4 RESULTADOS Y DISCUSIÓN
4.2.1 PARÁMETROS BACTERIOLÓGICOS
Overview
A paper “wheel” is balanced on the point of a needle and caused to rotate by placing your hand next to it. With practice the wheel can be moved from further away or deliberately made to spin in the opposite direction.
Detailed Instructions
First you need to make at least one photocopy of this page so you can cut out the wheel shown above. If you make the copy so the
wheel is near the top of your sheet of paper, you can fold the paper in half below the bottom of the wheel and cut two wheels at the same time. Cutting near the fold last will help keep the two papers together. Cut along the lines so you end up with a six-spoke wheel. The wheel can also be made with aluminum foil if you first make a paper template to use as a cutting guide.
Another option is to glue two or three narrow strips of paper together to create a wheel with either four or six spokes. The strips should be about 1/4” wide and 2 1/2” long. The number of spokes doesn’t seem to make much difference, though in theory, the greater the surface area the better. It can be difficult to get the wheel to balance if the spokes are not spaced equally, which is why I recommend cutting the wheel from a single sheet of paper.
Telekinesis refers to “movement at a distance” and it is possible for anyone to cause movement of this paper wheel without touching it or affecting it with normally understood forces.
There is an energy field which permeates and surrounds every living thing. This energy projects outward from our body and forms our aura, and has been referred to as “life force,” chi, prana, and other names. That energy is in motion. It circulates, and it can be demonstrated to exist using this little wheel.
After you have made the wheel, you need to balance it horizontally on top of a needle or straight pin. A pin can simply be pushed through a small piece of very thick paper, such as cardboard food packaging, to act as a stand, or you can push a needle through an eraser or other thick material so the point of the needle points straight up. The spokes should be bent downward a bit so they droop slightly, which helps to keep the wheel balanced. If you lay the wheel on a paper towel or thin cloth, then carefully rotate the tip of a pencil in the exact center of the wheel, you can create a small depression which can help the wheel to remain balanced. The graphite from the pencil also acts as a dry lubricant. First try using the wheel without making the tiny dent with the pencil and see how that goes -- but be careful -- you don’t want to poke a hole through the wheel and have to start over.
Once the wheel is balanced on the pin, move the palm of your hand slowly toward the wheel. It can begin to spin with the
hand several inches away, but slowly continue approaching the wheel until your curved hand is about half an inch or so to the side of the wheel. It should begin to spin almost immediately. If you switch hands, the wheel generally spins in the opposite direction. Another option is to cup both hands around the wheel with one hand closer to the wheel than the other. This usually causes the wheel to spin faster. Experiment with different hand positions to see which works better for you.
Be careful that your breath or other air movement doesn’t affect the wheel. If you have difficulty getting results, you can try creating a wheel using aluminum foil, or place a tiny bit of clear plastic tape on the underside at the center of the wheel to reduce friction against the pin.
Neither aluminum or paper are affected by magnetism, but both are affected by static electricity. If you run a plastic comb through your hair then gradually move it closer to the wheel while moving the comb up and down, you will see that side of the wheel also moves up and down. But the wheel will not spin because the energy field is “static.” It doesn’t circulate as “bioelectric” fields do. It may appear that static electricity is the cause of the wheel spinning when you put your hand next to it, but that isn’t the case.
If you move the comb up and down a few inches from the wheel so that the wheel also moves up and down, then place your other hand between the comb and the wheel, the wheel will stop moving. Your hand blocks the electrostatic field. This indicates that static electricity is not the force causing the wheel to spin. Static electricity is also discharged from the body by touching a metal object, which you can do and still cause the wheel to spin. Nor will heat from your hand cause the spinning motion. If you place a warm object next to the wheel, such as a hot cup of coffee, it will not spin.
Causing the wheel to spin simply by placing your hand next to it is a form of telekinesis -- movement at a distance. The force that causes this movement responds to mental states. It is possible to increase the speed of rotation, or to change the direction of spin, through mental concentration alone. It has been reported that some people can cause the wheel to spin from several feet away, or to spin a wheel enclosed in a glass jar, which normally doesn’t occur.
If you make several of these “energy wheels” prior to your party, everyone can experiment to see how well they can control them. Some people will naturally cause a clockwise spin with their left hand, while it will be counter-clockwise for others. Try reversing the direction of spin using the same hand. You can also place a wheel in the center of a table and have everyone place their hands around the wheel at once in various ways, even with the hands joined, just to see what happens.