For many reasons, I keep thinking that casual visitors to this website will gravitate to this chapter before studying my recommended procedures to learning remote dowsing techniques. After all, the public’s perception of horseracing is that it’s “outright gambling,” far too random and maybe even dishonest at times. Stocks, on the other hand, are less random and with proper due diligence and with targeted stop limits on losses, people DO make considerable gains on their investments. All one needs is to buy in to a good researcher or broker.
Dowsing a stable of racehorses and dowsing a portfolio of stocks is quite similar, but with one major difference. Remember the real power and beauty of dowsing is the revealing of truth.
Dowsing a racehorse using only it’s name, having no other information, and dowsing a stock that you think you know something about, is two different things. When you think you know something about the target, you have given up the reveal. You are now into confirmation or denial.
Recognizing a vibratory signature that has real worth comes only from practice with “not knowing.”
Dowsing stocks with a sensitive but un-disciplined mind, the novice will “definitely” find stocks that seem active, and they will in fact move, but the exact direction might be harder to discern. Worse yet is the stock that goes up 10% and then down 30%, that also could be read as a good signal.
I was practicing dowsing for a little over a year, when a photographer friend called me about a stock tip. I had not even considered dowsing the market. At that time it was horseracing and my business. Business was good and the horses were buying lunch and dinner.
Measuring Series Codes of the horses was my main technique, but I couldn’t get clear on how to use that on this stock tip. And I didn’t trust myself with a yes and no session as I was already too influenced by my friend's call. On a big sheet of white no-seam paper that photographer’s use for backgrounds, I wrote in bold letters, “Reveal The Market?”
Now my staff really thought I had gone over the edge. I also a day later wrote the word “Find” and circled it. I encouraged my staff of four, two assistants and two stylists to write on the paper anything that came to mind.
I had a three city location trip scheduled, I would be living on airplanes for three or four days. The stock, Lotus Software was going up in price so I bought some anyway and had opened an account with Shearson, my account’s recommendation. When I came back, having taken only one assistant with me, the stylists had written down some words on the “White Paper.” That’s what stylists do, they find things. One word stood out from the rest, “INVESTORS.”
“Yes,” that was it. Find and measure the amount of investors that are interested in buying a stock. I knew that at times I’d had picked up on the betting frenzy at the races, I’d get an interesting signal on a horse and the odds would suddenly drop. It wouldn’t be necessarily a winning bet either, so it wasn’t the race or the horse it was the “Bettors.”
I set up a procedure, I would imagine myself as a receiving antenna, a very large one.
I faced North and would slowly turn myself clockwise, holding the pendulum and a witness card with the stocks name, in this case Lotus. As I slowly turn I looked for signals coming from people around the globe that are interested in buying the stock.
A rotation would be good, oscillating to and fro, not so good, no interest. Lotus had an enormous amount of interested investors. Every slight move clockwise produced another rotation and by the time I was facing East, I had made up my mind that Lotus was indeed genuine. I did extremely well with that trade.
I started dowsing other stocks, the market was clearly in a bull session. Struggling a bit serving two masters, I decided I’d buy only long term and forget trading. The broker that was assigned to me was a gem of a man. I asked Ralph, for ten stock names he liked but no input as to expectations. I told him my “inclination.” During a three year period I only made one mistake, I bought a computer manufacture stock on the day it went up $3.00 to $33.00, I called the trade in during a “huge fee” shoot day, and Ralph did ask
“are you sure you know what you are doing?”
The stock dropped to $25.00 and two days later I found another witness card on the stock and I had written, “This is a weak stock!” I took the loss at $24.00, but a year or so later, found the stock interesting at $16.00 and took a short term ride to $19.00.
I demonstrated the procedure to finding “interested investors” to a dowsing group of about 60 people. I picked a stock off the top of my head, something I had no interest in whatsoever.
I picked Disney. By the time I had turned South, this was a heading that seemed to feel like the “Fundamentals” of a company, I was totally impressed with this company. Turning West was generally more investors, but seemed to be further out. The North to East activity or lack of, was what would happen soon.
I faced the group and said “This is the biggest set of signals I have witnessed in over a year!” “I’m buying every share I can get my hands on, I kid you not.” Disney was $42.00 at that time and I sold everything in the portfolio except my utility stock Northwest Energy, which was a extremely strong stock paying a 8% dividend and I started buying it at $16.00 eventually selling it at $25.00. I sold my Disney at $86.00 it went to $110.00 before splitting.
I was out of the markets before any of the crashes, not by any sagacity, I had to build a new studio in Manhattan, what a fun trip that was. Talk about writing big checks. The electric meter alone was $5000.00, and we needed risers, floors, bathrooms, air conditioning, walls, lighting, ambience, and business was awful.
I’m sorry I don’t have any input on what a crash feels like, but I’m back in the market, and short term readings are now necessary.
I still work with the “Finding Investors” technique. Try dowsing the alphabet to find stocks to do further work on. Again that is a “reveal.” Once involved in a trade other techniques become necessary.
The markets are clearly different than 30 years ago. The computer, cheap commissions and a global market has changed everything. Investors are selling with 10% profit margins.
Fear and gravity will make the markets violent at times.
Gravity in my opinion is not a passive force, controlling heavenly bodies, but an interactive force that effects our mental perceptions. I’m not the one to explain how this works, but there are people far more qualified working on this.
I devised a chart which is offered in the “Working Members” package, it has gravity, as well as acceleration, fundamentals, and inspiration, all rolled into one set of readings.
Stocks that have a weak gravity score, sell off quickly after any gains.
I also am presently working with a circle that I used to draw around horse’s names. I recognized back then that it was interesting. Decades later, it is fast becoming my favorite way to read a stock and it’s company short term to three to six months out. It is also offered in the “Working Members” package.
When a trade is going the wrong way, the heart gets too involved and the pendulum may not be the tool to use. Mental visuals are not affected by the heart, however while using mental visual techniques, the dowser then has to get past the middle conscious “self destructive” barrier. This is the middle conscious guessing that pops in to ruin what might be a real answer.
Only thru daily practice on many different quests does the dowser’s pattern recognition abilities become reliable.
Here again the “horse” can be the instrument of learning and knowing, with courageousness and in a state of peace.
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