| Talking Points: Using Dowsing Simply, Every Day
1. Start with the core idea
Everything begins with thought and visualization. Thought directs energy. Energy affects outcomes. Dowsing is simply a way to read and guide that process, not a complicated ritual. If you remember only one thing, remember this: energy follows thought.
2. Keep the mind relaxed
All effective dowsing happens in a relaxed state of mind. Call it daydreaming if you like. Take a few slow breaths, let your mind settle, and picture what you want to happen. Do not analyze. Do not force. Relaxation is not optional, it is the foundation .
3. Visualization is the map
Visualization is not fantasy. It is direction. Just like a road map tells you how to get somewhere, visualization tells energy where to go. Before you dowse, see the outcome clearly in your mind. Never focus on what you do not want. Always picture the positive result .
4. The forest and stream example
Imagine you are walking through the forest and come to a small stream, only about a foot wide. You have two choices. You can step over it, or you can stop and build a bridge. Of course you step over it. Building a bridge would be unnecessary and complicated.
This is how dowsing should work. If the solution is simple, do not make it complex. Many people try to build bridges where none are needed by creating elaborate protocols. The simplest action is often the most effective.
5. Ask one clear question
Dowsing works best when the question is simple. Instead of asking ten detailed questions, ask one useful one. For example:
What is the highest and best outcome here
Is there anything I need to change before proceeding
Is this place safe and supportive for me
Simple questions produce clear answers. Complicated questions confuse the mind and weaken results .
6. Use dowsing in ordinary situations
Dowsing is not reserved for emergencies or healing sessions. It works best when used daily.
Examples:
Before driving, check if the route is safe
Before entering a crowded place, check the energy
Before a meeting, ask about compatibility
Before making a purchase, check integrity
Before eating something that bothers you, neutralize the negative effect
These are small steps, like stepping over a stream, not building bridges.
7. Energy is everywhere
Places, people, events, food, and thoughts all carry energy. High energy supports you. Low energy drains you. Learn to measure it and respond accordingly. If you cannot avoid a low energy place, clean it up first. That principle is universal and does not change with the situation .
8. Intention matters more than tools
The pendulum is not magic. It is simply a feedback device. The real work happens in the mind. Your intention is what moves energy. If the intention is clear, the pendulum will respond. If the mind is cluttered, the response will be weak or confusing .
9. Practice builds strength
Dowsing skill develops the same way physical strength does. You do not train for a marathon by running once. You practice. Results improve over time. Some attempts will work immediately. Some will not. That does not mean failure. It means learning.
10. Do not announce what you are doing
Try things quietly. See what happens. If you talk about results before you have them, doubt from others can weaken your focus. Experience builds confidence. Confidence strengthens results .
11. One principle applies to everything
Whether you are working with people, animals, places, emotions, travel, safety, or opportunity, the principle is the same. Relax. Visualize the outcome. Ask a simple question. Let the energy move. Do not build bridges where you can simply step across.
12. Closing thought
If something improves the condition, it is worth doing. That is the only rule that matters. Keep it simple. Use it daily. Let experience be your teacher.
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Below is a revised speech that keeps the forest and stream metaphor as the spine, but now weaves in specific, recognizable stories and attitudes from Raymon’s newsletters. I have been careful to reference the ideas, not overload the speech with details, and to keep everything blunt, practical, and simple.
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Speech With Newsletter Stories Integrated
I want to talk about simplicity, because simplicity is what makes this work effective.
Imagine you are walking through a forest with a destination in mind. You may not see the end of the trail yet, but you know where you are going. You are calm, alert, and moving forward.
Along the way, you come to a small stream crossing the path. It is only about a foot wide. You stop for a moment.
You can step over it and continue, or you can stop and begin studying it. You can name it, measure it, argue about where it came from, or worry about what might happen if it rains. You can even decide to build a bridge.
Most people build the bridge.
They sit down and analyze the stream. They talk about it. They ask questions about it. They want to know what kind of stream it is and whether it has ever caused trouble before.
Meanwhile, the people who step over it are already on the other side.
This shows up everywhere.
I have seen people taught from childhood that a plant will harm them, so they avoid it for life. Later, when they decide to stop giving that belief power, the problem disappears. The stream never changed. The response did.
I have seen parents struggle with children by pushing, arguing, and correcting, when a quiet word spoken consistently does more than force ever could. Instead of fighting the stream, they step over it.
I have watched people face storms, literal storms, who didn’t stand around asking permission or debating whether they were allowed to act. They decided, visualized the outcome, and acted. The storm moved on and they stayed put.
As you walk deeper into the forest, the terrain changes. Some places feel light and easy. Some feel uncomfortable. When something feels off, you don’t complain about the forest. Complaining has never fixed anything. You adjust your steps and keep walking.
You will hear unfamiliar sounds. That doesn’t mean you are in danger. It means you are paying attention. Listen long enough to decide if it matters. If it doesn’t, move on. Fear grows when you stare at it.
Eventually, you come to a fork in the trail. There are no signs. One path feels clear. The other feels wrong. You do not need a long explanation. You picture yourself farther down the trail, safe and moving forward, and you choose the path that matches that picture.
People often ask for detailed instructions at this point. They want guarantees. They want to know if they are allowed to choose. But the only way you learn which path works is by walking it.
Later, you encounter fallen branches, uneven ground, and shadows that look threatening at first glance. You do not label them. You do not build stories around them. You step over them or around them.
Some people carry these branches with them, talking about them for years. Others drop them immediately and keep going.
By the time you leave the forest, something becomes obvious. The forest never needed fixing. The path never needed explaining. What mattered was how you moved through it.
You stopped building bridges for problems that only required a step.
You stopped claiming obstacles as yours.
You stopped talking and started moving.
Energy follows thought. Where you put your attention is where your power goes. If you put it on the obstacle, you get more obstacles. If you put it on the outcome, you move forward.
This is not complicated. It never was.
Decide what you want.
Picture the result.
Take the next step.
If you want to know whether this works, don’t ask me.
Try it and find out.
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