Dowsing for Cures is a must for every home. This book is crammed full of valuable information about a wide range of illnesses and possible cures and treatments, including rain forest medicines and minerals. It is a book to treasure and will quickly become your first port of call when illness hits a member of the family. You will find simple explanations that enable you to diagnose illness, along with the most beneficial remedies to reduce symptoms. This book contains basic lessons on dowsing to enable you to become confident when using your pendulum.
Wilma has been coaching clients in corporate classrooms since 1980. As president of Davidson & Associates, she has advised a wide range of Fortune 500 companies, educational groups, government agencies, and professional organizations on the written and oral communication challenges confronting them.
In addition to helping others handle their page and stage fright, to coaching better writing and speaking success in the workplace, to ghostwriting and editing for others, she has taught these topics on the undergraduate and graduate college levels.
Over the years her work has been featured in prominent publications and along with her published articles on a variety of topics, she has authored and co-authored several books on the art of communicating well.
Wilma earned a Bachelor's degree in English from the University of Connecticut, a Master's in English Education from the State University of New York, a Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study in Journalism from American International College, and a doctorate from Rutgers University where she was one of the first scholars to earn a doctorate by examining the types of writing unique to business.
I have to agree with the earlier review, there is very little spirituality about this book. It is more about the author's ego, early on she boasts how her healing energy was measured by scientists and rated very powerful, more powerful than reiki energy. Quite how this was done we are given no information. The book continues in this vain talking about how her marketing skills make her a good authority on the afterlife.
Having been fascinated by ghosts and the idea of helping them move on for quite a while, I snatched this book up at Borders one day and had at it.
Then I got completely turned off by the way Wilma proclaimed that her background in marketing and PR was a real asset in convincing the troubled spirits she caught up with to cross over.
I guess I'm just anti 'lying-to-sell-the-afterlife' ish. :D
A really disappointing book, the somewhat patronising undertone rather ruined it for me. Worryingly the author seems to glorify the dark side of spiritualism and occult practices such as using Ouija boards etc rather than warn against them which is potentially very harmful. Avoid.