Influencing Nature
Inviting the next generation of researchers to understand the workings of the Language to Nature project that might be used for the betterment of life.
Introduction: Hurricanes… A Step Beyond Warnings
There have always been hurricanes. They are a natural phenomenon. However, humans have built cities – homes, businesses, theatres, factories, oil refineries, and so forth – in some of their common pathways, and that makes hurricanes worthy of our attention. Meteorologists began to understand hurricanes in the 1880’s and were able to issue warnings as they approached. Advanced technologies like satellites and computer models, brought the warning system to a fine science, and it served to save many lives. Still, the only option when a hurricane is heading toward land is to get people out of its way. Buildings, often valued in the multi-billions of dollars, cannot be moved, and are therefore subject to destruction.
New theoretical findings in other areas may have something more to offer. Scientists are now circling back to ancient knowledge, with great promise. From Einstein to Candace Pert, reputable scientists are recognizing that God, or universal energy, is in everything. Another way of saying what Indigenous cultures have always known is that “everything has consciousness.” Amazingly, this seems to be true of hurricanes as well.
Indigenous people often have had an ability to blend and interact with Nature in beneficial ways that “modern” people, with their logic-based thinking and goals, cannot. Sadly, even many Indigenous people are losing their ancient connection with nature because of the influence of modern, left-brained logical thinking and education. However, a familiar example lingers. Native Americans still dance to produce rain in the dry Southwest. [www.native-languages.org] Another group still retaining a deep connection to Nature are the Maori people in New Zealand, who do much quiet watching and learning directly from Nature.
As a native New Zealander, I have sat quietly and observed Nature since before the age of ten. At one point a “communication” began, not in a way usually thought of as communication, but more like the communication to animals taught by former biologist, Marta Williams, in her book, Beyond Words: Talking with Animals and Nature (2005). This kind of communication is not about interpreting physical signs, positions of tails and ears, but is more telepathic, using a different energy system. At times great understanding is shared by the consciousness of animals and even Nature herself.
I became especially interested in weather systems and researching tropical storms became my passion. Over the years I gradually realized that I could get to know each hurricane personally, so to speak. I could understand what I term its “Code”- or to stretch things a bit, one could say I tune into its particular consciousness. When I understand and recognize the “Code,” I can communicate the impending danger to humans and the environment caused by the hurricane’s intensity. Time and again I have witnessed the hurricane calm its intensity of its own volition. The term I use for this work is the “Language to Nature Method” of influencing tropical weather.
One example is Hurricane Rita, the fourth most intense hurricane ever recorded in the Gulf of Mexico. This storm was “influenced,” through the Language to Nature Method, in order to save the Gulf from major contamination caused by damaged oil and chemical facilities spilling their toxic substances into the Houston shipping channel. Before the researcher’s communication with Rita, she was on track to head straight up the channel, which could have caused massive pollution to the Gulf of Mexico. Instead, Hurricane Rita, due to the influence of the Language to Nature Method, failed to meet the catastrophic forecast potential, and as a result, little damage was done to oil and chemical facilities. Hurricane Katrina was also “influenced,” causing a lowered wind intensity and an indirect impact on the city of New Orleans. Unfortunately the communications had no influence on the weakness of the levees.
Climate and Consciousness communities are small and previously have had no reason to talk with each other. However, a cooperation at this point could be a new direction for the research into the Language to Nature.
About Talk To Nature
Global Climate Headlines
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9 Apr 2009 James Woolsey: Plug-in hybrids for U.S. security, climate
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7 Apr 2009 Albert Carnesale: Climate response could create growth
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6 Apr 2009 Ralph Cicerone: NAS studies to determine climate choices
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29 Mar 2009 Amazon smoke slows formation of clouds, rainfall
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7 Mar 2009 Scientists track changes in Antarctic ice sheet
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