Dowsing: an ancient practice continues in the Blue Ridge
Published Wednesday, March 7, 2007
Hendersonville Times-News Weekly
Author: Beth Beasley, TNW Writer
The rods swing around a little bit and then suddenly cross over each
other as Sam Richardson walks over a stream flowing deep under the
ground.
It may seem like magic to anyone not familiar with the
practice of dowsing for water, but Richardson, who has been dowsing for
15 years, says it's all really quite simple. "It's no big secret how I
do this."
The modern-day art of dowsing or divining, which dates back at
least 7,000 years, includes some diverse uses. Dowsing, its
practitioners say, can help you find the best place to dig a well and
even help clear out negative energy from your home.
"We're just dowsing the energy fields," Richardson says.
"Everyone is capable of detecting and using these fields -- it's part
of our innate ability to detect the subtle energies that surround us
every day."
Richardson first learned about dowsing after seeing a notice
on the bulletin board at Unity Center in Fletcher for a meeting of the
local dowsing chapter. His enthusiasm has grown so much since attending
that first meeting that he now considers dowsing "part of my life
work."
Creating walking labyrinths as well as serving as a chaplain at Unity Center round out the Virginia native's passions.
Richardson, 67, flew for the Navy just after college, and has
alternately been in business in retail sales, real estate development,
farming, landscaping services and heavy machinery sales. He first moved
to Hendersonville in 1978.
Tall and soft-spoken with an easy manner, Richardson shows off
the basic tools of the dowsing trade, a pair of L-Rods made by a
friend, in his Arden backyard one sunny winter day.
The L-shaped metal rods are loosely suspended in plastic grips
that allow the rods to swing freely, picking up the slightest changes
in energy flow.
In a pinch, however, even something as simple as a coat hanger can be used for dowsing, held loosely in a fist.
What exactly is going on?
Richardson likens the person doing the dowsing to a computer's
processor with the L-Rods acting as the computer monitor, in that they
"tell us what our body is sensing."
He explains that because water sends out negative energy
upwards in a vertical pattern, the L-Rods will suddenly change position
when they're over an underground stream.
"Finding the spot where two streams cross each other is
ideal," he says, "That way if the well drill misses one it will
probably hit the other stream."
After walking around to pinpoint a water source, Richardson
gauges the approximate depth of the stream and the gallons per minute
flowing through by using a pendulum.
"I narrow the answer down by asking questions like, 'Is the
stream less than 250' below the surface?'" Richardson says, "The
pendulum gives me the answers by swinging a certain way for either a
yes or no response."
Most people who have grown up in the mountains here are familiar with the practice of dowsing, Richardson says.
"When I was looking to buy a house," he says, "At one place the
owner had dowsed the well himself -- it's great to see this because
it's something each of us have the ability to do."
Skeptics and science
So far, no scientific evidence has proven dowsing really works,
and the practice is often grouped with paranormal phenomena, or even
with the occult.
According to the Encyclopedia Americana, "Controlled field and
laboratory tests have failed to establish the validity of dowsing, and
judged by scientific standards the practice has little basis in fact."
Some people believe that the dowser is simply reacting to
imperceptible muscle movements, caused independently of emotion by the
mind, which may affect the way their instruments move. This theory is
known as the ideomotor effect, first described by William B. Carpenter
in 1852, according to The Skeptic's Dictionary.
Lee Barnes, a dowser from Waynesville, counters this kind of
skepticism that is based on scientific and other rationally
quantifiable bases.
"Dowsing is a way to tune into your own natural intuition and feeling for a place," Barnes says.
Barnes is a fellow member with Richardson of the Appalachian
Chapter of the American Society of Dowsers and also serves as a Board
member for the Chapter.
Part of Barnes' practice in the art is with 'map dowsing.'
Barnes claims he can track the path of the eye of a hurricane days
before it makes landfall. He says the results are usually correct
within about 30 miles.
"We all have the ability to tune into our subconscious," says Barnes. "There's no end to it -- everything is interconnected."
Healthy homes
Another aspect of Richardson's professional dowsing work is the clearing of energies from private homes.
This work can cover a number of factors, including diverting
negative energy from underground streams and other earth energies;
clearing entities in the home, including disincarnate spirits; as well
as clearing residual thought forms caused by past negative events like
murder, curses or abusive situations.
Richardson also works to divert harmful electromagnetic
radiation with the simple task of placing small magnets at each source
of EMF radiation, which can include fluorescent lights, electrical
panels and clock radios.
"If a person spends a lot of time in negative energy, say in a
chair or bed over an underground stream or near a negative energy
source," says Richardson, "It will eventually manifest itself in a
physical disease."
The German dowser Kathe Bachler, whose extensive research in
14 countries interviewing over 11,000 people in their homes -- compiled
in her book titled Earth Radiation -- backs Richardson's claims.
"Bachler found that cancer patients she interviewed were
almost universally inundated in a negative energy field," Richardson
says.
Richardson likes to use the analogy of a prism to explain how the negative earth energies in a home are lessened.
"The energies get diverted into minor energies that are harmless to the humans, plants and animals that live there," he says.
Richardson might place metal rods at each end of the affected area of a house, but most often he simply uses thought forms.
"It's most efficient to work in thought forms," says
Richardson, "Most of my work is done over the telephone -- I could be a
thousand miles away and still do the work, using the pendulum to
determine what is happening."
"Our thoughts and our words are very powerful," he says.
Richardson explains that he always lets a client know exactly
what he is doing while he works. "Education is a big part of what I
do," he says. Richardson teaches regular workshops at various venues in
the area.
"It's a gift most people don't understand or don't realize
they have," says Richardson. "Most of us don't realize how powerful we
are."
"Whether it's this or prayer," he adds, "it's all using the universal energy that comes to us from God."