Geobiology can impact our emotional state – who has never felt oppressed in a too-closed place? too dark? too crowded? We each have a story with the places that we have passed through… There are places that we love, linked to nice memories, to holidays, to a feeling of well-being…. And places we hate to go…. sometimes for irrational reasons…. We are in constant interaction with our environment. Whether it is our house or our flat, our workplace, or public places, including nature… Our body is a sensor of its wonderful environment, it reacts to cold, heat, sun, wind…. to all these phenomena that we feel but cannot see!!!!!!

And in the same way, it reacts to frequencies, or resonances, emitted by natural phenomena such as the presence of an underground watercourse, an underground cavity, etc. We call the study of natural phenomena which take place on the surface of the earth, often underground, geobiology. Some phenomenon are visible: for example a tree that grows on a vortex (an energy that “turns”) will have its trunk twisted and grow like a “corkscrew”. We often see them during walks in the woods…. Plants resonate with all of this. They will grow better or worse depending on what happens underground (if they are found at a so-called “negative” telluric network crossing, they will be in poor health).

It is the same for us humans, if our bed or a sofa in which we spend most of our resting time is located above a phenomenon that is not very supportive for living creatures, we will not be able to regenerate, and in some cases, physical pathologies could develop. I would like to note that any physical manifestation has for me a multitude of origins, certainly environmental (air, water, food, waves, etc.) but also often emotional…. The ideal is to have a holistic vision.

But let’s return to our environment. We are also exposed to a whole bunch of disturbances called electro-magnetic waves. The weakest come from the earth, from rocks, from nature, in a natural way. Others, all our everyday electrical and electronic devices (smartphones or cordless phones, microwaves, household appliances – smart or not!, everything we call “connected”, but also poorly plugged bedside lamps which emit a harmful electric field all night long. Added to this are all the waves from satelites antennas, wifi, 5G… in short, we are constantly interacting with all of this on a daily basis. Some people are called “electro-hypersensitive” when they develop migraines or physical problems linked to these exposures that I call technological geobiology.

We also enter into “resonance” with everything around us – see quantum physics experiments which demonstrate that everything is wave and particle at the same time (but I’ll spare you the explanation this time, comment below if you are interested in going further). We are in constant interaction with everything that vibrates around us  …. people, animals, plants, and even objects, colors…. Surrounded by 4 white walls for example, our body will analyse colour like the white found in nature (snow!!!!!!), and cool its temperature…. with a possible feeling of cold, isolation….

At a more subtle level, events that a place experiences are impregnated in the matter: in the walls, in the soil….Thus our house, the land where it was built on, all of this has a history, vibrations particular which sometimes are not really joyful (history is still full of battles and wars of all kinds….). If you find it hard to believe that events can permeate the buildings, I invite you to go to Auschwitz, visit the place and you will tell me what you think….

I see you panicking…. if all of this impacts us, how can we get out of it? Well the good news is that if the geobiology impacts us, we also impact our environment! Of course, we can read this sentence meaning that the human beings are polluting the planet… but also in another way: we can, with our actions, our thoughts and our intentions, create another paradigm, and act on these invisible phenomena…. but for that… I invite you to read the next post!

Find out more about my story and how I became a geobiologist here.