A divining rod is just another word for a pen

The art of sensing a story

Grant Faulkner

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Life might be described as largely a matter of looking for signs.

Signs that someone likes you. Signs that someone doesn’t like you. Signs of a storm coming. Signs of care. Signs of food.

As an artist, you have to be especially attuned to the mysterious pulses around you. You hear things. You smell things. You’re a walking Ouija Board. You’re a lightning rod.

You’re a divining rod.

I’ve always been fascinated by divining rods.

Divining rods have been used throughout history to locate things like water, gems under the earth, or even criminals on the run. There are references to the use of divining rods in Herodotus, the writings of Marco Polo, and the Bible. In the Tassili Caves of northern Africa, an 8,000-year-old cave painting depicts a man holding a forked stick, apparently using it to search for water.

Some thought divining rods were a tool of the devil. Some thought they were a tool of angels. They were used by French authorities as late as 1703 to select Protestants for roasting.

But there’s the question of whether the power is in the rod or the “dowser” (another word for diviners).

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Grant Faulkner

Executive Director of National Novel Writing Month, co-founder of 100 Word Story, writer, tap dancer, alchemist, contortionist, numbskull, preacher.