
By Alex Stark. Copyright 2001 and
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Geopathic Stress (also know as geostress)
is a form of trauma caused by disturbed or anomalous energies within
the earth's mantle. The Earth is surrounded by an energy grid which
contains and transmits vital forces. This grid is essential to life,
and is part of the background radiation which supports life. However,
this energetic grid can become traumatized and the energies which
it contains and emanates can become harmful to life. Geopathic stress
has been implicated in a number of undesirable effects to human
health, from simple conditions such as sleeplessness or confusion
to highly dangerous ones such as cancer, decreased fertility, and
auto-immune disfunction..
Western understanding of
Geopathic stress, although still incipient, nevertheless recognizes
a number of different causes for this perplexing phenomenon. Of
the many possible scenarios, potentially the most dangerous are
the harmful underground water veins known as "black streams".
These usually involve underground water streams that have become
harmful due to human activities such as road cuttings, foundations,
excavation, mining, explosions, war, and others.
In addition to geopathic
stress generated by dark streams, other factors such as ley lines,
global geomagnetic grid crossings, geological faults, underground
caverns, and natural mineral concentrations all exhibit effects
similar to black streams. They are all associated with geomagnetic
anomalies, increased magnetic fields, and/or higher levels of radon
gas. Lately, the entire spectrum of AC pulsed electromagnetic fields
and industrial and medical ionising radiation sources have also
been considered, as well as DC field disruptions caused by metallic
objects such as reinforcing rods in cast concrete.

BLACK STREAMS
Black streams can be defined
as underground water veins or streams that give off noxious radiations
which can be harmful to life above them. They can be conceptualized
as earth meridians (Chinese: Mai) whose flow has become stagnant
or polluted, giving rise to Negative Energy (Sha Qi).
Harmful radiation rises in
a vertical plane from the underground stream to the earth's surface
and above as indicated in the diagram above. Black Streams have
been dowsed to be anywhere from 1 ft to 900ft deep and from 1ft
to 300ft wide (the widest corresponding to a major ley line). The
two edge lines and the center line dowse as the strongest, sharpest
Qi and are potentially the most dangerous places on the stream for
habitual exposure. The streams may display tributaries and convergences,
and dowsable echoes parallel to the main stream.
Black Streams have been known
to change their habitual course, especially after earthquakes and
droughts. They are known to be stronger at midday, mid-summer, full
moon, and during periods of heightened solar flare (sunspot) activity.
They have been dowsed as inactive in the Canadian tundra during
the frozen winter. They are also known to be associated with higher
levels of ionising radiation, and with lightning strikes and other
atmospheric phenomena.
Black Streams: Causes
A black stream is a sick
earth meridian (Lung Mai). There is a well- established link between
black streams and traumas to the earth's etheric web that have caused
the flow of Qi to stagnate in these channels. Typical examples of
such traumas include the building of railway and highway cuttings,
tunnels and embankments, quarries and mines, and building foundations,
especially those with steel footings. Also implicated are heavy
industry sites, power stations and electricity sub-stations, military
bases, steel pilings, poles and even road signs. Old battle grounds
and historical sites involving trauma to the earth or to humans,
such as witch-burning sites, execution grounds, and burial grounds
can also retain much Sha Qi. Sometimes natural topography can exhibit
similar effects, particularly if there are concentrations of iron
ore below ground.
On a subtler level, a contemporary
real estate development which has been undertaken without any traditional
ground-breaking rituals (i.e. without a foundation-stone laying
ceremony or without offerings made in good faith to the earth and
nature spirits whose land has been taken for development) can display
signs of stagnant Qi in the earth meridians as well as traumatized
elemental energies.
Black Streams: Signs and
Symptoms
There are many well-documented
medical effects of prolonged exposure to black streams, arising
principally as a result of the position of the bed in the path of
this negative energy. Most notorious of these medical effects is
cancer. The first well-documented study of the correlation between
geopathic stress and cancer was conducted in the 20s and 30s
by the German dowser Baron von Pohl.
Von Pohl was asked to dowse
the small town of Vilsbiburg in 1929, having then the highest per
capita cancer death rate in Bavaria at the time. He discovered a
100 per cent correlation between the beds of cancer victims and
the paths of black streams passing through the town. He repeated
the procedure in Grafenau in 1930, a town with the lowest cancer
incidence in the province, and again found a 100 per cent correlation.
He developed a scale to rate Geopathic stress of 1 to 16, where
a combined tally of 9 or above gives rise to cancer.
Modern experience is that
cancers of all types can grow where Geopathic stress is lower than
this, possibly because we now have many more opportunities for exposure
to ionising radiation (for example through modern medicine), carcinogenic
pollutants, and other assaults on the immune system.
Other diseases in which Geopathic
stress has been implicated include: multiple sclerosis, motor neuron
disease, Parkinson's disease, and many other wasting and paralyzing
diseases; endocrine disorders of all types; Crohn's disease; candidiasis;
Down's syndrome and other congenital genetic disorders; schizophrenia
and a host of mental disorders including obsessions, addictions,
psycho-sexual disorders, suicides and location-specific depressions
and anxieties.
Disorders which can have
a Geopathic stress component include insomnia and nightmares, sudden
infant death syndrome, infertility, myalgic encephalomyelitis (post
viral fatigue syndrome), migraine, asthma, eczema, arthritis, and
rheumatic disorders, and many other chronically depleted immune
system conditions.
In terms of diagnosis for
geopathic stress, it is believed in the acupuncture tradition that
a point on the hand just distal to the fourth and fifth metacarpal
junction (Triple Heater 3-1/3rd) is a prime Geopathic stress test
point, for both diagnosis and treatment. Males often show pain if
this point is pressed on the right hand, whereas females show weakness
on the left hand.
Black Streams and the
Animal Kindoms
In the animal realm, most
mammals instinctively avoid spending time over black streams, gravitating
instead to white streams (i.e. the healthy, free-flowing earth meridians).
Birds are reckoned to be most sensitive, and horses most resilient,
though many injury-prone horses are often seen to be stabled on
black streams.
On the other hand, cats,
owls, snakes, slugs and snails are attracted to black streams, and
a cat's favorite sleeping place (in the absence of an obvious source
of warmth) is very often a sure clue to the location of a black
stream crossing. Insects, parasites, bacteria and viruses also thrive
on black streams, and ant and wasp nests invariably provide a similar
clue. A black stream is also the perfect location for a beehive.

Black Streams and the
Vegetable Kindoms
Clues to the path of a black
stream in the vegetable world include lightning-struck trees, dead
or stunted gaps in hedges and avenues of trees, infertile fruit
trees, cankers, and strangely twisted trees (usually in the direction
of flow of the meridian current--see photo above). Fruit trees are
the most sensitive, while oaks, redwoods and ashes are more resilient,
and elders seem to be positively attracted to dark streams.
Lawns will often betray bare
patches, moss, silver weed and fungi. Vegetable gardens will reveal
stunted or mutated growth, especially along the edge lines of the
black streams. On the other hand, ivy, bindweed, nettles, docks,
thistles, foxgloves, ferns and nightshades are naturally attracted
to dark streams. In therapeutic terms it is believed that the appropriate
medicinal herbs for a person who has fallen sick from a dark stream
can be usually found in the garden along the path of a black stream
running though their bed. This seems to echo homeopathic thinking.
Other Clues to Black Streams
The path of a black stream
can often be traced within the home by following the piles of chronically
unresolved clutter across a house. Other clues include piles of
rubbish, cracks in glass, brick, sidewalks, and plasterwork, recurring
mechanical and electrical breakdowns, derelict areas, and accident-prone
"black spots" both within the home and outside of it.
High accident locations on highways have also been correlated with
geopathic stress activity. Fruit and vegetables, grain, ale, cheese,
jam, wine, and photographic film will all spoil quickly when stored
in the path of a dark stream.
Sick building syndrome, although
a separate and distinct form of imbalance, can sometimes be rooted
in the presence of black streams under the property. In addition,
Sha Qi can be spread from the path of the streams throughout the
rest of the building by the steel construction frame, electrical
wiring, and pipe work, just as it can be spread along railway tracks.
Thus a steel-framed structure with black streams running through
it will usually dowse positive more readily than a brick or wood
structure under the same conditions.
Bad neighbor syndrome can
sometimes be traced to a black stream flowing from aggressor to
victim. Hauntings of earth-bound human ghosts and other entities,
including poltergeist activity, are often tied to negative earth
energies. Similarly, nature spirits and landscape entities, if not
properly considered, can hold trauma to the earth's etheric web
within the landscape.
LEY LINES
As mentioned above, in addition
to black streams, there are other possible causes for geopathic
disturbances. Ley lines are properly defined as straight over-ground
energy lines that echo the sinuous paths of larger underground currents,
including underground rivers. They carry positively charged Yang
Qi and are a counterpart to the negatively charged Yin Qi of underground
water. As such, they are associated with the Upper World in traditional
societies, and are charged with Heavenly Consciousness. Because
they act as a conduit for spiritual energies of various types, they
are often referred to as "spirit lines".
Ley lines have been recognized
by all cultures as specially sacred and have often been chosen for
the location of temples and other sacred structures and ceremonial
sites. These straight spirit paths (often over dozens of miles)
are found everywhere in the world, and frequently define the processional
routes to major palaces, temples and cathedrals. Appropriate for
sacred sites and ritual ceremony, these energy pathways are less
suitable for secular living, and houses built on them can become
a thoroughfare for all manner of disturbances, including spirits.
Hence they can become associated with Sha Chi and geopathic stress,
and the energy they convey is often negative to humans.
Ley lines are found in all
parts of the world, and have been developed in some societies to
an extremely complex degree. The Inka, for example, have left evidence
of a ley line system know as the seques which radiated from the
center of the Inka empire in Cuzco to the four corners of the empire.
The care and maintenance of these lines required vast investments
of manpower and wealth and was of supreme concern for the state.
In England, dowsers have
determined that the majority of ancient temples and holy sites,
including Christian churches up to the 18th century, have been sited
on such ley lines. The crossings of ley line systems, in particular,
attracted wide attention and were celebrated with cathedrals, abbeys,
and other markers. Recent research suggests that ley line systems
may be global and extend across whole continents. One such system
has been described as connecting the sites of Avalon in England
with the temples of Delphos in Greece. Unfortunately, we ignore
these brilliant elaborations of Earth energy to our peril, as the
path of ley lines, despite their usefulness as spiritual markers,
can often be too strong to support successful human use. Structures
unwittingly located above them can derive some of the same complications
already mentioned for dark streams.
GLOBAL GEOMAGNETIC
GRIDS
Global geomagnetic grids,
of which there are several, are thought to arise from the earth's
magnetic field as a form of vertical or (sometimes) horizontal,
radiation. They follow laws of symmetry and direction, lining up
with regularity at constant inclinations to the earths magnetic
axis. Researchers have found that the grid lines can cause changes
in the earth's magnetic field, the electrical conductivity of the
ground, variations in ultra short wave receptions, increases in
positive ions, differences in blood sedimentation rate, and at times
increased gamma radiation.
The grids are at their strongest
between 12:00 midnight and 3:00a.m. and at their weakest at 5:00p.m.;
they are influenced by earthquakes and weather conditions, and are
weaker in fog; they do not rise vertically but at an angle which
can change a few degrees during the night; and, unlike underground
streams, they are not influenced by phases of the moon. In addition,
they show varying weak zones of resonance (echoes) outside the main
line.
In the Stone Age standing
stones were set up on grid line crossings; the Chinese, Indian,
Greek, Roman, Native American, and European Medieval civilizations
knew of them, as the location of temples, monuments and cathedrals
bears witness.

1. The Hartmann Grid
This was described by Dr
. Hartmann in the 1960's. The network appears as a structure of
radiations rising vertically from the ground like invisible radioactive
walls. From north to south they are 25cm. wide and encountered at
constant intervals of 2m., while from east to west they are 15cm.
wide and the distance apart varies according to latitude from 1.2m.
in Reykjavik, Iceland (63.36"N) to 2.06m. in Ried, Switzerland (40.50"N).
Between these geometric lines lies a neutral zone.
The north-south rays are
Yin and linked to humidity, cramps and all forms of rheumatism.
The east-west rays are Yang and are linked to inflammations.
Wherever two rays cross (a
"Hartmann Knot") a geopathogenic point is found. This is especially
so at crossings of double negative lines which repeat at approximately
35m. intervals. Sleeping over these knots can cause nervous disturbances,
headaches, cramps and rheumatic illnesses. Where the intersections
coincide with black streams the effect is greatly increased
The intensity of these lines
increases three to four-fold at night when there are less free ions
(for similar reasons radio waves are received better at night).
Twenty-four hours before the arrival of an atmospheric low pressure
zone, a 100% increase of gamma rays is found on the knots (up to
300% on volcanic soil).
Twelve hours before an earthquake
the thickness of the ray triples: beside the central ray appear
two other weaker rays to left and right which are not normally detectable.
At this time dogs howl, birds flutter madly in their cages, some
cats hide under the quilt, and some people feel sick or need to
sleep. During an earthquake the Hartmann network becomes twisted
and distorted, but is restored to symmetry half an hour later.
This network penetrates everywhere
in dwellings or on open ground, but Merz has found the grid to be
pushed outside certain sacred structures such as the Egyptian pyramids
or temples as well as Himalayan Buddhist stupas. These structures
seem to create a dense protective perimeter composed of up to seven
rays around the perimeter, and a ray-free interior.
2. The Curry Grid
This grid, described by Wittman
and Curry in the 1970's, has much in common with the Hartmann grid,
but is oriented 45o from north. The south-west to north-east grid
lines repeat every 2.36m, and the south-east to north-west lines
every 2.7m. The lines are approximately 15cm. wide, with medically
significant double negative lines repeating every 50m. Crossings
of these lines are considered more harmful than the equivalent Hartmann
knots.
The double negative crossings
are associated with sleep disturbances, depression, and other nervous
reactions, inflammations and rheumatic diseases; and also with the
sites of stocks and pillories, and hellebore plants. Double positive
crossings encourage enhanced cell enlargement and proliferation,
even to the point of cancerous growth.
3. The Schneider Grid
This was described by Schneider
in the 1980's as a positive grid, oriented 45o east of north with
lines l7cm. wide, a repeating interval of 294m, and a north-south
and east-west energy flow. The lines of this grid are supposed to
increase powers of thought and speech, and pulpits and lecterns
are often found on its crossing points.
Schneck described a mirror
image negative version of this grid, oriented 45o west of north,
and with the opposite energy flows and mental effects.
4. The Second Schneider
Grid
Schneider also described
a positive grid oriented 28o east of north with lines 21cm. wide
and a repeating interval of 267m.
Hawthorns like to grow on
the lines of this grid, which are associated with strength and physical
healing, and are often followed by stretches of Roman roads. On
its lines crossings are found holy wells, chapels, shrines, way-side
crosses, stone-age camps and castles, Roman forts, standing stones
and cup-stones. Especially powerful lines occur, and Chalice Well,
Glastonbury is on such a crossing.
Schneck again describes a
mirror-image negative grid.
5. Other Global Magnetic
Grids
In addition to the global
geomagnetic grids mentions above, there are many others, of which
the most important are the Broad Curry Grid, the Double Curry Gird,
and Schencks Cemetery Grid. The positive lines in these grids
are all associated with dolmens, stone circles, ancient sites, holy
wells, chapels, and holy trees. Their negative counterparts, similarly,
are associated with prisons, execution sites and, where they converge
with other negative lines such as black streams, "cancer points"
can be found.
CURES TO GEOPATHIC
STRESS
There is much that can be
done to ameliorate or remove Geopathic stress. To shield a residence
from the path and effects of a black stream traditional Chinese
devices include the building of a Dragon wall (a screen wall with
an undulating ridge), the digging of a ditch, or the burying of
a protective talisman at an appropriate point on the path of the
stream. Modern Western methods include the careful placing of crystals,
copper coils, and ankhs or the installation of radionic devices
such as the Raditech machine.
To cure a black stream the
Sha Qi (negative energy) of the affected meridian can be transformed
into Sheng Qi (positive energy) by the practice of Earth Acupuncture.
This can be performed using wood, metal, stone, or crystal "needles"
applied to the appropriate earth acupuncture points (Xue) for a
variable time, perhaps as briefly as for a few seconds, but on average
for about two hours. The black streams are thus transformed into
white streams. With larger meridians, or with geological faults,
a needle may need to be left in place permanently. Fire, in the
form of candles, incense, moxa, sage, or a bon-fire may also be
employed. The old Beacon hills of Britain are moxibustion points
in the landscape for the purification of the land. They are fired
at the appropriate moments in the cycle of the seasons. In time
these became the fire festivals.
Permanent needles may take
the form of moving water features, sculptures and statues, standing
stones, stone cairns (piles), stupas, or a specially planted tree.
In this sense, a grave stone may be seen as a form of earth acupuncture
needle which balances the Yin Qi of the corpse with a Yang sculptural
form to reunite the Qi of Heaven and Earth. On a larger scale, pagodas,
temples, churches, and cathedrals can all function as earth acupuncture
needles to the same effect.
Earth acupuncture techniques
which have been used to promote the flow of Qi in a blocked meridian
under a house will often have an instantaneous effect in dispelling
an accumulation of radon. Where the radon concentration derives
from black streams the effect is usually permanent as long as the
streams remain white (clear). Where radon derives from geological
faults it will generally build up again, and more permanent physical
remedial action is necessary.
What all these cures have
in common is a therapeutic intention, often in a sacred ceremonial
context. Earth Acupuncture has to be performed within this sacred
ritual context, because it is only through the use of ritual that
the energies of the Earth can be made to shift. All traditional
peoples have recognized this fact. In many cultures stone piles,
standing stones, or specially designated trees are used to both
cure the geopathic stress as well as to create a secondary and more
beneficial effect through the use of prayer, meditation or shamanic
practices. Usually the spirit world is addressed directly, in its
manifestations in both the Upper and Lower Worlds (the worlds of
heavenly consciousness and base ego). Training for geopathic cures
therefore invariably involves spiritual education at an advanced
level.

Above: Inserting acupuncture "needles"
against geostress:
Rock quartz in a foundation slab (left) and a laser-cut Vogel crystal
in reinforcing foundation bars within poured concrete (right).
RESEARCH INTO
GEOPATHIC STRESS
The Bibliography at the end
of this paper contains references to most of the available research
on this topic. However, a brief overview of the field would have
to include the following:
Baron Gustav von Pohl.
Germany (1920s) Von Pohl was able to determine that 2.5 of all the
homes surveyed had some form of geopathic stress. He also determined
that 95% of all cancer cases had connections to geostress.
Ernst Hartmann. Germany
(1940s-60s) Hartmann was the first to describe the global geomagnetic
grids and their influence on geostress. After extensive testing
that spanned over 30 years of research, he concluded that cancer
is a disease of location.
Manfred Curry. Germany
(1950s-70s) Curry continued on Hartmannıs work, describing other
global grids and their influences.
Blanche Merz. Switzerland
(1920s) Merz was able to correlate geostresses to cancer, noting
full moon variations, as well as correlations of north/south lines
to cramps and rheumatism, and east/west lines to inflammation.
Ralf Gordon. England
(1980s-90s) Gordon correlated cancers of the lung, breast, and cervix
with geostress in 90% of all cases he studied.
Otto Bergmann. Austria
(1987-89) In a two year trial which included over 462,000 measurements
in 6,942 tests, Bergmann found geopathic stress effects on blood
sedimentation, blood pressure, blood circulation, heart beat, breathing,
skin resistance, and electrical conductivity of muscle points.
Kathe Bacheler. Austria
(1989) In a survey that included 3,000 apartments and over 11,000
people, Bacheler discovered 100% correlations between geopathic
stress and 500 cases of cancer she studied. She also found 95% correlation
with ³problem² children.
Pallegard. Denmark
(1990) In a much publicized study, Pallegard correlated geostress
in 14 out of 18 crib deaths.
Roger Rose. England
(1990s) In a sample of 50 patients with myalic encephalomyelitis,
Rose found 100 % correlation to geostress.
Christopher McNaney.
England (1990s) In a sample of 175 nomadic gypsy families, he found
only 1% cancer and 0% heart disease.
Robert Endrost & Klotz
Biberach. Germany (1990s) In a study performed by architectural
students surveying homes, Endrost & Biberach found 383 cases of
geostress in a sample of 400 cancer patients.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
Kathe Bacheler, Earth Radiation,
Wordmasters, 1989
-
Paul Broadhurst & Hamish Miller,
The Dance of the Dragon, Pendragon, 2000
-
David Cowan & Rodney Girdlestone,
Safe as Houses: Ill Health and Electro-stress at Home, Gateway,
1996
-
Paul Devereux, Places of Power,
Blanford, 1990
-
Paul Devereux & Ian Thomson, The
Ley Hunters Companion, Thames & Hudson, 1979
-
Ralf Gordon, Are You Sleeping in a
Safe Place?, London, 1990
-
Tom Graves, Needles of Stone,
Turnstone, 1978
-
Freiherr Gustav von Pohl, Earth Currents
as Pathogenic Agents for Illness and the Development of Cancer,
Frieich Verlag, Feucht, 1983
-
Christopher Bird, The Divining Hand,
Dutton, 1979
-
Richard Fortey, The Hidden Landscape-A
Journey into the Geological Past, Pimlico, 1993
-
Derham Groves, Feng Shui and the Western
Building Ceremonies, Brash, 1991
-
Alan Hall, Water, Electricity and
Health, Hawthorn, 1997
-
Sig Lonegren, Spiritual Dowsing,
Gothic Image, 1986
-
Blanche Merz, Points of Cosmic Energy,
Daniel, 1987
-
John Michell, The Earth Spirit,
Thames & Hudson, 1975
-
Hamish Miller & Paul Broadhurst,
The Sun and the Serpent, Pendragon, 1989
-
Nigel Pennick, Lines in the Landscape,
Hale, 1989
-
Nigel Pennick, The Ancient Science
of Geomancy, Hale, 1980
-
Marko Pogacnik, Nature Spirits &
Elemental Beings, Findhorn, 1995
-
Dr. G. Schneck, Global Grid Lines,
in the Journal of the British Society of Dowsers, June 1995.
-
Dr. Glen Swartwout, Electromagnetic
Pollution, Aerai, 1991
-
Jane Thurnell-Read, Geopathic Stress-How
Earth Energies affect our lives, London, 1998
-
Tom Williamson, Dowsing, 1993,
Ch.3
www.earthtransitions.com
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