It is great that so many people are willing to do 'the nature work.
You can do all this nature work on your own projects and all projects
you have authority over. And PLEASE do!
It needs to be your project or you need the authority of
the person who's project (or land/property) it is! You need both:
Willingness AND Authority! (Actually you need Skills too!)
To illustrate:
Imagine you go to your neighbor and rearrange his living space
or workplace and paint his cat green. All without his permission
because 'you felt guided' and you 'meant well'. Is he going
to be pleased? No!
Most people are already offended if you do not put their toilet
seat down (or up in some cases).
There are clearly defined boundaries that need to be respected.
Otherwise someone will come one night and cut all your hair off
while you sleep to get the boundaries point across... :-)
So please be aware who the land/project belongs to and who is in
charge of it: it is THEIR responsibility. To do any work you need
THEIR CONSCIOUS authorisation!
Common sense, when you think about it, no?
ENERGY and FORM are the same for nature they are
nature! Same principles apply!
What we can see and touch we call FORM; what we have more difficulties
perceiving we call ENERGY.
Be assured, however good a person thinks they are, no person can
perceive the whole realm of energy of a project. To be honest we
are extremely far away from that (and it is not our job, I hastily
add! Our sense-organs are here to keep most of reality out; not
to let most of it in...)
That's why it makes sense to work in partnership with the form
and energy expert: Nature!
We connect through conings: - see Perelandra web site:
http://www.perelandra-ltd.com/Conings_W68.cfm
And we can communicate via a simple Kinesiology tool: - see Perelandra
web site:
http://www.perelandra-ltd.com/Kin_W73.cfm
Energy is as real and powerful as Form to be taken serious
and treated with respect.
Always ask before you 'tweak'!
This way the people in charge will also know whom to go to if things
go haywire, and whom to thank if it goes well!
by Martin Kutternik 11. April 2010