Soil-less Gardens
TRIANGULATE WHAT?
by M.K.L., England
I was doing work on one of my company's products (a special spiral to energize water) with nature. It suggested change of form (which I sort of expected), but to my surprise the triangulation process tested positive on the Troubleshooting Chart, too, and to do Triangulation first. Triangulation, okay! But, triangulate the water energizer product with what?
I decided to first read more on Triangulation and to do the work the next day. I closed the coning. I read all about Triangulation in Workbook II (I knew about Triangulation from the Microbial Balancing Program — but this was different). I developed a better understanding that a good triangle in the garden — or company, as in this case — is a powerful thing to have. And I had better ideas how to ask relevant questions in the coning. Armed with knowledge, I opened the coning the next day and found out what to triangulate the water energizer with. I thought — maybe the manufacturer and me? Or the inventor's spirit and some other thing, like my company — I had plenty of wild possibilities up my sleeve. But it was much simpler than all my imagination: the energizer is a product of my company, and the triangle is with two other products of my company. Now I understand that products are like plants in a garden.
I made a product list and soon discovered, via testing, that I needed to triangulate the energizer with a book and a CD we sell. I did the triangulation work (one link and one point). Of course, my curious business-mind thought that it might be good to offer the products as packages or in a special combined way. I asked, but no such thing was to be done. Business as usual, or not quite as usual. We had a huge influx of orders the next day, all completely unexpected and only in part related to the products involved in the triangle. The company just sold three times more products the next day than normally sold in about a week. From reading in Workbook II, I got the message that triangles are a rare "fluke" in a garden, unless things are done in co-creative partnership. So I was surprised to have a triangle in my "garden." But when I think back, I have asked in conings (even the definition, direction and purpose [DDP] was not so clearly defined then) if I should include these products/items in my company's product list. (I badly burned my financial fingers in the past when I included things I thought were right.) So that to have a triangle is a nice gift and not a "fluke" after all.
One final note: I recently made a DDP for my company and calibrated myself to the DDP of my company. I have not done this before. The DDP included a substantial amount of profit each month for me and my wife to live from, which might well be possible to achieve soon if things keep going at this rate.
Perelandra Voices 2001


