"Pattern Lines Of The Life Field (Burr)"
Marion W. Dowler

BACKGROUND

This work began from an idea presented in the book Vivaxis(1). This book presented the idea that by using metal rods a person could find the geographic direction of their birth. Three receptor points in the forehead had been identified as areas that could be affected by using the person's place of birth as their energy source.

The above idea was pursued by M. Marsh, M.D. Her careful and meticulous search found that there were receptor points all over the surface of the body. These points formed a grid of approximately half-inch squares. As her search continued she found that these points were more than a grid work. Some of the points were found to belong to certain lines, while others belonged to other lines.

The method of finding the receptor points and identifying which line they belong to is outlined in the method at the end of this paper.(2) Further investigation of the above findings led to the model of Penelope being made for a Science Fair Project.(3) After an intensive search of both literature and making personal contacts with many scientific and medical institutions we still do not have an answer to our question, "What have we found?"

However we did find some materials that gave us information about both the possibility of the body having an energy and what that energy might be. The work that Crile(4) did explained the theory of a radio-electric interpretation of the body. The Classic of Internal Medicine(5) showed that the Chinese used points on the body to treat illnesses but their meridians did not correspond to our pattern lines.

In 1990 I studied the physiology of acupuncture at the Research Centre of the Traditional Medicine Hospital, Beijing, PRC. They find the points to a specific meridian line by conventional methods.

Burr(6) showed that there was some validity for the idea that biological systems have a form of energy. Our work took that idea one step further. We found that there were distinctive lines of the Fields of Life that were composed of individual receptor points. Both the individual points and the lines could be used to treat certain illnesses. Our work also found that the geographic direction of a person could be located by using the rods in a specific way. A compass and a map were used to confirm these geographical directions.

Recently other materials have come to light that point out that there is an energy used in communicating with other people. This energy appears to act the same as the energy that drives the rods when a person holds them in the appropriate way.

Tipler(7) and Teilhard de Chardin(8) appear to agree that this energy is present in the world. The term they used was 'radial energy'. Tipler quoted Teilhard de Chardin's work in The Phenomenon of Man(9), "...Teilhard's radial, spiritual, or psychic energy may be equated to 'information' or 'information content' in the sense that has been made reasonably precise by communication engineers." Teilhard de Chardin(10) wrote that, "...essentially, all energy is psychic in nature." Tipler quoted Teilhard de Chardin's(11) ideas on radial energy, "Radial energy-psychic energy-is as ubiquitous as tangible energy. It is present in all forms of matter, at least to a rudimentary extent". At the same time Tipler(12) said that, "radial energy is not really energy in any sense that a physicist would recognize."

METHOD

The method we used to locate the pattern lines of the Life Field of Burr was as follows:

  1. To locate the pattern lines we used two people, a transmitter and the person being tested. The person who located the pattern lines was called a transmitter.
  2. Our equipment was a compass, two pieces of one-eighth inch welding rod, eighteen inches in length, each of which was bent at a right angle and pointed at both ends; two pieces six inches long of one-quarter inch copper pipe, and a roll of data dots. The place where this work is done must be free of electrical and magnetic influences. The space used must be free of all metal and electronic equipment.
  3. To locate their geographic place of birth they had to ground themselves. The grounding was done by holding water taps for thirty seconds. The person then stood in the following manner - feet parallel, eighteen inches apart, body erect, head and face pointed directly in front of them. The rods were inserted in the copper pipe which acted as sleeves. The copper pipe sleeve was held in each hand, palm on the lower part of the sleeve and the thumb extended well up the sleeve. The arms were held out to the sides of the body at shoulder level. The direction the rods assumed was then marked on the floor and checked with a compass. The direction of the birthplace was indicated by an arrow.
  4. To use the birthplace as the signal source a procedure called 'channeling' was used. The arrow marked on the floor indicating the geographic direction of the birthplace was used as 'Home'. The person took the same position as in finding the birthplace except the hands were held loosely at the sides. The person stood facing their 'Home', counted to four, dropped their head and crossed their hands. In this position they turned ninety degrees clockwise and stopped. At this point they came back to the original erect body position and counted four again. This procedure was repeated at 180 degrees and again at 270 degrees. When they returned to 'Home' they stopped and repeated the whole procedure in an anti-clockwise rotation.
  5. A receptor point was a point on the body that was found to turn the rod. The index finger of the receiving hand of the transmitter was used to pick up the signals on the testee. The rod held in the transmitting hand indicated the amount of signal present. This method was used to locate the individual receptor points of the pattern lines. The pattern lines were located by applying pressure on the receptor point and testing the rest of the line at the same time. If the pressure applied did not stop the oscillation of the rod, the receptor point did not belong to that pattern line.
  6. The rod that settled in one direction was the geographic direction where the person was born, the other rod confirmed this by turning at right angles and oscillating to the person's own heart beat. The hand that was stationary was the receiving hand, the other hand was the transmitting hand. The place of birth was found to be the signal source for the body. To use the signal source a process called 'channeling' was followed as described above. To act as a transmitter your own body had to have a high signal because we found that the signal flowed from the weaker to the stronger.

RESULTS

The signal appeared to have some of the characteristics of both electricity and magnetism. If people had recently been exposed to static electric charges their readings were inconsistent as was also the case of those in poor health. To distract the attention of the person being tested they were instructed to count numerically backwards to themselves. Active thinking could influence the phenomena.

When all the pattern lines were marked on a diagram of the body it resembled a grid-work of one-half inch squares. We have described where three of the nineteen pattern lines are located on the body.

See figure 1 and details.

The pattern line for the hypothalamus gland had two receptors located on the top of the head about three and one-half inches from the upper portion of the ear, one located in the middle of the forehead, one on the inside tips of each finger and upper end of each toe, and one on the palm of the hands near the base of the index finger.

The appendix line ran from the base of the spine on a forty-five degree angle to the right side, continued around to the front of the body, crossed the abdomen midway between the waist and groin and stopped at the middle of the front abdomen; other receptor points were located on the outer left side of the right hand about one inch below the base of the little finger.

The stomach pattern line ran in two parallel bands, one inch apart around the body about one inch above the waist; one receptor was at the top of the bridge of the nose, one at the base of the thumb on the right hand and one at the inner side of the left and right foot just below the metatarsal joint of the big toe.

Of the fifty people that were tested there were two persons whose geographic place of birth did not correspond to their birthplace. The remainder of the fifty people tested had the same pattern lines in the same positions that we have described.

CONCLUSIONS

Our conclusion was that a new system of the body had been located by using the rods in a particular way. The system located had a spiritual or psychic energy that can be used to treat illnesses. It was also demonstrated that the receptor points, the pattern lines and the geographic direction of the place of birth could be located by using the rods in the prescribed manner shown in the method outlined above. The geographic direction of the person's birthplace could be used as an energy to treat some health problems.

The person being tested does not have to stand in any particular direction. The transmitter determines the geographic place of birth for them. If you are doing it for yourself, the same rules apply. However, to treat either your client or yourself (transmitter) you have to stand with your face looking in the geographic place of your birth (or the client's place of birth). To use this as a treatment, the person faces their own "magnetic north" (geographic place of birth), puts their hands loosely in front of them and then slowly count.. The number counted depends on the seriousness of the illness. I usually use a count of 5, repeated four times in one week. However, testing the point that is not in harmony is necessary to see how well the treatment is working. After counting (5) the person drops their arms, and slowly turns to the east, counts (5), facing their geographic birth direction. They repeat this at the south position and the west position. They then face the geographic direction, count (5), and in an anti-clockwise direction repeat the same counting process.

CITATIONS

  1. Vivaxis 1969
  2. Dowler & Dowler 1975
  3. Dowler 1975
  4. Crile 1936
  5. Veith 1966
  6. Burr 1972
  7. Tipler 1994
  8. Teilhard de Chardin 1975
  9. Tipler 1994, p. 113
  10. Teilhard de Chardin 1959, p. 64
  11. Tipler 1994, p. 129
  12. Tipler 1994, p. 112

BIBLIOGRAPHY

  • Burr, Harold Saxton 1972. The Fields of Life - Our links to the universe. New York: Ballantine Books.
  • Crile, George 1936. The Phenomena of Life - A Radio-electric Interpretation. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
  • Dowler, Marion W. & Dowler, Marilyn D. 1975. The Pattern Lines of the Life Field. The Proceedings of the Second Congress of Psychotronic Research published by The International Association for Psychotronic Research, Secretariat IAPR, 2, rue J. Engling, Luxembourg.
  • Nixon, Frances & O'Connor, Bessie 1969. Vivaxis - The Spiral of Life. Toronto: Abbey Book Publishers.
  • Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre 1975. The Phenomenon of Man. Toronto: Harper & Row.
  • Tipler, Frank J. 1994. The Physics of Immortality. Toronto: Doubleday.

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