Readings from the spectrometer with Dr. Yan Xin in the same location as the americium source.
Nuclear physicist Feng Lu, one of the researchers, observed that “Dr. Yan’s
research transformed the accepted view of the nature of the world. The results of
his research have demonstrated that the human potential is far greater . . . than
that which has been previously thought.”
In his book
The Energy Cure,
Dr. Bill Bengston describes his empirical tests
of the healer Bennett Mayrick (Bengston, 2010). On one occasion, Bennett was
hooked up to a device that measures the rate of radioactive decay. The technician
instructed him to concentrate on making the radioactive material decay more
rapidly. Bengston observed, “The technician gave a yelp. ‘Something’s wrong.
This thing says the decay is occurring faster than I believe can be possible.’
“Ben playfully replied, ‘Then I’ll slow it down.’
“Soon the technician was mumbling something about the decay slowing to
almost one-half its normal rate.”
When Bengston asked Ben how he did this, Ben said that to speed up the
decay, he imagined a cloud, which he then dissolved with his mind. To slow it
down, he imagined a frozen rock.
M
Y
E
UREKA
M
OMENT
On June 26, 2017, I nervously unpacked my very own Geiger counter.
For the past few months, I’d e-mailed colleagues—with far more
experience than I—copies of the Bengston and Yan experiments and urged
them to conduct replications. No one seemed interested.
The equipment required was simple and inexpensive, just a Geiger
counter and a smoke detector containing an americium-241 disk.
The methodology was elementary. Either a healer could slow down the
rate of radioactive decay or he could not. A Geiger counter can measure
radiation as either microsieverts, a standard scientific unit, or counts per
minute (CPM). CPM is a count of how many electrons are being released
by the radioactive source.
I set up the equipment on my dining room table and figured out how to
get a basic radiation reading. I discovered that the baseline in my house
fluctuated between 12 and 22 CPM, with an average of 18 CPM.
I then placed the Geiger counter over the radiation source, a simple
household smoke detector. The radiation readings rose to an average of 60
CPM. Just a couple of inches away, the readings were normal; a Geiger
counter has to be very close to a smoke detector to measure any radiation
since the devices are designed to be safe for household installation.
I performed the seven steps of EcoMeditation and then filled my mind
with the same image that Ben Mayrick had used, a frozen rock. The Geiger
counter didn’t register any change.
Well, that’s it
, I thought.
It didn’t work. That ability may be something
only a few people, like Ben or Dr. Yan, possess.
But I decided to continue meditating, my hands on either side of the
smoke detector. I sent energy through my hands, just as I would with a
client to whom I was offering healing.
The numbers began to rise. First to the high 60s and then into the 70s. By
the time I’d meditated for a while, it rose to over 80 CPM. I ran the test for
10 minutes, and it averaged 80 CPM.
I then stopped meditating, and the numbers dropped back to 60 CPM.
After another 10 minutes, I moved the Geiger counter two feet away from
the smoke detector, and the background readings averaged the same 18
CPM as when I began.
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