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Water has emotional healing powers; science shows exposure to positive thoughts and images can change water's physical qualities

Water Glass
A discussion on the remarkable powers of water cannot be complete without referencing the extraordinary pioneering work of Dr. Masaru Emoto, who published The Messages of Water in Japan in 1999. The book became an international bestseller, and a second volume ensued, followed by the similarly bestselling The Hidden Messages in Water in 2004.

Dr. Emoto's scientific work began with an interest in homeopathy, and the startling notion that water can copy and store subtle yet detailed information changed his life. (Homeopathic preparations are dilutions of a substance so refined that none of the original molecules remain – yet the water "remembers" the pattern of the substance.) He was curious about this ability, recognizing that homeopathy worked most effectively as a curative, and began studying water crystals (in the form of ice) and the patterns they made when the water was exposed to various substances and toxins – and even music, words, symbols and emotions. The result was fascinating.








Pure water was exposed to words written on paper and wrapped around the bottle in which the water was put, with the printing facing in. Incredible as it may sound, in repeated experiments words consistently affected the structure of the water. The most beautiful crystals were formed by the words "love," "gratitude" and "thank you." In a number of carefully controlled trials, these were written in many different languages, yet all those phrases pertaining to "love" bore a striking resemblance to one another; the same was found with other words or phrases, no matter in which language they were translated. The same phenomenon occurred with the spoken word also. Children were brought into the laboratory and asked to tell the water that it was beautiful. Lovely crystals formed. Conversely, when the water was exposed to aggressive words like, "you fool," or, "I hate you," no crystals formed, There was only a mass of disruption, which bears a disturbing resemblance to cancer cells seen under a microscope. The most startling of these was from a Japanese anime cartoon: "You make me sick. I will kill you." Along with the chaotic disruption could be perceived a tiny figure of a man, holding a gun.

When the water was exposed to music, beautiful crystals were again formed to Beethoven, Mozart, Bach, Chopin and Tchaikovsky. When it was exposed to heavy metal music, however, the result was the same as with "you fool." When the water was shown a picture of the earth from space, the crystals formed were similar to those of "thank you" but were slightly deformed – as if to indicate that matters here are out of balance.

Dr. Emoto's work was given a prominent place in the acclaimed and independently produced 2004 film What the Bleep do We Know? Seeing Dr. Emoto's photographs displayed in a subway station when she is late and harried, the anxiety-ridden main character, played by Marlee Matlin, has a transformative experience. "If words can do that to water," the man beside her muses aloud, "imagine what they can do to us?"

Imagine what words can do to us. Words, thoughts, "vibes." We have long heard that thoughts create and words have a much more powerful effect on the psyche than actions, but here at last is physical evidence.

Our bodies, on average, are 70 percent water. When in utero, they're 99 percent water. By the time we are born, they're 90 percent. If we live to old age, they're about 50 percent water. As Dr. Emoto says: "In other words, throughout our lives we exist mostly as water." We've seen here in this book that water is the conduit for all information throughout the body, an electrical conductor. If our emotions, other people's emotions and what we hear in the world can affect physiological processes – as science has found with the relation between stress and heart disease, for instance – why not do what we can to create peace and well-being at a cellular level? We have the power to affect our health and wellness by charging all the water we take into our bodies in a simple and powerful way.

As an experiment, take or make up a bottle of water; either purchased spring water or home filtered water. On a piece of paper, write the words, "love," "gratitude," "thank you" or whatever positive words you like. Drink some of this water every day for a week and observe the result. I guarantee there will be a difference in the way you feel.

No wonder, then, that throughout the ages, in all cultures, water blessed by priests and shamans, water occurring naturally from springs associated with saints and gods and visions of divine persons has been viewed as holy. Folk wisdom has long recognized the capacity of water to convey blessings, healing and prosperity to us. Now we have scientific proof for our own time.

Source:  http://www.kitchenmedicinebook.com/016798.html

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