PDA

View Full Version : Metal Magic?



Scarlet Rose
September 3rd, 2001, 11:53 AM
Greetings To You All :)

Whilst searching the Internet this morning I came across your website, (which is lovely!) I do hope I’m not intruding.

I have come to your site because I seem to be experiencing some problems with metal, that no one I have spoken to are familiar with; So I thought I would search the Internet for
some help.

Quite often whilst I am raising /sending out energy (ex. healing my sister’s headache last night or directing it towards a spell) I seem to send out ‘something’ that affects metal near
by; Sometimes I don’t even know I’m doing this, until much later. For example whilst cooking some pasta for dinner I managed to melt the bottom of the cooking pot into liquid
metal of which poured over the stove! Or whilst healing a family member in my computer room, the sides of my computer fell off for no apparent reason and a coke can ‘uncrushed’.

Does anyone have any ideas what I am doing? I can’t possibly raise enough energy to turn metal into liquid? These experiences have been increasing, which is the reason for my sudden concern.

Thank You For Your Time :)
Blessed Be
Scarlet Rose

Lavender
September 3rd, 2001, 11:07 PM
It's possible. I know someone that can't wear watches. He fries the insides of them all the time. Electronic gizmos go haywire around him. I can't remember what he said about it, though.

Myst
September 3rd, 2001, 11:20 PM
Mm I wreck watches too, all the time. Strange things happen I guess :)

moonmagick4
September 4th, 2001, 08:32 AM
It sounds to me like you have a lot of energy!!!!!!:shift: :shift: :shift:

Mairwen
September 4th, 2001, 11:06 AM
Remember that most watches, adn some electronics (like your pc's CPU chip, for example), have at their heart a quartz crystal. Sometimes, due to our personal energy (ie, magnetic field), those crystals get fried. Not a whole lot you can do about it, either, except learn to control your own energy fields ~ and sometimes even that doesn't help.

slvr_phoenix
September 4th, 2001, 01:26 PM
Also, many watches are poorly designed and extremely sensitive to static electricity. Zzzzzap! Just walking on a carpet in winter can fry many a watch. It all depends on how well the electronics inside are shielded against electrostatic discharge. Generally, as far as this goes, you get what you pay for. Though that doesn't always hold true, as in the past I've had an expensive calculator watch that would get reset on a nearly daily basis, and lately I've been wearing some pretty cheap watches ($20 range) that haven't been zapped yet.

As for metals being so commonly affected, they are generally excellent physical conductors of both heat and electricity. Scarlet Rose, perhaps your energies work in a similarly conductive manner and when uncontrolled can strike like lightning, aiming themselves at the closest conductor.