Blog #157--Water Is Life, Part 1
- Jack Tuttle
- Apr 25, 2016
- 5 min read
Flint, Michigan, has undrinkable water thanks to the short-sightedness of its leaders. What has happened there is similar to problems faced by many other cities. In our effort to control Nature for power and profit, we have done great harm to our natural water sources.
Water is life. Water preceded all other life forms on Earth. I say “other” because water is as alive as we are. Every atom of water, just as every atom within human bodies, vibrates with energy. There is no difference between an atom of hydrogen, oxygen or the other elements composing our bodies.
Therefore, if anything is alive, everything is alive because everything is composed of energy vibrations.
It is estimated our bodies are 70-80% water on average, so in truth we are merely variations of water. Water doesn’t need us to exist; in fact, it would likely do far better without us around to harm it. But we can’t exist without water. Yet we have done little to maintain water in its natural, pristine condition. Rather, we have forced it to submit to our will, often with disastrous results.
20th century scientist Viktor Schauberger did pioneering work on the properties of water. He understood water in a way few even now can begin to comprehend. Among his discoveries were ways of moving water up a pipe without a pump; producing abundant supplies of electricity and radiant energy with minimal cost; improving soil quality; producing water for drinking artificially to duplicate that found in Nature; and healing cancer, tuberculosis and some neurological disorders, among other things.
Schauberger stated the following:
“The revelation of the secret of water will put an end to all manner of speculation or expediency and their excrescences, to which belong war, hatred, impatience and discord of every kind. The thorough study of water therefore signifies the end of monopolies, the end of all domination in the truest sense of the word...”
It is no wonder Schauberger’s work was mostly destroyed or stolen. After all, if his discoveries were used for practical benefit, a number of multinational corporations might go out of business. The greedy rich wish to hoard water sources so they can sell it at exorbitant prices while allowing the demise of those unable to pay for it. Disease research is a highly profitable venture, as are the pharmaceuticals produced synthetically to treat diseases without curing them. Fossil fuels are still preferred to run our vehicles, war machines, power stations and the like. Millions of gallons of water are being wasted on fracking to obtain oil and gas from deep in the Earth.
Schauberger saw many connections between water, soil and life on Earth. Unfortunately, humans have done much to damage water quality over the centuries. Callum Coats, who translated Schauberger’s work for the book “The Water Wizard” and several others, summarized Schauberger’s conclusions:
“Water is a being that has life and death. With incorrect, ignorant handling, however, it becomes diseased, imparting this condition to all other organisms, vegetable, animal and human alike, causing their eventual physical decay and death, and in the case of human beings, their moral, mental and spiritual deterioration as well. From this it can be seen just how vital it is, that water should be handled and stored in such a way as to avert such pernicious repercussions.”
Schauberger found there were as many variations of water as there are plants and animals. He used the phrase “juvenile water” to describe sterile, distilled water with no so-called “impurities.” Water taken from underground wells or from its first exposure to the air has not developed the qualities needed to be truly beneficial. He compared this immature version with a baby grabbing at anything within reach. The impurities include trace elements, minerals, salts and smells. He said water reaches maturity when it is enriched with sufficient amounts of raw materials. Then it can give of itself freely.
If one were to drink only distilled water, it would leech out our supply of minerals and trace elements and eventually kill us. We need mature water to live. My wife and I tried one of those devices that eliminate impurities on our main water faucet, but I noticed a definite loss of energy in the water dispensed. It just felt stale compared to free-flowing water, so I went back to drinking regular tap water. Fortunately, our water supply has not yet been contaminated sufficiently to cause obvious harm, but it may be only a matter of time.
Chlorine and fluorine are among the chemicals added to local water supplies, supposedly to kill off harmful bacteria. But they kill off good bacteria as well, including those that enhance immune systems. Since blood (sap in the case of vegetation) is mostly water, water imbued with these additives makes us more prone to bacteria, viruses, and cancer.
Schauberger’s experiments demonstrated how man’s efforts to alter the flow of water for personal gain have done much to harm water quality. The details are too complex for this article, but they are summarized by Schauberger:
“All around us we see the bridges of life collapsing, those capillaries which create all organic life. This dreadful disintegration has been caused by the mindless and mechanical work of man, who has wrenched the living soul from the Earth’s blood-water...The more the engineer endeavours to channel water, of whose spirit and nature he is today still ignorant, by the shortest and straightest route to the sea, the more the flow of water weighs into the bends, the longer its path and the worse the water will become. The spreading of the most terrible disease of all, of cancer, is the necessary consequence of such unnatural regulatory works.”
Schauberger also talked much about proper ways of storing water. Storage units with square corners are counterproductive because water stagnates in the corners. Water moves even within enclosed spaces because of variations in the temperature of water. But water in corners can’t move, causing a reduction in energy and providing an environment for the development of pathogenic bacteria.
Enclosing it in plastic bottles has a similar effect; it needs to breathe and flow. I can tell a big difference in water energy between water poured out from a tap and water bottled some distance away by those seeking profit rather than water quality. Bottled water companies are not required to provide the true source of their water. And the plastic is not biodegradable, creating an even worse problem for the future of life on Earth. Water drunk directly from a rapidly-flowing mountain stream tastes wondrous by comparison.
Like mentioned in my book “It’s a Secret, So Pass It On: a Toolbox For Life,” man’s first thoughts on how to control Nature are usually opposite our best interests. Schauberger extolled anyone who would listen, “Comprehend and copy Nature.” Perhaps the best way to summarize his work is with his own words:
“Our accustomed way of thinking in many ways, and perhaps even without exception, is opposed to the true workings of Nature...Our work is the embodiment of our will. The spiritual manifestation of this work is its effect. When such work is carried out correctly, it brings happiness, but when carried out incorrectly, it assuredly brings misery.”
Part 2: http://dreamtime3.wix.com/jacktuttlebook#!Blog-158Water-Is-Life-Part-2/c1q8z/571e61e10cf2dcaa530e5c58
http://dreamtime3.wix.com/jacktuttlebook
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