Numbers as lottery numbers
"So-called lucky numbers appear in some magazine horoscopes: how are these worked out and should I use them when playing lottery?" - a question by Josephine D. from Wakefield
Every astrology column writer has their own method of calculating these numbers. There are rumours that the trainee sits and writes down whatever numbers come into his or her head. In any case, using lucky numbers for playing lottery makes no sense. Because these magazine horoscope numbers are distributed in enormous print runs throughout the population they can’t be taken seriously as lucky numbers. The fact is: if these numbers really were drawn in the lottery, so many other people who believe in lucky numbers would have also ticked them that you would be sharing your winnings with them all and your lottery winnings would be abysmal.Created: 05:02 PM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Card readings | Comments [2]
Secret candles
Elisabeth from London: "There’s a kind of candle that looks like a graveside candle and has the word “reversible“ printed on the rim: what is it for?"
A so-called reversible candle is used in magic to deflect curses or evil spells back to the sender and make them ineffective. Many of these candles are black on the outside with a red core which only becomes apparent once the candle has been burning for a while.
Created: 08:31 AM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Card readings | Comments [0]
Rune stones
Jim from Ispwich wants to know: How does the rune stone oracle work?
To consult this oracle you need a soft surface, so that the runes won’t be damaged (e.g. a blanket). You must also concentrate very hard so that each step is carried out correctly.
1. Place all the runes in the palm of your hand. Now throw them up into the air and try to catch as many as possible in your palm again.
2. Take the runes which you caught in your cupped hands and throw them up again, trying to catch as many as possible on the back of your hand. The ones you do not manage to catch can be disregarded.
3. The runes now caught on the back of your hand are thrown up in the air and this time caught in the palms again. Ideally, you should now have at least 7 runes in your hands. If you have less than this, repeat steps 1-3.
4. Put aside the runes which you didn’t catch.
5. Take the rest in your cupped hands and throw them up in the air again. This time only one rune is caught in the cupped palm. This is the master rune. This rune describes the personality of the questioner in the current situation.
6. Now lay all the selected runes, except the master rune, “face down“ in front of you, if possible without noting its inscription.
7. You now have to perform a multiple throw: take the master rune between thumb and forefinger and throw it high. While this rune is in the air, pick up one of the runes lying in front of you and catch the master rune at the same time. Repeat the process until you have caught six runes.
8. Lay these six runes in front of you in the order you caught them. The remaining runes, if there are any, are not required for the interpretation.
The interpretation:
The master rune represents the personality of the questioner.
Rune 1: Indicates the dominant personality trait.
Rune 2: Indicates the nature of the will.
Rune 3: Indicates processes which could shatter self-belief.
Rune 4: Indicates which changes are helpful in overcoming the processes shown by rune 3.
Rune 5: What could the immediate future look like?
Rune 6: How does the questioner react to that?
Created: 04:24 PM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Card readings | Comments [0]
What is Kinesiology?
Mark from Dublin has this question: "What does a kinesiologist, or a healer who offers kinesiology, actually do? Is it a diagnosis or a form of treatment?"
Kinesiology is a branch of alternative medicine. The term kinesiology comes from the classical Greek and roughly translates as “study of movement”.Kinesiology uses terms and teachings from traditional Far Eastern medicine (meridians and elements without the use of acupuncture needles), the neurology and brain research fields and many approaches taken from psychology and paedagogy. In texts on kinesiology, for example, the term energy is used not in the sense of electrical energy but in the sense of oriental healing arts.
Kinesiology is a method which treats the patient wholistically, i.e. in their entirety, not only observing symptoms but also taking into account the body-mind-spirit connection and treating the root of the symptoms. Kinesiology is mainly studied and practiced by alternative medicine practitioners and naturopaths and alternative healers, but increasingly also by doctors using wholistic methods of treatment.
One of the most frequently used tests is the medicine test. A muscle test is performed to try and find out which medicines the body requires and at what dosage. For this, samples of the substance in question are laid at the centre of the body (the test zone). Then the body is asked for its response by testing the muscles. Either the arm reacts weakly and gives way or the delta muscle “locks” in. Using this method (and the relevant test materials) it is possible to discover the presence of poisoning due to environmental toxins, heavy metals, allergies (to food or pollen, for instance) and more.
Created: 10:42 AM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Card readings | Comments [0]
Near death experiences
Mary from Ipswich has this question: "What are near death experiences and what significance do they have for us? Can they help us understand our lives better? Are they helpful in other ways to the living?"
A near death experience is a phenomenon which can happen to people during an operation, for instance, or a traffic accident or in the early stages of drowning, when they slip into a clinically dead state and report on this experience in similar ways.
People who have firsthand experience of a near death experience say that they were able to leave their physical body; that they passed through a sort of tunnel where they saw a bright light, met with the deceased, saw their whole past life in fast forward and experienced boundless love in the form of a luminous figure, which they identified with Christ, God or a ball of energy.
People who are reanimated after being declared clinically dead also report a ongoing sense of their own identity, a feeling of an all-encompassing understanding and the universal awareness or certainty that they are a part of the universe, of visions of wonderful landscapes, an altered sense of time and feeling of gravity, the impression of high speed, the vision of a boundary and a phase of return to waking life.
In medical terms, the causes of near death experiences can be explained by brain cells dying off or a change in the blood supply to the brain during the dying-off phase. The experiences are interpreted as hallucinations produced by the lack of oxygen to the brain of the clinically dead person. Pilots and astronauts who often undergo high acceleration and thereby lose consciousness report similar “perceptions”. Similar hallucinations are experienced under the influence of LSD.
Based on a representative poll of 4000 Germans, just under 5% of the population have had a near death experience. The 5000 year old epic of Gilgamesh contains such reports, although there were no methods of reanimation then. At the International Association for Near Death Studies (IANDS) reports of near death experiences from all over the world are examined by experts in different fields. The German representative, the doctor, neurologist and psychiatrist Dr. Michael Schröter-Kunhardt, maintains that it is very possible that NDEs indicate the existence of a life after death.
Created: 01:01 PM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Current questions | Comments [0]
Spirit contact: when there’s no reply…
Created: 12:00 PM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Current questions | Comments [4]
How long have oracles been in existence?
Stella from Lancester wants to know: What is the oldest record of oracles being in use? And how long have tarot cards been in existence?
Archaeological finds testify to magic practices and oracles having been used for thousands of years. In Peking in 1997, for instance, 4000 year old bones were found with characters carved into them. These were used by the rulers to assist them in making decisions: questions about the future were carved into them after which they were heated, and the resulting cracks and fissures caused the letters to change. These letters were then used to provide answers.
There are conflicting opinions as to the subject of tarot. One plausible theory is that in the mid 15th century an artist, Bonifacio Bempo, designed and painted a card game called “Tarocchi” for the aristocratic Milanese family Visconti. It consisted of four suites of 14 cards each and 22 “Triomphi” (trumps) depicting scenes from everyday life and the prominent figures of the time (e.g. Pope, Emperor, etc.).
Other sources trace the origins back to an Italian pictorial encyclopaedia from 14th century Venice which has links to Spanish pip cards.
Created: 01:58 PM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Card readings | Comments [0]
Voodoo: black magic?
Sally from Liverpool: Where did the voodoo cult originate? Is it evil (voodoo dolls)? What has been written on the subject?
Voodoo was originally a West African religion. The word “voodoo” comes from an African word for spirit or divinity and has probably been around for several thousand years. The word is often used as a blanket term for a great variety of Afro-American religions. Voodoo is traditionally practiced by the Yoruba people. Nowadays it is mainly practiced in Benin, the Dominican Republic, Ghana, Haiti, Louisiana and Togo. Other religions closely related to the Yoruba tradition are practised in Cuba (Santeria) and Brazil (Umbanda, Macumba, Candomblé). Voodoo is recognised as an official religion on Haiti. In Benin it is the national religion and celebrated annually as a religious festival on January 10th.
Voodoo is often seen as so-called “black magic”. This view is nurtured by the existence of a cult of the dead and the belief in reanimation of the deceased. There have also been rumours of child killings. Voodoo sorcerers were said to have used the blood of children in secret ceremonies. Nowadays there are ceremonies involving the ritual slaughter of animals. The practice of animal sacrifice itself is not contested; what is, is whether or not this is done as a magic practice. On the other hand, accusations of practices such as child sacrifice abound in the history of religion and are almost always little more than propaganda.
Created: 11:48 AM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Card readings | Comments [0]
Laundering powdered money?
Lizzie form London: "Some people claim that “money powder“ can make you rich: but what is it? Does it really work? What goes into it and can anyone prepare it?"
There are some healers who work with certain powders and do indeed claim success with them. Whether this is due to the powder itself or to the raised consciousness which results from using it is another matter. According to old traditions, money powder is made from pine needles, myrtle twigs, woodruff, oak moss, ginger, hyssop and orange peel. In principle, anyone could grind up this mixture in a pestle and mortar.
Created: 10:56 AM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Card readings | Comments [0]
Worry dolls
Miriam from Manchester asks: There’s a custom of telling tiny rag dolls one’s worries and hardships and putting these overnight under the pillow: where does this come from?
The so-called "worry dolls" were originally used by the traditional peoples of Guatemala. Being very superstitious, they believed that they had problems and worries because the gods wanted to punish them for their wrong doings. Legend has it that when you put the little doll under your pillow at night, your problems and fears will have dissipated by morning. You can buy worry dolls nowadays in specialist esoteric shops; they are only a few centimetres long and cost approximately 4 euros for a bag of six
Created: 10:28 AM | Author: Jörg Dahlmann | Category: Card readings | Comments [0]

