How to Choose a Home

Most people know intuitively what parameters would enhance or diminish the quality of their life when looking for a house. However, many important factors are overlooked in favour of less geobiologically significant elements.

After derma and clothing, the house is our third skin and a very important factor in keeping healthy. We should remember that when choosing a house or a site to build we are defining our future quality of life.

The first step to finding your new house or building lot is to sit down and work out what parameters are really important to you. This is not about how many bedrooms or baths but physically, emotionally and spiritually what do you want this new location to do for you and your family.

Make a checklist of the things that are really important to you.

Feel free to adapt this real list from one family to suit your family’s situation.

Personal

  • Optimum energy for a healthy, happy marriage
  • Supportive of good communication
  • Zero Geopathic stress within the house (or easily fixable to zero)
  • Great energy for good family dynamics and relationships
  • Creates a positive, stable financial environment for the family

Business

  • Keeps us focused and creative
  • Draws perspective clients
  • Builds excellent client relationships
  • Provides the environment for building financial stability and growth
  • Provides the best energy possible for our business

Education

  • Supports excellent learning and education for the children
  • Supports excellent learning and creative development for adults

Social

  • Encourages entertaining
  • Supports depth and loving relationships with friends and extended family
  • Attracts friends to spend time at the house

Spiritual

  • Encourages spiritual growth
  • Supports a calm, peaceful attitude
  • Provides protected space for spiritual development by all family members

Other

  • Add whatever suits your family


Take the list to a Kinesiologist who is trained in Geobiology and Information patterning, and have them use a map to muscle test out what blocks or neighbourhoods in your proposed search area are most compatible with achieving what you really want in a home. Choose several places within your highest compatibility area and then after doing a thorough walk-through to get a feel for each of them, have each one tested against your parameters to see which one is the best fit with your desires.

Have a Geopathic Stress Assessment done to be sure your choice has positive energy, or develop a plan of what to do to change it to positive energy. The assessment will also identify where lines are located within the house so that you can place beds, couches, and desks in the best energy for healthy living.

Geobiology provides structured ways to establish the important criteria bearing on what is often an emotional choice. Aside from focusing on your parameters and Geopathic stress levels, it is important to consider some practical issues as well.

Surroundings

  • Harmony between nature and the inhabitants,
    flowery gardens, trees absorbing dust and producing oxygen.
  • Compact and hard ground, stony or sandy.
  • Atmosphere rich in negative ions, near parks, forest or ocean.
  • Orientation towards North and West for the living area.
  • Area with little or no noise, away from high tension power lines and transformer stations (at least .8 km-further with very high tension lines or larger stations. Be aware of the little transformer boxes in each block as well.
  • Locate the perturbed (geopathically stressed) zones or have them located and neutralized.

House

  • Construction materials of high natural quality such as wood, stone, bricks and tiles.
  • Dimensions respecting the human scale, good relation between height, width and length
  • Insulation with cork, coco fibre or mineral wool.
  • Non toxic paint, take notice of the influence of colours (chromotherapy).
  • Electricity, avoid the transformation of the bedroom into a research laboratory with TV, radio and other electric appliances. The ideal solution would be to be able to switch off the bedroom areas for the night to avoid long exposure to electromagnetic fields (the effects of these fields can be enhanced by metal beds).
  • Avoid electric blankets, heating pads, and other electric sources on the bed.
  • Floor coverings made out of natural materials such as terra cotta tiles, cork, wood, woollen carpets or plant fibres.
  • It is not recommended to have a bedroom situated over a garage. The metallic mass of cars is a strong agent of disturbance of the natural magnetic field.
  • It is best to sleep with the head of the bed pointing North as to be aligned with the geomagnetic field.

Thanks to Transformation for some of the information on buying a healthy house.  http://www.transformation.net/coils/geobiology.html

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