The Memory of Water

Good clean water is a basic need for health and life itself, and scientists have validated ancient teachings about other legendary attributes of water. All major religions maintain that water is sacred, and they use it to confer blessings and health to their communities. The healers in these traditions use water and the energies it contains to treat ailments of the body and spirit. How is it that water is able to function for so many cultures as a sacred healing force?

Water has many properties that permit life to exist. What many people do not know is that water has a memory of where it has been in the form of an energetic charge. This memory of water permits a physician who knows the energetics of a patient to match them with an appropriate medicine or combination of medicines held within a liquid solution. The water can then deliver the energetics of those medicines to a specific area of the body. For example, a soup, tea, an IV bag of nutrients, or a cleansing enema would each deliver different benefits to the recipient.

Water and mineral proportions in our body fluids are very similar to those in ancient oceans, and our lives depend upon precise amounts and qualities of these from moment to moment.  With this ability to convey non physical information, it is evident that people and all living things are sensitive to the vital energy of water we drink or bathe in.

Mineral hot springs bring up water charged by epic variations in pressure and heat from deep-earth magma flows.

The handling of municipal water through pipes in cities, buildings, heaters, and sewage treatment centers charges the energetics of water very differently than a deep-earth aquifer does. The resulting charged water merges with your own in your showers, baths, and beverages, perhaps more intimately than you would like. The sacred properties of water include this memory of how communities value their water resources and each other, ultimately.

To experience these water memories for yourself, go to your nearby untreated geothermal hot spring and languish in a hot tub full of water that has never before contacted another human body. Afterward, notice how you feel compared to after your home shower or bath, and repeat this experiment as often as you like. Luckily for those in the Western United States, there are a number of wonderful hot springs to choose from.

References

1. Emoto, Masaru. Messages from Water, Vol. 1 (1999) and Vol. 2 (2001).

2. Emoto, Masaru. The Shape of Love: Discovering Who We Are, Where We Came From, and Where We are Going, Doubleday, 2007.

3. Milgrom, Lionel. β€œIcy claim that water has memory.” New Scientist, 11 June 2003.

Previous
Previous

Schooling on Forskolin

Next
Next

Mixing & Matching, Ingrid Naiman