Saturday, November 11, 2006

Making water happy
Have you ever thought that you are able to make water happy? That would be the last thing to come to my mind until I read that article. It's about a Japanese water researcher who found out that water reacts to certain stimuli, like music, words and pictures by changing its crystals' structure. For example (in the picture), when they played Bach’s Air for the G String to the water its crystal changed, "giving the impression that they are dancing merrily". Ok, one may say, sound is physical energy, it's understandable to have such impact on water. But the experiment didn't stop here. They tried writing words on the water surface and the water responded. It gave nice cristals when they wrote 'Thank you' and gave no crystals at all to 'You fool'. It even reacted to images by giving crystals that made sense. It all applied to good quality pure water and did not work with distilled water. However, there were people (a priest) who could influence the death distilled water and even structurally change the crystals symmetry to shapes unknown to science before. Interesting, hm?
It all can well be explained by the quantum physics theory of ultimate coherence. In other words, it can be possible that we are all interconnected and are part of the same matter. Water and mind can be different fragments of the same thing. If we go further back in time we can find a similar explanation in the Hindu view of reality. In the Hindu view, our individual egos are like islands in a sea: We look out at the world and each other and think we are separate entities. What we don't see is that we are connected to each other by means of the ocean floor beneath the waters.
In any case, the results from the experiment are amazing. Just think of the implications. Somehow we are connected to nature. Somehow we can influence nature. And nature can understand and respond to us. Could it be possible that the tree in our back yard or the stone we just stumbled in have consciousness? Why not? Perhaps we just need to open our eyes and hearts a little bit wider for all these little wanders that have always been out there.
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