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Water: Nature’s Great Connector

April 25, 2010

The concept of water revitalization is moot if water’s role in Nature is a purely chemical one, but we have shown already that water is much more than the chemical formula H2O.  Water benefits from Johann Grander’s revitalization technology because in addition to its chemical functions, water is a carrier of information- a “bridge” within Nature that connects the entire community of living beings into a cohesive whole.  This connectivity and the information that flow through it are vital to maintaining the positive qualities of natural systems.

I was recently reminded that this understanding of water is not entirely a new one when I came across Rumi’s poem “Story Water”, (translated by Coleman Barks in The Essential Rumi).  Here is an excerpt of that piece:

“A story is like water
that you heat for your bath.

It takes messages between the fire
and your skin.  It lets them meet,
and it cleans you!

Very few can sit down
in the middle of the fire itself
like a salamander or Abraham.
We need intermediaries.”

An intermediary is a go-between, a connective link between two parties.  As an intermediary in Nature, water knits together elements and entities which otherwise would be unknown to each other: the supernova and the seed, the honeybee and the Milky Way, the embryo and the dawn.  Subtle, formative information joins these seemingly distinct processes together into a cogent whole, through water.  Water is not only commonplace on Earth, but in the heavens as well; it has been found deep in space, on stars and in comets, and even in the streams of matter being hurled from black holes.

To Johann Grander, water’s connectedness is profound.  He tells the story like this (Grander Journal III, page 8), “Years ago, I had a quite special experience, which persuaded me that water is connected with other water to a much higher extent than we might imagine.  One day I saw under my microscope in a water drop, a kind of sheet lightning without knowing what that should mean.  Shortly afterwards, I heard on a Munich radio station that in Bavaria there had been severe thunderstorms.  Only then, I realized that I had seen flashes of lightning in the water drop…

…If you realize these connections, it’s understandable why today, worldwide, water is loosing more and more of its original power and quality due to environmental influences and the appertaining energy losses.”

Johann Grander is not the only one to note the profound connectedness of water.  As Austrian naturalist Viktor Schauberger once wrote, “Air and water are intermediate organisms whose task is to connect the above and below.”  And in an earlier post, I reported on the interesting discoveries of Dr. James Morré of Purdue University, who found oscillatory cycles in water which displayed sensitivity to environmental phenomena, including high-energy solar events.

The notion that water is much more than a chemical medium is both new and old, and also profoundly current.  What is the information content of our rivers and streams, when they have become the final resting place for our modern medicinals?  National Geographic Magazine, writing about the concentrations of modern pharmaceuticals found in fish in its April 2010 “Water Issue” states that, “You’d have to eat tons of fish for such small concentrations to affect human health, but the products could pose a threat to marine life.”  What threat might they pose to the underlying fabric of the natural world- to the healthy flow of information through Nature’s primary conduit, water?

Rumi says that a story is like water…  Water, however, is also like a story…

What is the story contained in your water?

© 2010, Michael Mark

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One Comment leave one →
  1. Lanessa Hunter permalink
    April 28, 2010 2:37 am

    Keep up the great work, Michael!

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