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Televison, cloths drier, central heating all packed in. And no it is not the law of averages. It is this happening and lots of other things in the house that makes me believe in them. And guess what I have discovered that this house is on a ley line. Weird or what.

2007-01-23 10:31:12 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Weather

My ley line runs directly through an old kirk and it's yard and through the middle of my house.

2007-01-23 11:25:27 · update #1

5 answers

That's very strange. I believe in ley lines. I'm also fascinated by energies created by water and rocks. I watched a feature on TV about dowsing and the accuracy of it was amazing. The rods crossed directly over an underground water system. Apparently that's something to do with leylines and energy lines! Rocks also resonate energy, we have limestone cavern near us and the atmosphere up there feels really charged and it's easy to feel disorientated.

2007-01-23 10:50:27 · answer #1 · answered by Alison of the Shire 4 · 0 0

Ley lines are undeniable. human beings lined issues up. yet why? it will be that they believed the criteria the position those lines intersected become efficient, yet we actually do not recognize what they were wondering at the same time as they did this. that's all hypothesis. As for "factors of ability". it would want to be naive for us to imagine there aren't any further some aspects on earth extra efficient than others. There are diverse densities to the earth crust, and there is a lot occurring contained in the earths center and fewer than the crust. Why does no longer some aspects exhibit extra power than others?

2016-12-02 23:15:51 · answer #2 · answered by england 4 · 0 0

If you are on a ley line, you need to call for the assistance of your local diviner - he'll come in with his willow wand and check it out for you.

Is your house sitting on an ancient site? A not visible small stone circle or a single line of stones or anything like that?

You need to get this problem sorted and fast.

2007-01-23 19:57:54 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would like to but all credibility was lost for me when on Glastonbury Tor some guy went round to everyone saying he'd give us all a free sort of tourist guide.

Apparently one particular green field was actually purple if you looked at it properly, there was a huuuuge dolphin to the north and a bush which is one of the only pair in the world the other one is in Egypt of something and they both know when to bear fruit at exactly the same time.

come to think of it, maybe he was getting his ley lines crossed...

2007-01-23 10:50:51 · answer #4 · answered by Icarus 6 · 0 0

Everyone's house is on a ley line. There are ley lines wherever you want them.

From The Skepics' Dictionary:

Ley lines are alleged alignments of ancient sites or holy places, such as stone circles, standing stones, cairns, and churches. Interest in ley lines began with the publication in 1922 of Early British Trackways by Alfred Watkins (1855-1935), a self-taught amateur archaeologist and antiquarian. Based upon the fact that on a map of Blackwardine, near Leominster, England, he could link a number of ancient landmarks by a series of straight lines, he became convinced that he had discovered an ancient trade route. Interest in these alleged trade routes as sources of mystical energy has become very popular among New Agers in Great Britain.

Today, ley lines have been adopted by New Age occultists everywhere as sources of power or energy, attracting not only curious New Agers but aliens in their UFOs and locals with their dowsing rods. These New Age occultists believe that there are certain sites on the earth which are filled with special "energy." Stonehenge, Mt. Everest, Ayers Rock in Australia, Nazca in Peru, the Great Pyramid at Giza, Sedona (Arizona), Mutiny Bay, among other places, are believed to be places of special energy. There is no evidence for this belief save the usual subjective certainty based on uncontrolled observations by untutored devotees. Nevertheless, advocates claim that the alleged energy is connected to changes in magnetic fields. None of this has been scientifically verified. Maps have been produced, however, with lines on them which allegedly mark off special energy spots on earth. For example, the Seattle Arts Commission gave $5,000 to a group of New Age dowsers, the Geo Group, to do a ley line map of Seattle. Photographs of the result, which looks like a defaced satellite photo of the Seattle area, can be purchased for $7.00 from the group. It proudly proclaims that the "project made Seattle the first city on Earth to balance and tune its ley-line system." The Arts Commission has been criticized by skeptical citizens for funding a New Age, pagan sect, but the artwork continues to be displayed on a rotating basis in city-owned buildings within Seattle.

Citizens had every right to be skeptical. Here is what the Geo Group has to say about their project:

The vision of the Seattle Ley-Line Project is to heal the Earth energies within the Seattle city limits by identifying ley-line power centers in Seattle, neutralizing negative energies and then amplifying the positive potential of the ley-line power centers. We believe the result will be a decrease in disease and anxiety, an increased sense of wholeness and well-being and the achievement of Seattle's potential as a center of power for good on Spaceship Earth.

The Geo Group's vision is little more than a profession of faith. It is reminiscent of the claim of Transcendental Meditation that group meditation could reduce local crime rates. The Geo Group's methods have been just as effective.

2007-01-23 10:52:30 · answer #5 · answered by tentofield 7 · 0 0

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