View Full Version : What kind of water do you drink?
judykott
01-27-2009, 08:10 PM
After reading many conflicting versions on what is the BEST water, I have opted for reverse osmosis, with Prill beads and cosmic beads in it. I remineralize before drinking with Himalayan salt or Concentrace drops. I did notice some relief of pain when adding the salt to the water,I have rheumatoid arthritis. I had gone years without using any salt of any kind for the most part. I have not noticed any difference with the Prill or cosmic beads. Has anyone else used those?
Antaletriangle
01-27-2009, 08:15 PM
judy,i posted a series of audio coast vids on amazing water-is it conscious? a couple of days ago it's very good to listen to the stuff they're discovering about it is crazy-restructure it in front of quality speakers with soothing music for a few minutes 15 or so then drink it straight away tap water!!etc.Give it a listen it sounds crazy and new agey but quite amazing.
judykott
01-27-2009, 08:20 PM
I saw those videos already but have not found out where to get the Sun sound of Ohm recording yet. In the meantime this is what I am using. Do you know where to get the sound track or anyone else?
Swanny
01-27-2009, 08:54 PM
I drink tap water that has been through my filter, there is a clear quartz and a amethyst sat in the bottom chamber :original:
http://www.freshwaterfilter.com/pub/files/.thumbnails/1224102468_Gravity-Filter_w175_h175.gif
EpiphaMe
01-27-2009, 08:55 PM
When you consider that our bodies utilize chelated minerals (those from plants) and you consider that water is meant for hydration & not nutrition, well then, rain water or distilled water (same process) is the one to choose. My understanding is that your body cannot much use rock minerals, like oyster shell or oxides etc, so shop wisely... these may even become stuck as overload in the bodies' tissues, it might be wise to not worry about the mineral content of water as those minerals are most likely not from plant matter. Plants transform rock minerals into chelated minerals and are best suited for our bodies. Please correct me if I err.
judykott
01-27-2009, 09:12 PM
From what I have read filtered water does not get rid of fluoride which is added to the water where I live. I read somewhere that distilled leaches the minerals out, but is good for a short term cleanse. that is the problem there is so much contradictory info. I found the site to buy the sun sound tape that David Sereda talks about on the videos that Antatriangle posted in this link .
http://www.voiceentertainment.net/music.html
Northern Boy
01-28-2009, 12:54 AM
Sping water for me straight from mother earth
GaiaLove
01-28-2009, 01:11 AM
Evian water or Dasini dont have fluoride added. Or we drink filtered tap water (Brita).
city life...:thumbdown:
Antaletriangle
01-28-2009, 01:22 AM
Currently where i live is one of the few areas without fluoride added in an official stance by water authorities...they probably think we're stupid enough to not add it in Stoke!!lol.
Humble Janitor
01-28-2009, 01:31 AM
Evian water or Dasini dont have fluoride added. Or we drink filtered tap water (Brita).
city life...:thumbdown:
Actually, I heard that Evian and Dasani DO have fluoride added to them.
I drink Poland Spring.
With all the reports of trace amounts of prescription drugs in the water supply, I am unsure of whether or not to even drink tap water. Also, it has a grayish hue sometimes and tastes like ****.
oldpaganfreak
01-28-2009, 01:52 AM
we are blessed with wonerful springs on our valley farm. my drinking water flows right from the teat of mother earth. ambrosia!!
mntruthseeker
01-28-2009, 02:00 AM
My husband was running tap water to fill the sink for dishes and it was a deep dark brown..........Thank God no odor or I would of puked for sure
I quick called the water dept and the lady said she didn't think anyone was in as they just left for the day. I looked at the clock and it was 310.....so I said "oh nice hours" she giggled. I was burning up
Finally a guy called me back and told me to just let the water run for 15 minutes. I said we did and it stopped and he says it's ok now. I said yes, but what was it?
No answer and told me that it's something that happens once in awhile. Like do I have "STUPID" written across my head. no answer he just says. Don't wash clothes for an hour. Don't wash clothes but drink after 15.
Anyhow, I got this man sitting there waving his hands in the air indicating for me to end the call. (not too long ago, I told the police off and they sent me to the hospital to be admitted) LOL I will never hear the end of what my big mouth did that time. So I told the guy, Hey, you have a nice weekend, goodbye and ended the call.
Is this whole world crazy? I wanted to know if his family drank that ****..........From now on we add a teaspoon of peroxide in my water. I can't afford to get a softener but we do filter our drinking water.
Brown water................how nice
BTW I just seen a commercial saying how we should add one tablespoon of bleach to water to sterilize baby bottle to soak them for 4 minutes in it. How nice of our TV
One tablespoon of bleach to one gallon of water will sterilize your water over night. it works !
judykott
01-28-2009, 02:08 AM
MMS would be safer to use for disenfecting water. Chlorine leaves bad traces of things.
no caste
01-28-2009, 02:29 AM
Tap. Also river/creek when upstream to beaver dams. I hang my hat with municipalities and plebs. :original:
oldpaganfreak
01-28-2009, 02:56 AM
one doesn't want beaver fever....
After reading many conflicting versions on what is the BEST water, I have opted for reverse osmosis, with Prill beads and cosmic beads in it. I remineralize before drinking with Himalayan salt or Concentrace drops. I did notice some relief of pain when adding the salt to the water,I have rheumatoid arthritis. I had gone years without using any salt of any kind for the most part. I have not noticed any difference with the Prill or cosmic beads. Has anyone else used those?
I have been wondering what is the best for getting out Fluoride and the most contaminants, Distilled or Reverse Osmosis? And what is the cheapest to use?
Right now I just use a Brita-type countertop filter to filter tap water bleh! Gotta switch...and our water is Fluoridated ugh! :doh: No wonder I've been distracted lately that and the Chemtrails with HAARP :eyes:
Bonnie
01-28-2009, 05:17 AM
Has anybody tried Langenburg oxygen water?
This is a highly structured and oxygenated water.
We incorporate totally unique processes of purification and structuring to reach purity standards far beyond that of other bottled waters, and to achieve superior detoxification, hydration, and oxygenation throughout the entire body. Along with extremely high, naturally occurring dissolved oxygen content, Langenburg Oxygen Water™ is perfectly pH and mineral balanced.
High Levels of Stable Oxygen
Microclustered for Hydration
pH Balanced
Mono-Atomic Mineral Balanced
Highly Advanced Purification
Structurally Restored
http://www.langenburgwater.com/p/water
If you go into the Langenburg Water website, it, supposedly, has great health benefits like uplifting energy, better endurance and more. I was just curious if anybody has tried it and what they thought about it.
futureyes
01-28-2009, 05:35 AM
drink tap water from the well on the property ...
good stuff :thumb_yello:
judykott
01-31-2009, 03:35 PM
I have not tried the Langenburg water, and would not because it uses so many bottles. I get my reverse osmosis water from a machine at the health food store so I can refill my containers. I then take a stainless steel container with me so I do not have to buy little water bottles when I am out. I would like to get a property with good water. I do not like the idea of how much energy it uses to create reverse osmosis, but none of the filters I have checked into remove flouride.
Myplanet2
01-31-2009, 04:07 PM
There is a Cartridge available for the Berky that reduces Fluoride from 10 ppm to .2 ppm.
Not bad. I get mine from Doulton in Michigan. Great customer service. One of the filters that shipped with mine came broken. I called and they shipped a replacement free without asking for any verification.
http://doultonusa.com/HTML%20pages/ceramic_candles.htm#specialty
And these are gravity units. no electricity. totally portable. We use ours everyday.
judykott
01-31-2009, 04:48 PM
New Questions Raised About Controversial Plastics Chemical Bisphenol A
ScienceDaily (Jan. 30, 2009) — A University of Rochester Medical Center study challenges common assumptions about the chemical bisphenol A (BPA), by showing that in some people, surprisingly high levels remain in the body even after fasting for as long as 24 hours. The finding suggests that BPA exposure may come from non-food sources, or that BPA is not rapidly metabolized, or both.
The journal Environmental Health Perspectives published the research online January 28, 2009.
Controversy around BPA is mounting. In December the U.S. Food and Drug Administration agreed to reconsider the health risks of the chemical, which is used to make plastic baby bottles, water bottles and many other consumer products. Scientific studies suggest that BPA may harm the brain and prostate glands in developing fetuses and infants; adults with higher BPA levels in their urine were linked to higher risks for heart disease and diabetes, according to a study published last September in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The latest finding from Rochester is important because, until now, scientists believed that BPA was excreted quickly and that people were exposed to BPA primarily through food. Indeed, the FDA and the European Food Safety Authority have declared BPA safe based, in part, on those assumptions.
"Our results simply do not fit that picture," said lead author Richard W. Stahlhut, M.D., M.P.H., of the University of Rochester's Environmental Health Sciences Center. "The research community has clues that could help explain some of these results but to date the importance of the clues have been underestimated. We must chase them much more vigorously now."
Manufacturers use BPA to harden plastics in many types of products. In addition to plastic bottles, BPA is used in PVC water pipes and food storage containers. BPA also coats the inside of metal food cans, and is used in dental sealants.
Stahlhut and colleagues obtained data for a sample of 1,469 American adults through the Center for Disease Control's National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). The researchers sought to explore the link between BPA urine concentration and the length of time a person had been fasting.
Accepting the widely held assumption that food is the most common route of exposure to BPA, Stahlhut expected to see a relationship between the last food ingested, fasting time, and BPA levels. People who had fasted longest (15 to 24 hours), for example, should have had much lower BPA levels than people who had eaten more recently, Stahlhut said.
Instead, those who fasted had levels that were only moderately lower than people who had just eaten. This is significant because scientists expected BPA levels to decrease by about half, every five hours.
"In our data, BPA levels appear to drop about eight times more slowly than expected – so slowly, in fact, that race and sex together have as big an influence on BPA levels as fasting time," Stahlhut said.
According to the authors, two possible explanations may exist for the higher-than-expected levels of BPA in people who fasted. One is that exposure to BPA might come through other means, such as house dust or tap water.
In addition, Stahlhut theorizes that BPA may seep into fat tissues, where it would be released more slowly. However, further study is needed to evaluate the effects of BPA on adipose tissue hormones and function, Stahlhut said, as well as more studies to compare BPA levels in fat versus blood and urine.
The Centers for Disease Control estimates that 93 percent of Americans have detectable levels of BPA in their urine.
The latest data also supports the idea that individuals might be re-exposed throughout the course of a day, Stahlhut said. In 2000 another research group found that BPA can migrate from PVC pipes or hoses into room temperature water, producing another potential route of exposure.
The University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Training Grant, funded the research
Jonathon
01-31-2009, 05:09 PM
This is the best aftermarket system I am aware of for removing ALL contaminants out of your tap water. Come in a portable and under-sink mount version. http://www.purewatersystems.com/
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