British doctor Frances Farrelly discovered that she could perceive the affected areas of her patients' illnesses through her consciousness, even diagnosing conditions merely through imagination. She termed this phenomenon the 'resonance reflex phenomenon.' Interestingly, a similar occurrence exists among plants. The Delaval couple found that when branches are cut from a mother plant, the new plants can still draw nutrients from the 'mother's' rays. If the mother plant is burned, the new plants do not grow as vigorously as those that were born from a living mother. Rodal also confirmed that even when the mother plant is far away, it can still provide 'protection' to its offspring.
British scientist Bernard Glad conducted experiments revealing that plants grow at different rates when watered by individuals in varying emotional states. For instance, barley watered with water held by a normal person grew the fastest, while barley watered with water held by a person with a mental illness grew the slowest. Glad suggested that emotional states affect the energy in the water, which in turn influences plant growth.
Clergy and scientists have discovered that certain objects seem to carry a special energy. For example, a pastor from the Saint Fire Church in Florida found that the ebony cross he used during sacraments left him feeling exhausted. Tests showed a significant decrease in his vitality when wearing the ebony cross. Professor William Tiller from Stanford University proposed that everyone has a thymus that controls the characteristic of love, and that the field of love can be transmitted through space, stimulating other entities and forming a chain of loving consciousness.
Although these phenomena have been observed and measured, the mechanisms behind them remain difficult to explain.