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Post by Elizabeth on Sept 25, 2018 5:31:05 GMT
Maybe I've been watching too many ghost movies and stuff but nevertheless I'll ask it. Some people say a house or another place can give off energy whether good or bad. Do you believe this?
The reason I say no is because I read online about a couple that bought a home and the seller purposely didn't mention the history of the house. Some serial killer lived there alone before he got sent to life in prison or executed (I forgot the sentence he got). Anyway he never buried the corpses on his property since he loved the beautiful home as did this couple. To the couple it was their dream home and they loved everything about it. Then when neighbors asked them how they were able to live in a house owned by a serial killer, the couple's perspective changed on the house. They claimed a bad energy now possessed the house and they were selling it now to get out of there. But point is this energy they mentioned wasn't present before until they learned the truth which then gave them a negative perspective and so the bad energy surfaced.
Your thoughts?
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Post by DKTrav88 on Sept 25, 2018 5:43:13 GMT
It was their dream home until they found out who it belonged to before them, then bad energy shows up? Sounds like the neighbors scared them and they scared themselves out of the house shrug it’s more like they created the bad energy if anything
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flow3
Full Member
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Post by flow3 on Sept 26, 2018 22:12:45 GMT
Maybe I've been watching too many ghost movies and stuff but nevertheless I'll ask it. Some people say a house or another place can give off energy whether good or bad. Do you believe this? The reason I say no is because I read online about a couple that bought a home and the seller purposely didn't mention the history of the house. Some serial killer lived there alone before he got sent to life in prison or executed (I forgot the sentence he got). Anyway he never buried the corpses on his property since he loved the beautiful home as did this couple. To the couple it was their dream home and they loved everything about it. Then when neighbors asked them how they were able to live in a house owned by a serial killer, the couple's perspective changed on the house. They claimed a bad energy now possessed the house and they were selling it now to get out of there. But point is this energy they mentioned wasn't present before until they learned the truth which then gave them a negative perspective and so the bad energy surfaced. Your thoughts? Hard to say. Is it Casimir effect? Hawking radiation? Dirac sea? Something else?
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Oct 1, 2018 9:58:39 GMT
Maybe I've been watching too many ghost movies and stuff but nevertheless I'll ask it. Some people say a house or another place can give off energy whether good or bad. Do you believe this? The reason I say no is because I read online about a couple that bought a home and the seller purposely didn't mention the history of the house. Some serial killer lived there alone before he got sent to life in prison or executed (I forgot the sentence he got). Anyway he never buried the corpses on his property since he loved the beautiful home as did this couple. To the couple it was their dream home and they loved everything about it. Then when neighbors asked them how they were able to live in a house owned by a serial killer, the couple's perspective changed on the house. They claimed a bad energy now possessed the house and they were selling it now to get out of there. But point is this energy they mentioned wasn't present before until they learned the truth which then gave them a negative perspective and so the bad energy surfaced. Your thoughts? everything is composed of energy , so hence addressing your question.. Its more towards the perception not the house itself. architect design does influence how how a person viewing it will draw the energy from it , although nit the energy being referred to in your post
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Post by joustos on Dec 4, 2021 17:06:26 GMT
I am sorry a member had to be deleted, since in the above post he made a point that is akin to what I as about to write, i.e., that architect design does influence how person viewing it will draw energy from it, .... Back to my project: Architecture includes structural "interior decorating" and "interior decorating" means more than "ornamentation"; I take this term to mean "interior structuring AND furnishing". Of course, each room of a house has a unique function [such as "living/drawing room", "bedroom", etc.] so, there cannot be universal laws of proper "esthetic" decorating so that a dweller or a viewer may draw good/auspicious "energy" from them. Anyway, the energy we are talking about in this thread is what we should call "esthetic power". Now, what I had in mind was a type of Japanese "interior decorating" which I saw in one of their TV broadcasts and can be seen online. I am referring to the furnishing (in a reception/living room) they call TOKONOMA, which delights and relaxes a viewer,and is created exactly for this purpose. One source: . japanesevisitor.com/japanese-house-home-Tokonoma Briefly: A Tokonoma is a wooden enclosure (like an open cabinet) or alcove whose bottom is an altar -- a slab made out stone or bamboo -- slightly above the room's floor level -- on which are placed some beautiful or sacred objects, e.g., an incense burner, two candles on candlesticks, one or two pottery vases with floral arrangements, or a potted bonsai tree, and the like, while there hangs on the wall a scroll with calligraphy. So, this enclosure can be called an abode/house of beauty. Normally it is located at the wall opposite to the entrance of the living room, so that it is seen by an entering guest. We are told that th construction of a Toconoma was inspired by ancient Buddhist altars on which were placed votive gifts; and in earlier times, in Japan, prayers were made to Shinto deities before Tokonomas. I think that the arrangement of the items inside a Tokonoma reflects the view that one has when he enters a Renaissance or Baroque Christian church [built also in Japon after the 16th century].
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Post by joustos on Dec 4, 2021 19:12:48 GMT
An addition:The art of making a Tokonoma is similar to older and recent artworks. In the 20th century there was a flurry of artists who produced INSTALLATIONS on floors of museums or art-galleries] --sculptures (such as Pisani's Chocolate Venus) and ready-made art-works (like Duchamp's toilet vase). Inthe 12th century, [St.] Francis of Assisi installed living people to re-create the Christmas/Nativity scene -- the sacred family and a cave or a shed with animals,the town of Bethehem -- shepherds, people amazed at the star, etc. Such an installation was called a Presepe or Presepio. Thereafter, potters created small statues, so that a presepio could be set up in church or in private homes.(In the 17th century, specially in Naples, highly artistic presepi were created,and some are preserved to this very day in various museums.) A logology aside: The etymology of Presepe/Presepio has been done [CF. Bonomi Dizionario Etimologico Online]: Presepe/Presepio < Latin Praesepium.// Prae = Before [in front]. Sepium = edge/border of a place, thus implying a closed area, a precinct. Hence "presepe" is a precinct that is set before a viewer. Therefore we can say: A Tokonoma is a Praesepium, or vice-versa.. As such, no matter how it is called, it is a display case, just as our shop-windows are.
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Post by joustos on Dec 4, 2021 22:11:50 GMT
Final addition As we know, Christmas is the Dies Natalis [birth day] of Jesus, wherefore it can also be called the Nativity Day. Amongst the Dorian Greeks, the 10th day after birth was the day when a name was formally given to a newborn baby. However, later on, as at the times of Jesus, the Hebrews gave the name on the 9th day after birth, when a male baby was presented in the temple for circumcision,that is, for admission to God's Holy People.(The ritual is like the Christian baptism, though more violent.) This naming and circumcision day of Jesus was called Epiphany (the Epiphany or Presentation/Manifestation of Infant Jesus) by the Christians. [The cut prepuce is still preserved in some ten European churches, as they claim, for relics are valuable assets.] Logology of "epiphany": Epiphany < Gr. Epiphaneia (= Appearence [showing up], Manifestation ; Apparition [as of a God. normally invisible].//
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Post by MAYA-EL on Oct 5, 2022 2:31:46 GMT
I am sorry a member had to be deleted, since in the above post he made a point that is akin to what I as about to write, i.e., that architect design does influence how person viewing it will draw energy from it, .... Back to my project: Architecture includes structural "interior decorating" and "interior decorating" means more than "ornamentation"; I take this term to mean "interior structuring AND furnishing". Of course, each room of a house has a unique function [such as "living/drawing room", "bedroom", etc.] so, there cannot be universal laws of proper "esthetic" decorating so that a dweller or a viewer may draw good/auspicious "energy" from them. Anyway, the energy we are talking about in this thread is what we should call "esthetic power". Now, what I had in mind was a type of Japanese "interior decorating" which I saw in one of their TV broadcasts and can be seen online. I am referring to the furnishing (in a reception/living room) they call TOKONOMA, which delights and relaxes a viewer,and is created exactly for this purpose. One source: . japanesevisitor.com/japanese-house-home-Tokonoma Briefly: A Tokonoma is a wooden enclosure (like an open cabinet) or alcove whose bottom is an altar -- a slab made out stone or bamboo -- slightly above the room's floor level -- on which are placed some beautiful or sacred objects, e.g., an incense burner, two candles on candlesticks, one or two pottery vases with floral arrangements, or a potted bonsai tree, and the like, while there hangs on the wall a scroll with calligraphy. So, this enclosure can be called an abode/house of beauty. Normally it is located at the wall opposite to the entrance of the living room, so that it is seen by an entering guest. We are told that th construction of a Toconoma was inspired by ancient Buddhist altars on which were placed votive gifts; and in earlier times, in Japan, prayers were made to Shinto deities before Tokonomas. I think that the arrangement of the items inside a Tokonoma reflects the view that one has when he enters a Renaissance or Baroque Christian church [built also in Japon after the 16th century]. What? You had to delete one of the members because they made a post talking about the same thing your talking about? I'm so confused?
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