11.2. Searching for Living Persons

Each case of searching for a living person is a story to itself; therefore, it is very difficult to define the initial step of the search process. For many persons, it is impossible to say that they have disappeared, although they are not there, as they voluntarily became members of religious sects, groups of young people searching for drugs, went away for love, became vagabonds, prostitutes and so on. There is no rule about how to begin and how to obtain positive results when searching for a living missing person.

The search must be focused on the family. One should find out what their relations were. Special attention should be paid to the relatives emotionally involved with the missing person. Such persons may give much useful information. However, one must be careful. The therapist may be misled by the stories of the family. He must be careful about energy blows, as magic protocols might be set up and the like. In their suffering, the family members subconsciously feel as if their relative is gone for ever, that he or she is already buried; thus, they do not reveal his or her negative characteristics, which are very useful for the seekers, especially in the initial conclusions and the first steps in the search process. The family finds it hard to accept the therapist. Particularly, they have doubts when they see that the therapist does not need any items of the missing persons, such as their portrait, a personal item, a piece of clothes and so on. Thus, they are also sceptical about the methods of work with lifecosmic energy. People are prone to talking about any event; however, in this case the family hides the negative characteristics of the missing person. The story is spread among them and also quickly spreads out to their friends and acquaintances. Therefore, when talking to the family members, the therapist must be careful and well trained, so that he can select useful information. The therapist must not reveal information creating doubts of his ability or those giving a bad feeling to the family of the missing person.

The current location of the missing person may be fixed or changing. He or she may be travelling by a vehicle. A useful piece of information is if the person took their ID documents with them. One must establish contact with the competent authorities which are certainly engaged in the search as part of their official duty. One must consider the decision of the family about whether they want to include mass media in the search. If they do, one must obtain the contents of the published text, speech, picture and the like. The opinion of the family and the journalists does not have a practical value; however, it may be of use to see their point of view and it can help us in logical conclusions thus shortening the time needed for searching.

Organisations engaged in the search of the missing person, such as the police, associations, private detectives, diplomatic representatives, friends of the family and similar teams, hide their discoveries or give incorrect information in order to protect their own work processes. We must treat the data obtained from such organisations at the level of energies, separate the correct information from incorrect data, and determine negative information which misleads the therapist in his or her search.

We must only trust our own discoveries; the discoveries of others may serve as a warning that such approach to the search is also possible and that we should check our own findings.

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