Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 March 2013

Expert on lie detector discovers that plants can recognize people and more..

Snow during night Photo by Bogdan Fiedur
Snow during night Photo by Bogdan Fiedur



According to an expert on lie detectors,  Cleve Backster, founder of the FBI's polygraph unit, plants can feel, plants have ESP, plants are experts at detecting lies, plants can recognize people, plants have remote sensitivity and more.

Cleve Backster

Using  lie detector tests, Backster claimed that everything in the universe is interconnected and capable of producing emotional responses. For example polygraph was hooked to the plant. When Ceve Backster manged to create perception of a threat to the plant, polygraph readings would jump on the scale at the time of creation of the thought (in which he would imagine plant's leaves burning). He didn't actually need to burn the leaves of the plant, past experience of such an event and  the intention of the experimenter to repeat that act was enough to spike the reading of the lie detector.
Backster's biocommunications work is most famously discussed in The Secret Life of Plants by Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird



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Wednesday, 13 March 2013

Is "giving away" a secret to happiness and health?



Manitoba winter night photo  by Bogdan Fiedur
Manitoba winter night photo  by Bogdan Fiedur
A retired Scottish-born man should have died long ago. Feeling sick from medication, he decides to give all his money away and have fun along the way. 11 years later (should be dead according to science and main stream medicine) he keeps giving away his retirement money and makes others happy. He keeps himself happy and thinks that even Bill Gates can't be as happy as himself.


After nine heart surgeries, "Harmonica Man" Andy Mackie stopped his prescriptions and used the money to spread the joy of music to kids. Watch Mackie in Steve Hartman's "Asssignment America."


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Monday, 11 March 2013

No plow, no fertilizers, no herbicides and everything grows naturally

Tree in frost  Photo Bogdan Fiedur


For the first time I heard of this Japaneses farmer when I watched Animal Planet. 90 year old Masanobu Fukuoka was walking with two canes through his farm and showing to the camera crew his vegetable garden. The picture didn't look like a farm or a garden. Everything looked more like an accident . Under  scattered trees there were growing weeds, vegetables and herbs.  Chicken would run freely and there was no fences so wild animals could come and go at will. This was natural farming and permaculture at work.



Masanobu Fukuoka is a farmer/philosopher who lives on the Island of Shikoku, in southern Japan. His farming technique requires no machines, no chemicals and very little weeding. He does not plow the soil or use prepared compost and yet the condition of the soil in his orchards and fields improve each year. His method creates no pollution and does not require fossil fuels. His method requires less labor than any other, yet the yields in his orchard and fields compare favorably with the most productive Japanese farms which use all the technical know-how of modern science. 

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Sunday, 10 March 2013

Gross National Happiness - A missing ingredient

Manitoba sunset Photo Bogdan Fiedur



Living in the world where progress and continuing growth are considered as the parameters of being well off, it sounds almost outlandish that someone would want to look into such other measuring indicators like e.g. happiness. Would it be not enough to ensure that everybody's index of happiness falls into the proper range as opposed to creating of unattainable goals of richness, big bank accounts and luxury, which contribute to greed, consumerism and wasteful spendings?  There is a place on earth right now where Happiness is being put on the same level like education and transportation. This place is Bhutan, a country of  population 750,000.


Gross National Happiness: A Look at Bhutan


(NaturalNews) Officials in the growing country of Bhutan in southern Asia have found that in the pursuit of economic development, people and society lose their culture, environment, and their social systems leading to significant problems. Bhutan has said, “That is not enough,” to this way of life according to Dasho Kinley Dorji, Ministry of Information and Communication.
In an interview in the documentary “Happy,” Dorji states that “GDP (Gross Domestic Product) is not enough. Humanity needs a higher goal for development and that is Gross National Happiness (GNH). We believe that this contentment, this happiness, lies within the ‘self’ and there is no external source.
A faster car, a bigger house, more fashionable clothes are not going to give you that contentment. They might give you fleeting pleasure, but not contentment….Gross National Happiness is important in that it makes us think about what we do; of ourselves as individuals, of society, of the world. To think rationally, think holistically, think spiritually.

Secluded Bhutan

Bhutan is an ancient culture secluded high in the Himalayas just south of Tibet. The current population is approximately 750,000 – about the size of San Francisco. With a history dating back 1,400 years, their origin can be traced to tribes from northern Burma and northeast India. This diverse background has created a very eclectic culture.
The Bhutanese are a people with unique customs and deeply held beliefs. To keep their traditional culture alive, they wear traditional clothing that has been worn for centuries. Men wear a “gho,” a long robe tied around the waist by a small belt called a “kera,” and women wear a “kira,” a ankle-length dress made from beautiful colors and finely woven fabrics.
To protect their sacred traditions, Bhutan has tight restrictions on tourism. Only 64,000 tourists were allowed to visit the country in 2011 and the numbers in the future are not expected to increase. They consider it “safeguarding their treasures.” Bhutan is the only country in the world to retain the Tantric form of Mahayana Buddhism as its official religion.
The Buddhist faith has played a key role in their culture, social and ethical foundation. It permeates every aspect of secular life. The Bhutanese diet is rich in meat and poultry, dairy, rice, and vegetables.
According to Dorji,”Gross National Happiness is the responsibility of the government to create an environment where citizens can pursue happiness.” In terms of environment, the law says that 60 percent of Bhutan must always be forest. In terms of culture, their monasteries and schools are preserved and protected from development. Subsequently, the Bhutanese government has established rules of dress, language, and architecture to create this environment.
Bhutan has only recently pursued GNH and time will tell how successful they will be.




Read the full article here.
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Friday, 8 March 2013

Sound of angels is all around you, can you hear it?

Falling snow at night Photo by Bogdan Fiedur


When we rush and run during our daily activities, we are so busy and focused that we are missing beautiful sounds which nature makes available for our pleasure. When you just slow down for a moment and unwind and stop your mind, you realize that around you life exists which you were not noticing before.  There are birds chirping and wind caresses branches of trees, rustling leaves are playing quiet music and butterflies are moving from flower to flower. Although now is winter in the norther hemisphere, it is still possible to hear birds although not as often.

It totally surprised me when I heard this slowed down sounds of
crickets. You cold say this is music created by angels, of course if you believe in angels. If you don't the music is still beautiful and take a minute to listen to it.