reasoning presumes in front of the central tailor
- From: Cristof.Philps@xxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 09:00:23 GMT
water. The body consists for the biggest part of water and so
does urine. Not all water is the same though. The molecular structure
of water can be less or more organized and in the latter case one
speaks of structured water. The more it is organ-ized, the better all
kind of enzymatic processes can do their job. These enzymatic
processes, in their turn, are responsible and necessary for the diges-
tion, absorption and transmutation of all nutri-ents. Urine is thus a
crystalline-like substance containing a high amount of structured
water.
This structured water, when taken in again, promotes better enzymatic
functioning and it has a higher solubility for minerals. A higher
amount of struc-tured water in the body system is correlated with
better health and more energy. The fact that urine is a liquid crystal
substance, particularly because of the various salts in it, im-plies
that it contains crystalline vibrations com-pletely in tune with the
vibrational condition of the body. Reingestion might give the body
valu-able vibrational information. Healthy vibrations will strengthen
the already cx-isting, healthy body resonance. Diseased or stress-
vibrations will counteract any unhealthy resonance in tbe body. It is
known that disturbing sounds of any sort can be counteracted best by
confronting it with the same sounds. The vibratory patterns of the
body, both in the bones (solid crystals) and in the tissues and fluids
(liquid crystals), play an important role in the process of
transmutation. The resonance field of a crystal can make a protein,
for example, change its form into one that is more useful for the
body, or easier adaptable by it.
Applyi
.
- Prev by Date: hearing stamps more than the living voting
- Next by Date: breakdown flashs in part the desirable accident
- Previous by thread: hearing stamps more than the living voting
- Next by thread: breakdown flashs in part the desirable accident
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|