Crystal balls.
Balls are made of optical glass, in its density similar to rock crystal.
In balls, transparency and "depth" are valued. Inclusions and "curtains" are used when traveling in the Looking Glass as a foothold.
The ball is mounted on a special stand or simply on a flat surface, illuminated with a candle, the view is immersed in a ball and ...
One candle is used more often when concentrating on a certain concept, desire, opportunity; two - when solving dual problems (yes - no, do - do not ...); three - if necessary, to find a compromise, a non-standard way out of the situation ...
Relying on Kabbalah, you can master this amazing tool of magicians.
Examples (chapters from Raymond A. Moody's book Life Before Life)
"I discovered another method of immersion in past lives, and the method is simpler and more convenient than self-hypnosis. This is the method of the crystal ball.
For many years I have been engaged in various areas of psychology. At first I received a philosophical education and defended my thesis in the field of this science. Then I decided to get a higher medical education in the field of psychiatry. I worked in several clinics for the mentally ill, and then went into private practice. Despite this experience, I only recently learned about the method of gazing into the crystal ball. I found out about him, digging around on the dusty shelves of the old library in Atlanta. I looked through the names of the books, and one of them interested me. It was "A closer look into the crystal ball" by Ernest Chal ("Crystal Gazing"), 1905 edition. Looking through the first pages, I realized that the author was busy describing the details, and therefore it is difficult to agree with him or to object to him in some way. In this book he described how he studied this ancient and mysterious art. He claimed that in ancient times, since the time of Ancient Egypt, people used this phenomenon to find answers to the questions that tormented them.
Careful gazing into the crystal ball has a glorious history. In medieval Europe, wandering fortunetellers moved from city to city, broke tents and accepted visitors. Visitors asked questions, and fortune-tellers sought answers to them in the visions that appeared for them in the mirror. Close inspection in the mirror was used to predict the future and expose criminals. For example, a robbed person often turned to a soothsayer for help, who could see a thief in his mirror. After a long gaze in the mirror, he saw a man there who, on the basis of his testimony, was accused of a crime. Similarly, they searched for lost objects. The visitor described the subject, and in the mirror the diviner saw where he was, so the mirror served as a device for searching for missing things.
Due to the fact that outwardly looking into the mirror was like witchcraft, after a while the church declared this art outlaw, and therefore it practically disappeared from the western part of Europe. True, there were short periods of his revival. A certain Dr. D. found an obsidian mirror, which was used by the priests in the civilization of the Aztecs. He brought him to England, spread the art of prediction there, and this interested Queen Elizabeth I. She constantly consulted Dr. D., asking him to look into his "stone indicator."
Balls are made of optical glass, in its density similar to rock crystal.
In balls, transparency and "depth" are valued. Inclusions and "curtains" are used when traveling in the Looking Glass as a foothold.
The ball is mounted on a special stand or simply on a flat surface, illuminated with a candle, the view is immersed in a ball and ...
One candle is used more often when concentrating on a certain concept, desire, opportunity; two - when solving dual problems (yes - no, do - do not ...); three - if necessary, to find a compromise, a non-standard way out of the situation ...
Relying on Kabbalah, you can master this amazing tool of magicians.
Examples (chapters from Raymond A. Moody's book Life Before Life)
"I discovered another method of immersion in past lives, and the method is simpler and more convenient than self-hypnosis. This is the method of the crystal ball.
For many years I have been engaged in various areas of psychology. At first I received a philosophical education and defended my thesis in the field of this science. Then I decided to get a higher medical education in the field of psychiatry. I worked in several clinics for the mentally ill, and then went into private practice. Despite this experience, I only recently learned about the method of gazing into the crystal ball. I found out about him, digging around on the dusty shelves of the old library in Atlanta. I looked through the names of the books, and one of them interested me. It was "A closer look into the crystal ball" by Ernest Chal ("Crystal Gazing"), 1905 edition. Looking through the first pages, I realized that the author was busy describing the details, and therefore it is difficult to agree with him or to object to him in some way. In this book he described how he studied this ancient and mysterious art. He claimed that in ancient times, since the time of Ancient Egypt, people used this phenomenon to find answers to the questions that tormented them.
Careful gazing into the crystal ball has a glorious history. In medieval Europe, wandering fortunetellers moved from city to city, broke tents and accepted visitors. Visitors asked questions, and fortune-tellers sought answers to them in the visions that appeared for them in the mirror. Close inspection in the mirror was used to predict the future and expose criminals. For example, a robbed person often turned to a soothsayer for help, who could see a thief in his mirror. After a long gaze in the mirror, he saw a man there who, on the basis of his testimony, was accused of a crime. Similarly, they searched for lost objects. The visitor described the subject, and in the mirror the diviner saw where he was, so the mirror served as a device for searching for missing things.
Due to the fact that outwardly looking into the mirror was like witchcraft, after a while the church declared this art outlaw, and therefore it practically disappeared from the western part of Europe. True, there were short periods of his revival. A certain Dr. D. found an obsidian mirror, which was used by the priests in the civilization of the Aztecs. He brought him to England, spread the art of prediction there, and this interested Queen Elizabeth I. She constantly consulted Dr. D., asking him to look into his "stone indicator."