The Mysteries of Water
Water is the source and preserver of life.
Water is something very common but yet very important and crucial to our existence. Water has been used in many spiritual, religious, and mystical practices over the ages.
The person who opened my eyes to the significance of water was non-other than Viktor Schauberger. He talked about how water preserves life, and how the cycles of water carried nutrients from deep underground to surface with them on the tree trunk. That opened my eyes to appreciate water as a gift from nature.
I tried to investigate for a couple of months and try to get insights about water, but nothing really came through, but recently I started to get insights about water on which I will be sharing with you.
To understand more about these insights, I recommend reading the published article We are one-dimensional beings and how is the universe a simulation was sourced out of the insights I got from water.
By the way, Viktor Schauberger had an ability to let his consciousness travel with water, then when he woke up, he was full of knowledge and insights about water.
“The upholder of the cycles which sustain all Life is water. In every drop of water dwells a deity whom indeed we all serve. There also dwells Life, the soul of the primal substance — water — whose boundaries and banks are the capillaries that guide it, and in which it circulates. Every pulse beat arising through the interaction of will and resistance is indicative of creative work and urges us to care for those vessels, those primary and most vital structures, in which throbs the product of a dualistic power — Life”
~Viktor Schauberger
“The true foundation of all cultures is the knowledge and understanding of water.”
~Viktor Schauberger
“Understanding that water exists as a solid, a liquid, a vapor, as a molecule, and at some point as light is to also understand our own nature and possibilities because we are mostly made of water. After I realized that we are water I came to realize that we do not have death; we only change into higher vibrations of being. This is an irreplaceable finding for me personally.” ~ Masaru Emoto
“To understand water is to understand the cosmos, the marvels of nature, and life itself.” ~ Masaru Emoto
“Water has a memory and carries within it our thoughts and prayers. As you yourself are water, no matter where you are, your prayers will be carried to the rest of the world.” ~ Masaru Emoto
Unusual Physical Properties of Water
- Boiling Point and Freezing Point: Water has an incredibly high boiling point despite its small molecular weight. Water must first break its hydrogen bonds before it can begin to boil, which requires a lot of energy. The same concept applies to the freezing point. The boiling and freezing points of water enable the molecules to be very slow to boil or cool. In water, this is imperative to the ecosystems of life. If water was very easy to freeze or boil, drastic changes in the environment and so in oceans or lakes would not be habitable. This is also why sweat can cool our bodies.
- The solidity of water: All substances become lighter when heated and denser when they are cooled. So when water is cooled, it becomes heavier and forms ice. But water is one of the few substances whose solid state can float in its liquid state. Instead of condensing and shrinking in size due to the solidity of the state, water expands as it solidifies.
- The liquid state of water: At standard temperatures and pressures, it is very rare for a compound without carbon to be a liquid. Water is therefore a rare liquid at room temperature. Since water is a liquid at room temperature, it can move around much faster than if it were solid. Besides that water as a liquid can dissolve a lot of substances, unlike other liquids.
- The vapor state of water: When water is heated, it doesn’t react with other substances to form a new substance, instead it absorbs all the energy used to evaporate it, which in return this process can be reversible.
Looking at these few physical properties of water, we see that the mysteries and uniqueness of water properties allow water to protect and preserve life. For example, if water didn’t float on freezing lakes during wintertime, all the living organisms would die because, the ice would sink down, and if water would dissipate or react with other elements during evaporation, there would be no rain. If water was not a universal solvent agent, it would not dissolve all the nutrients underground to bring them up on the surface for plants and other living organisms.
These properties are taken for granted but are vital for the entire planet’s ecosystem.
Reference: https://chem.libretexts.org/@go/page/1510
The Mysteries of Water
Water is the source and preserver of life.
Water is something very common but yet very important and crucial to our existence. Water has been used in many spiritual, religious, and mystical practices over the ages.
The person who opened my eyes to the significance of water was non-other than Viktor Schauberger. He talked about how water preserves life, and how the cycles of water carried nutrients from deep underground to surface with them on the tree trunk. That opened my eyes to appreciate water as a gift from nature.
I tried to investigate for a couple of months and try to get insights about water, but nothing really came through, but recently I started to get insights about water on which I will be sharing with you.
To understand more about these insights, I recommend reading the published article We are one-dimensional beings and how is the universe a simulation was sourced out of the insights I got from water.
By the way, Viktor Schauberger had an ability to let his consciousness travel with water, then when he woke up, he was full of knowledge and insights about water.
“The upholder of the cycles which sustain all Life is water. In every drop of water dwells a deity whom indeed we all serve. There also dwells Life, the soul of the primal substance — water — whose boundaries and banks are the capillaries that guide it, and in which it circulates. Every pulse beat arising through the interaction of will and resistance is indicative of creative work and urges us to care for those vessels, those primary and most vital structures, in which throbs the product of a dualistic power — Life”
~Viktor Schauberger
“The true foundation of all cultures is the knowledge and understanding of water.”
~Viktor Schauberger
“Understanding that water exists as a solid, a liquid, a vapor, as a molecule, and at some point as light is to also understand our own nature and possibilities because we are mostly made of water. After I realized that we are water I came to realize that we do not have death; we only change into higher vibrations of being. This is an irreplaceable finding for me personally.” ~ Masaru Emoto
“To understand water is to understand the cosmos, the marvels of nature, and life itself.” ~ Masaru Emoto
“Water has a memory and carries within it our thoughts and prayers. As you yourself are water, no matter where you are, your prayers will be carried to the rest of the world.” ~ Masaru Emoto
Unusual Physical Properties of Water
- Boiling Point and Freezing Point: Water has an incredibly high boiling point despite its small molecular weight. Water must first break its hydrogen bonds before it can begin to boil, which requires a lot of energy. The same concept applies to the freezing point. The boiling and freezing points of water enable the molecules to be very slow to boil or cool. In water, this is imperative to the ecosystems of life. If water was very easy to freeze or boil, drastic changes in the environment and so in oceans or lakes would not be habitable. This is also why sweat can cool our bodies.
- The solidity of water: All substances become lighter when heated and denser when they are cooled. So when water is cooled, it becomes heavier and forms ice. But water is one of the few substances whose solid state can float in its liquid state. Instead of condensing and shrinking in size due to the solidity of the state, water expands as it solidifies.
- The liquid state of water: At standard temperatures and pressures, it is very rare for a compound without carbon to be a liquid. Water is therefore a rare liquid at room temperature. Since water is a liquid at room temperature, it can move around much faster than if it were solid. Besides that water as a liquid can dissolve a lot of substances, unlike other liquids.
- The vapor state of water: When water is heated, it doesn’t react with other substances to form a new substance, instead it absorbs all the energy used to evaporate it, which in return this process can be reversible.
Looking at these few physical properties of water, we see that the mysteries and uniqueness of water properties allow water to protect and preserve life. For example, if water didn’t float on freezing lakes during wintertime, all the living organisms would die because, the ice would sink down, and if water would dissipate or react with other elements during evaporation, there would be no rain. If water was not a universal solvent agent, it would not dissolve all the nutrients underground to bring them up on the surface for plants and other living organisms.
These properties are taken for granted but are vital for the entire planet’s ecosystem.
Reference: https://chem.libretexts.org/@go/page/1510

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