In the 19th century taking canaries down coal mines was common practice.
They were used as an early-warning system.
In the presence of toxic gases the canaries would become sick before the miners.
The miners would then have a chance to
escape.
Today IT (information technology) technicians are often in the front line for EMF exposures.
They’ve become the modern-day equivalent of canaries in the coal mine.
This was the case with Guy.
He did a graduate engineering apprenticeship with Land Rover to design and develop
Range Rover car's.
“I became an expert on making cars safer so that they crash nice and safely. “
He worked as IT Director in vehicle design consultancy for 10 years before moving on to high level IT consulting for pan European and global companies.
Including latterly a telecom company.
His desk was 50 meters away from 30 cell phone tower antennas under test.
Guy got sick.
He suffered crippling headaches.
“I spent two years in bed with a migraine, throwing up.”
But ‘Guy’s no ordinary guy’.
He trained as physicist.
When he got sick he read the science, cleared up his electromagnetic environment and got better.
He “built an understanding of the problems of electrosmog from the physics of the situation”.
He developed new approaches for dealing with EMFs, making use of Faraday cages
and shielding materials which effectively absorb as well as reflect EMFs, where necessary.
“I’m better now and I live a relatively normal life. ”
Lloyd Burrell