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When i was looking for a condo,
i found a great place. on the end, in a remote corner of the lot. was divine! no wifi next door... lots of trees, etc. then things changed. condos changed hands, people moved in and out next door, across the street, etc and wifi because all the rage. a cellphone tower was build directly north of my place... they built big houses up the hill... everything changed. best thing is to get as healthy as possible and get as far away from rf as you can, but don't expect you are going to be able to control your surroundings forever. best to be flexible and not stay in a spot that is high emf for any longer than you absolutely need to. i stayed too long in my condo. i thought i was going to live there for the rest of my life... but when conditions changed, it felt like the end of my life might be sooner than i'd expected. :) i would've left sooner if i'd understood the rf situation from the beginning. as for testing a place... i'd test it several different times of the day and night and also over the course of a week... weekdays might be different than weekends, for instance... nights different than days. just stay open and receptive and flexible and don't plant yourself forever in a material world that has a factor of change built in. love, patricia On Aug 2, 2015, at 11:12 AM, Marc Martin [via ES] wrote: > When I was last shopping for a new house, I would try to figure out how it "feels" by going to the open house, spending lots of time wandering through the empty house, being in the house with my real estate agent after the open house had ended, etc. But by "lots of time" I meant an hour or two, not days. :-) > > Marc > |
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" just stay open and receptive
and flexible and don't plant yourself forever in a material world that has a factor of change built in. " That is great advice. We never really know what is coming these days. Its hard to face that though since I dream of finding a place to be our forever home. As you said though when it comes to your health not much else really matters. The place I would really like to move to is a village of about 5000 located next to another village of about 5000 both villages sandwiched between native american reservation land and also reservation to the north. To the south is a growing bedroom community but the northern part of it is likely to remain rural. The reservation is the most likely place to remain undeveloped but even then you never know. The problem with the area is there isn't much that comes up in our price range and what does is sold in a few days. I think that is going to make it hard to check things out but we will figure it out. |
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In reply to this post by JDark
Jdark that is horrible yet funny that you thought it was broken cause the light is always on. I really hope you are able to get out of there soon! I have looked at that meter and it looks like a good one but I am tempted to go with the cheaper Cornet ed78s cause we are pretty broke right now. I wonder if it would be as good. I will check out your new video!
Very interesting about the smart meters. The new building I mentioned is big on solar so I guess that is why the smart meter. So PNM told you they aren't putting in smart meters on everyone cause of potential health risk? Well that is good news since the other areas I am looking at moving are serviced by PNM as well. You saying you won't move here cause it's too cold makes me feel like less of a baby, lol. Everyone looks at me weird when I am complaining about how cold it is in the winter. Especially people from North Dakota, haha. I have always had the feeling that the El Paso/Cruces area is just not a good place to be and you have confirmed that for me. My husband has to go down that way for business and I am always put off by the idea that we might ever have to move down there. Luckily we shouldn't have to. I am sorry you are being forced out though. There is no escape from that many smart meters but to move. SO unfair. I had never though about solar this way. Its good to know so thanks for educating me! I guess you are right that 'green means toxic'. And 'natural' food can mean GMO. What are things coming to? |
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Yes Dishderdoo: I would stay up north. Just make sure that you do your homework on the place you pick. Make sure that the PNM meter there is not digital and talk to PNM that they are not going to put on on that house and come to an agreement, before you commit to the house. Always do this and never assume. I have not spoken to PNM in a year, but even so things change or go down hill fast. One month fine and the next...
Of course I am not able to take cold so it's AZ for me. I think you have to be more independant, healthy and hearty to take NM. NM does have a lot of beautiful remote places and the indian res sounds good. You can always count on progress and planning for it gives you more time. If you can get far out as possible for your level of health. I was cleaning out yesterday and found this page in an old notebook-many will not live in the NE due to cold and I had done a comparison on accuweather of the temps. I so often long for the winter warmth of NY. ![]() AZ is only because I can not take cold. Worse for my health than RFs. If that were not the case and I could do harsh winters I would BeLIne to Green Bank, WV.LOL |
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In reply to this post by Patricia
... [show rest of quote]
I didn't think consciously to buy a trailer for the reason you state, but really in the back of my mind lurks just that. You never know what horrid thing they have in store next and want to be able to pick up my wheels and go. Looking to be in one place, but have options always open. The balance of a safe place is too fragile and one thing can tip it. Even WV if they loose the telescope and the president signs the military base out of there. He will if it interferes w/ the utility wanting to put in meters. Then a more unrealistic side of the coin. If people saw the light and the companies went analog again, I would probably want to move to LA or another Southern state-even then good to have a truck and pull up wheels should another Katrina turn up on the horizon.
Before I knew I was ES I had thought about an RV so I could live there again and have a way to flee the storms in my home. No more NOLA is wifi death and the rest the state is smart meters, except for one place "Jefferson Davis Parish". No cheap homes in that zone and no rentals-but they are keeping the analogs. Places like AZ, CA for example have more understanding and tolerence for ES. The south does not. Something to consider too. |
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