Dowsing Tools - Pendulum
Get the latest Flash player
Dowsing
Dowsing Tools - L-Rods
Dowsing Tools - Pendulum
Dowsing Tools - Y-Rods
Dowsing Tools - The Bobber
How to Find Water with Dowsing
How to Find Water with Y-Rods and Bobbers
Techie Tombstones Talk From Beyond The Grave
Immortalize Loved Ones With Funeral Technology
Study Abroad Locations
Study Abroad Programs - Academics
Study Abroad Programs - Field Trips & Culture
Study Abroad Programs - Health And Safety Abroad
Study Abroad Programs - Student Support Services
Study Abroad Programs - Quality, Value, Price
How to Select a Professional Coach
Selecting a Coach for Your Business
Selecting a Coach for Personal Goals
Selecting a Coach - Determine Your Business Objectives
After receiving her BA from the University of New Hampshire and her MA and MFA degrees from the University of Iowa, Marty went on to become an active member of the Boston arts community for twenty one years, exhibiting her work in numerous galleries, creating environmental sculptures in state parks and other public spaces, founding member of the Boston Sculptors at Chapel Gallery, and creating the Reclamation Arts Group. She served on boards of cultural organizations including; The Boston Visual Artists Union, The Massachusetts Cultural Alliance, The Cambridge Arts Council, and One Percent Commission, The Institute of Contemporary Art and The New Art Center of Newton. She has taught in leading art institutions including the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and Tufts University. As an art teacher, she shows students how to be in touch with that part of them selves which generates creative ideas.
As a child Marty learned dowsing from her Lithuanian grandfather, Frank Witkus. In 1986 she attended the American Society of Dowser's school and convention in Danville, Vermont and added formalized dowsing training to her life.
She researches ancient sacred sites in Europe and America discovering what makes specific places sacred and recreates that experience for others today. Integrating art and geomancy, she amplifies the potential of site-specific art and invokes wide public participation in Earth healing attitudes.
Currently Marty Cain is a visual arts instructor in the MFA program of Vermont College, a division of Union Institute. She is a life member of the American Society of Dowsers, where she co-directed the Beginning Dowsing School for the past six years. Marty presents labyrinth and dowsing workshops, consults, writes, and collaborates with the earth energy and angelic realms to co-create contemporary sacred spaces for individuals and institutions. She has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, Blanche E. Colman Foundation, the Edna St. Vincent Millay Colony and Boreal/Art/Nature of Quebec, Canada.
Her art works are celebrations of nature, taking the form of site-specific environmental sculptures, smaller indoor constructions using natural elements, and photo/drawing collages of her installations and ancient sacred sites. Her labyrinth designs are located across North America (from Maine to California and Canada to Hawaii), Brazil and South Africa. She is a founding member of the Labyrinth Society.
Dowsing Tools - Pendulum
Marty Cain: Hi! I am Marty Cain and I am here from the American Society of Dowsers and I'll be demonstrating how to make some basic dowsing tools and how to use them. In this clip, we're going to be looking at the pendulum which is incredibly easy tool to use but it's also one that I use almost everyday because I have next to every telephone in my house. For the pendulum, you will need a ball of string and a pair of scissors to cut the string and I use sinkers because they're Lead and you can't use them for fishing anymore.
Transcripts
Marty Cain: Hi! I am Marty Cain and I am here from the American Society of Dowsers and I'll be demonstrating how to make some basic dowsing tools and how to use them. In this clip, we're going to be looking at the pendulum which is incredibly easy tool to use but it's also one that I use almost everyday because I have next to every telephone in my house. For the pendulum, you will need a ball of string and a pair of scissors to cut the string and I use sinkers because they're Lead and you can't use them for fishing anymore. So all you need to do is cut a length of thread and you put it through the sinker. If you don't have sinkers, you can use a nut, like a nut and a bolt, just slit that through a nut. You can also use a ring, if you're wearing a ring and just tie the end of it. So you don't loose it and you have a pendulum. Now how you use a pendulum is you hold it close to the weight itself and you let it slip through your fingers until it starts to gyrate or move in some direction. And that length of thread is your energy level length. So for me, I were to hold it up here, it would move so slowly, it would drive me crazy and if I had it too close, I wouldn't be able to read it well because it move so fast. So I am -- again, just going to let it slip through my fingers until it starts to move and that's my normal length through that thing. And with every tool that you have, you always ask what your code is going to be. You are talking to your higher self and it needs to have a particular code, so you know what's going on. So I am asking for yes response. In my yes response, is simply yes, back and forth. And then I go back into the search position, always go to search and then please show me my no response and then immediately goes to the no which is sideways. Now some of you will have a clockwise spin or counter-clockwise spin for yes or no. It doesn't matter what your code is, as long as you know what it is and you keep it. If you start messing around because you will read that you can program your tools. Well, programming is a conscious ego situation. I don't want to involve my ego in anyway if I can possibly avoid it, because the ego cannot dowse. You only can dowse to through your heart. So, I want my higher self, my intuition to tell me what it wants for code and then I follow that, rather than determining, saying you have to be a certain way. So, again ask it, please show me, my yes, and there's my yes and show me my no and here's my no. So, now I am ready to use the pendulum. Now where I use the pendulum mostly is next to my telephone because when people call me and they ask me to do something, I always ask, is it in my highest good or the highest good of everyone, if I do this project? And if I get a no, then I wont do it. So pendulums are very handy for answering yes/no questions and for working indoors and quietly. That's the basic rules about using a pendulum and next we'll be moving into how to work with the Y-Rod, which is a very basic tool that's been around for centuries, where there is even images of them in the 1400s when they were looking for tin lines in England. So we'll go to the Y-Rod next.
Boating - Gas vs Steering Your Personal Water Craft
Boating - After Your Ride in Your Personal Water Craft
Water Heater Maintenance
Gas Water Heater Routine Maintenance
Electric Water Heater Routine Maintenance
How to Drain a Water Heater
Water Heater Maintenance - Temperature and Pressure Relief Valve
Water Heater Maintenance - Water Leaks
How to Improve the Energy Efficiency of a Water Heater
(Add Comment)