Then they carried out experiments to improve the soil in this way. They chose two plots 9 meters apart, took photos, and planted four similar cabbages respectively. In the darkroom, they radiate a photo of one piece of soil every day, while the other piece of soil is untreated. A month later, it was found that cabbage in treated soil grew faster than cabbage in untreated soil. After maturity, the former is three times larger than the latter. Later, he carried out the same experiment on cabbage, lettuce, broad bean and radish, and all achieved satisfactory results.
Later, they found that as long as the irradiated materials were mixed into the soil, the same good results would be obtained. They mixed the seeds of rye, duck grass and treated vermiculite at a weight ratio of 2: 1 and planted them in two boxes respectively. Plant seeds and vermiculite were also planted in the other two boxes, but the vermiculite was not treated. Although the soil conditions were the same, the yield of the treated vermiculite box was 186% higher than that of ordinary crops, and the protein content was 270% higher. They also mixed the treated vermiculite at a rate of 238 kilograms per acre in a square meter of Milfoyan wheat field. When harvested five months later, the yield per mu is 2 tons, which is 270% higher than that of untreated wheat.
And some people deal with seeds according to their methods, but they have achieved nothing. As long as they do it in one step, they will succeed. What is the reason? They suspect that human factors are at work. In order to identify the role of people, they mixed vermiculite into the soil where oats were planted in flowerpots, asked the assistant to pour a certain amount of water every day, and told them which basin of vermiculite was irradiated and which basin was untreated. In fact, all vermiculite has not been irradiated. It turns out that some flowerpots grow faster than others because assistants think they contain treated vermiculite. Obviously, it is only people's awareness that it will grow quickly, and it is also a kind of nutrition that helps plants grow quickly.
Dr. Miller of Georgia Institute of Technology in the United States, together with the Waller brothers who have made outstanding achievements in medical care, conducted a series of experiments to measure the growth rate of plants at 1967. In a black wheat field, Miller observed that the growth rate of new leaves was fixed at 0.17cm per hour. Later, he asked the Waller brothers to start thinking about seedlings at 9 pm. As a result, the curve showing the growth rate immediately points upward. By 8 o'clock the next morning, the growth rate of wheat seedlings increased by 84%. It is not 0. 16 cm higher than the original speed, but 0.27 cm more.
Francis Farrelli, a British doctor, found that when he opened his palm and walked towards the patient, he could feel the diseased part in the patient's body. She said, "I started to use my brain as a tool, or just my consciousness." From then on, farrelly not only didn't need a radiometer, but also didn't need blood samples and photos. As long as she uses consciousness to imagine the patient's condition. She called this "* * * vibration reflection phenomenon."
This kind of telepathy exists not only between people, but also between people and plants, that is, between plants. Mr. and Mrs. Delaval found that after the branches cut from a plant take root underground, the new plant can get nutrition from the light of "mother". If the mother plant is burned by roots, they find that trees without mothers do not grow as vigorously as those with "mothers" still alive. This discovery was also supported by Radahl. He found that the mother plant can provide "protection" for its subtree even if it is far away. The mother tree can be in another city, another country or anywhere on the earth.
An English scientist named Bernard Grad once did such an experiment. He selected a 26-year-old female with mental retardation, a 37-year-old male with mental depression and a 52-year-old healthy male from the hospital, asked them to hold a glass of water for 30 minutes, and then watered the plants with 3 glasses of water to see which one grew faster. He found that barley irrigated with water held by normal people grew faster than barley irrigated with water held by mental patients or ordinary water, and the water irrigated by mental patients grew slowest. Strangely, plants irrigated with water from neurotic patients grow faster than those irrigated with untreated normal water. Grad noticed that when the psychopath was holding a sealed water bottle, he didn't have any reaction or expression. But when the psychopath took the bottle, she immediately asked what to do. When she was accused, her reaction was that she was interested in it, so she put the bottle on her lap like a mother treats a child and shook it slowly. He concluded: "The important factor in obtaining this experimental result is not her basic physical condition, but her mood when holding the bottle." He pointed out that depression, impatience or hostility when handling this solution will make the solution hinder the growth of plant cells.
Professor William Tiller, director of the Department of Materials Science at Stanford University in the United States, believes that everyone's thymus controls the characteristics of love in all spectral ranges. The field radiated by one entity from thymus is accepted by the corresponding gland of another entity after spreading through space, thus stimulating the gland and carrying out some biological activities. If the second entity sends the same vibration back to the former, it will form a chain of consciousness of love between the two. However, because most people are always depressed, their feelings of love are very limited, so the radiation energy is quite small and the spread range is limited, so only a few people can receive this radiation and feel this emotion. He said: "If an entity launches itself on a large scale in a very wide frequency range, many entities will receive its radiation and feel its love, thus becoming full of vitality."