2min snip

Terrain Theory cover image

Matt Roeske on electroculture, pyramid power, and 2,000 pound pumpkins

Terrain Theory

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Pyramids and Ley Lines: Harnessing Energy for Plant Growth and Human Health

Pyramids were placed on ley lines with primary water underneath them to harness energy and increase magnetism./nMagnetic and non-magnetic materials were used together to create a negative energy or gone generator to benefit plants./nPlants need negative ions to thrive, while toxic chemicals create positive ions that negatively impact health and plant growth./nCopper enhances the life force of plants and humans alike./nKnowledge about the beneficial properties of copper and energy lines was hidden post-World War II.

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The areas in which were very fertile had pyramids around them because they understood putting a pyramid on the ley lines with primary water underneath it, it would then harness that energy and increase the magnetism because of the composition of the materials that they were using. They were using magnetic and non-magnetic materials placing them together to create a negative energy or gone generator, which would then help the plants around it because the plants need negative ions versus all this stuff that we live in, all these toxic chemicals and all this other stuff create positive ions, which impact our health, but then also impact our plants. So it's interesting because I've learned plants have sap which is like blood and humans have blood and it goes hand in hand. And when you put copper by your plants, you're enhancing their sap, which is their life force. And when you as a human wear copper or have copper in your body or use a copper cup, you're enhancing your life force as well because they both go hand in hand, but a lot of it was hidden, like I was saying, post World War II because the chemical farming had to take over and that's when they did the DDT push. DDT for me, DDT for this and DDT for that was a big attack on the birds and the bees and the insects. And not only the humans, but especially the birds, the bees and the insects. And it's interesting because when I was getting into a lecture culture, I started studying people who use sound frequency to boost their crop yield. They would basically take a speaker, his name was Dan Carlson and he had a speaker box and he would emit bird chirping sounds to his plants.

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