Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike(Mont)
You can get started here. Don't expect immediate results. Practice the basic "belly" breathing here--slow breaths using your diaphram, especially before using the Examiner or other locator device. Twenty minutes should work. This is the path to meditation. I would avoid the advanced breathing techniques like holding your breath. This can be dangerous and you really need an instructor. Read the warnings.
http://www.abc-of-yoga.com/pranayama/
I really wanted to wait until you have some practice with the rod, but I can tell you to avoid fixating on the rod itself. This is a common mistake when learning any new equipment. You want your awareness on the search area, not the rod. Don't worry, you will notice when it responds.
Also, you want to be several feet away from the target. If you are too close, your energy field will interact with the target's field and you won't feel it. The hottest areas are the edges of the target's field. For a small target this might be a circle six feet in diameter. As you sweep the rod through the search area, try to imagine you have a very long stick and feel for the target's field like it is a big bubble. It's like there is a field membrane where the polarity changes. The target itself will not give as good a response.
I noticed you said you wanted something that works 100%. That's isn't going to happen unless you are perfect. I know ALL skeptics think they are, but that's delusional. The rod is only going to be as good as the operator's skill level. Typically the beginner is going to have mental interference. This might be more than you can overcome, so you are going to have to work hard at eliminating negative thoughts and doubts. If you can get the meditation down, your mind will be still and it won't be "your own worst enemy".
When you are actually searching for a hidden target, you might get more than one response. Put a marker down on each line and try to learn where you went right and where you went wrong.
That's enough for now.
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Thanks for the tips, Mike(Mont).
There may be a place for using your suggestions in the testing program. But for the initial tests I plan on following the manufacturers instructions exactly. This means if the instructions don't say I should meditate or try yoga or breathing exercises before looking for a target, then I wont. the manufacturer says the Rangertell Examiner is not a dowsing rod, but works on electronic principles instead. I once read that the reason why a person must be holding the pistol is to complete the circuit to ground with the right hand (left hand will have the wrong polarity). But this is second-hand information. I will read the instructions sent by the manufacturer and follow them with the idea that the manufacturer knows how his invention is designed to be used.
Of course there is a lot of controversy about the working/non-working of the Examiner, as well as controversy about the principles on which it is alleged to work. But in order to make a fair test, I will presume the manufacturer/inventor knows more about the correct operating methods than others know.
After all, the Rangertell Examiner advertising does not say the user needs to perform mental, physical or spiritual exercises in order for it to work. It is supposed to work by simply following the instructions. This is the basis of fair testing. I plan to begin as any ordinary person who wants to find hidden targets, without special gifted abilities or yoga training. The premise of the Rangertell Examiner is that it works for most people as soon as it is properly tuned. As an example, suppose I practised your instructions and found that they magically made me into an expert dowser. Then who would know if the dowsing was finding the targets, or the Rangertell examiner was finding them? I am sure that by deviating from the instructions in the early stages of testing, we would start a forum war between LRL enthusiasts and skeptics. It wouldn't be wise.
But your instructions are what I am looking for in the event that I don't find the kind of success that that we are shooting for. If I have trouble getting the Examiner to work, and if I have exhausted all the manufacturer recommended methods without success, then I will rely on tips like the ones you suggested. If it gets to that point, I will follow your instructions exactly, and I will be asking for more tips.
Thank you for sharing your tips on operating the Rangertell Examiner.
I will archive them in my repository of tests to perform toward the end of the testing program.
Best wishes,
J_P