory being that more rays would come through
hollow areas. The recorders ran twenty-four hours a day for more than a year
until, in early 1969, the latest (at the time), IBM 1130, computer was
delivered to the university for analysis of the tapes. Six months later the
scientists had to admit defeat: the pyramid made no sense at all. Tapes
recorded with the same equipment from the same point on successive days showed
totally different cosmic-ray patterns. The leader of the project, Amr
Gohed, in an interview afterward said, “This is scientifically impossible. Call
it what you will – occultism, the curse of the pharaohs, sorcery, or magic,
there is some force that defies the laws of science at work in the pyramid.”
Jules Green of
the Psychical Research Society experimented with flowers. Taking four roses, he
placed two under pyramids, one under a cube, and one in the open air. He did
the same with four tulips. After a week, the flowers exposed to the air had
withered, while the others were still fresh. The roses and tulips in the
pyramids, however, had actually grown.
Not surprisingly, people experience enhanced
effects when meditating beneath pyramids. Changes in the meditator’s aura (electromagnetic
field) have been noted with Kirlian photography –
auras become brighter and larger. Meditators report
deeper relaxation, an enhanced sense of well-being, and increased levels of
awareness. The positive energy flow in the pyramid facilitates deeper focus. A
pyramid aids meditation because it focuses harmonious energy while deflecting
distracting energies. People meditating in a pyramid regularly have
received strong spiritual and psychic impressions, as well as enhanced dreams
and visions, vivid visual imagery, and increased memory recall.
Experiments
have shown copper to be the best metal for an open-frame meditation pyramid,
due to its natural electronic and bio-enhancing properties.
However, pyramid structures of cardboard, wood or bamboo are also effective, if
built to the same proportional dimensions as the Great Pyramid.
Pyramids have also been found to:
·
Restore the lustre to tarnished jewellery and
coins
·
Purify water
·
Mummify and dehydrate meat, eggs and other
food stuffs
·
Help keep milk fresh and prevent souring
without refrigeration
·
Dehydrate flowers without losing their form or
colour
·
Increase the growth rate of plants
·
Help attain increased relaxation
·
Improves the taste of coffee, wine and certain
fruit juices
·
Promotes healing of cuts, bruises and burns,
as well as reduces pain from toothaches and headaches.
About the Author
Julian Websdale is an independent researcher
in the fields of esoteric science and metaphysics, and a self-initiate of the
Western Esoteric Tradition. His interest in these subjects began in 1988.
Julian was born in England, received his education as an electronic and
computer engineer from the University of Bolton, served in a Vaishnava
monastery during 2010, and has travelled to over 21 countries. Julian is also a
member of the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign.
No comments:
Post a Comment