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The One
12th August 2011, 21:29
Fascinating movie spans the globe to reveal recent discoveries about water, the most amazing yet least studied substance in the world. Witness as researchers, scientists, philosophers and theologians try to understand this unique liquid and all its miraculous properties still waiting to be discovered.

It was there that Heisenberg and Bohr came to Einstein to tell him it looked like the minds of the researchers were affecting the results of the experiments. Mind was inexorably linked to matter. Einstein later said, âEveryone who is seriously involved in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that a spirit is manifest in the laws of the Universe-a spirit vastly superior to that of man, and one in the face of which we with our modest powers must feel humble.â

In this amazing film, Water, the Great Mystery, we can see that science has made a quantum leap into understanding how mind can be recorded by the most simple element in nature (water) and on the periodic table: H20. If water has memory, and its main component being hydrogen, then the whole universe would have memory. Hydrogen was born between 100 and 1,000 seconds after the big bang. It makes up 75% of the known mass of the universe and now is part of the missing mass equation

-3ZUe54fVHI

Carmen
12th August 2011, 21:50
The only reason its still a ruddy mystery is because academia dismissed the findings of Viktor Schauberger in the first half of last century!!!!!!!!! Sorry, its no point me trying to comment on the videos. My loading is soo slow, its pointless.

celt, what the hell are you doing posting that crap there??????

Back to something meaningful. Im just re-reading Schaubergers books and they are fabulous. He said that science was operating at an octave too low and he was absolutely correct. They just couldnt get their limited minds around what he had discovered because it was beyond the intellectual ceiling and it also did not gel with the controllers as he was introducing free energy and health.

He also explained why wild animals get TB. Now that is something Ive puzzled about for years.

The One
12th August 2011, 21:56
celt, what the hell are you doing posting that crap there??????

Agreed think you have had one to many celt

Ruby L.
12th August 2011, 22:04
celt, what the hell are you doing posting that crap there??????

Agreed think you have had one to many celt

And, personally, I've had ALL too many of celt's video being posted everywhere. How annoying!
No pun intended but it really breaks the flow.

Thanks for your video, The One; it looks really interesting! Going to settle in and watch the rest of it now.

<8>
12th August 2011, 23:08
Thx ONE...

I am looking at it now....Realy great video..:)

nearing
13th August 2011, 02:11
celt, what the hell are you doing posting that crap there??????

Agreed think you have had one to many celt

And, personally, I've had ALL too many of celt's video being posted everywhere. How annoying!
No pun intended but it really breaks the flow.

Thanks for your video, The One; it looks really interesting! Going to settle in and watch the rest of it now.

This post and the posts above it are all confusing. I see a post by celt here.

good find, The One.

ThePythonicCow
13th August 2011, 02:26
This post and the posts above it are all confusing. I see a post by celt here.
I probably should have done some editing on them.

celt posted the same, non-relevant, video on seven threads at once.

I removed the seven posts. celt is on a week vacation.

The confusing comments above are referring to that video post of celt's that is no longer here.

¤=[Post Update]=¤


And, personally, I've had ALL too many of celt's video being posted everywhere. How annoying!
If anyone sees someone posting off-topic videos everywhere, please Report one of those posts (click the http://projectavalon.net/forum4/images/buttons/report-40b.png triangle beneath the post and describe in the Reason box on the next screen what you want the Moderator to know.)

Thanks.

nearing
13th August 2011, 02:32
Thanks for explaining that, Paul. I thought I was in the Twilight Zone! LOL.

Carmen
13th August 2011, 21:37
Im going to leave this computer to load this movie of yours One. Water is such a fascinating subject. As I said I'm re-reading Viktor Schauberger's books and not being an academic, they are quite a study.

One thing he talks about is the movement of water and its temperature. Man abuses the water (planets blood) by not understanding the way nature 'moves'. Im understanding this little by little but there are some very obvious demonstrations of how water moves naturally. eg tornadoes move centipedally, (from the outside in) and the centre is levitational. The ability of a trout to go up waterfall is the same principle. The water in a waterfall forms a conical tunnel in which these same levitational forces operate. The trout levitates up the water then leaps the last part over the top. Also, man does not understand that the healthy temperature of water is +4 degree celcius. Overheating of water is a major proplem. Water in rivers and streams need the shading of foliage alone the banks. The keeps the water at its optimum temperature. Man has destroyed the full hydrological cycle by cutting down the old growth forests. These forests are integral to the 'full' hydrological cycle.

Anyway, maybe it would be interesting to people here for me to impart what I am learning, maybe not. I dunno. Its very interesting though. I have always puzzled over why wild animals get tb. (tuberculoses) It probably wasnt even happening in Schaubergers day, but it is now and he predicted it. The wild animals are forced to drink pure water (young water) that has not the nutrients in it, and this is the cause of the TB. Its quite complex but it sure makes sense. Schauberger was a genius, not constrained by an intellectual ceiling. He refused to go to university. He allowed nature to teach him by observing it.

Heyoka_11
13th August 2011, 22:40
Also, man does not understand that the healthy temperature of water is +4 degree celcius.

Hi Carmen,

Although it has been years since I last read anything by Schauberger, I remember wondering if there were any correlation between his quoted ideal temperature of +4 degrees Celcius, and water's unique physical property of expansion below this figure. I am far from an expert on this, but I know that the lattice structure of water molecules rearrange when cooled below +4 degrees, and it actually expands. This is why water pipes burst when water freezes in them. No other compound, as far as I am aware, possesses this property.

That is of course with the exception of Gallium metal, which expands by 3.1% when it solidifies.

Ah, sorry, I meant gallium arsenide! :rolleyes:

Schauberger and his work are so utterly fascinating, that one could devote an entire lifetime to the study of his material; and his only course material was nature itself, as you pointed out. Great stuff!

Carmen
14th August 2011, 00:00
Thank you Heyoka, I'm still reading. When I read through his books a few years back, the knowledge caused such sadness and anger that I could barely read. What happened to him was criminal, but we know why and his time is coming, so I re-read now with a hopefulness that we are on the cusp of huge change and can be ready to apply Schaubergers directions to look after our water.

Reading just now about water being the blood supply of the planet is a fantastic explanation. As in our bodies, our blood supply has to maintained at a certain temperature. It has to be covered (not exposed). It moves a certain way. If "any" of these prerequisites to health are not present, then we are sick. Its the same with the planet.

sandy
14th August 2011, 03:15
Thank you The One,

I'm grateful for you and your contributions :)

Carmody
14th August 2011, 03:32
No other compound, as far as I am aware, possesses this property.


gallium:

Gallium metal expands by 3.1% when it solidifies, and therefore storage in either glass or metal containers is avoided, due to the possibility of container rupture with freezing.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallium

Carmen
14th August 2011, 03:37
No, dear Carmody, that was Heyoka quoting. Thanks for that info. As I said, Im only just learning and Im finding it absolutely fascinating. Why they have not gone back to Schauberger's knowledge of water, I do no know! Have watched some of the video and will let the rest load overnight!! They had not mentioned Schauberger at the stage of the video pause.

What is gallium used for? Where is it found?

Thank you, Didnt see the link first off!

Heyoka_11
14th August 2011, 03:41
the knowledge caused such sadness and anger that I could barely read.

Yes! To think that we have had the answers to this, and so, so very many other issues, for so long now, and still we must play the game with our hands tied behind our backs.......

1,2,3,4,5,6.......la, la, la........

It is such a crime!

I fly to work in the North-West of Western Australia, in the Pilbara region. Looking down upon the water courses, and the way a river branches into ever smaller tributaries, one cannot help but see the striking similarity with the systemic flow of blood within our bodies. There is also a beautiful tree, a desert eucalypt, right outside my room at work, and I often just stand there and admire it, and say dumb things like "Thanks tree!, thanks for just being there and helping to soften the surroundings". Well, one time while I was entranced by this particular tree, I'm hit by the idea that threes may serve a similar function to human hair. Not sure what that is, besides giving a bit of shade I guess. As we are both living systems, the more we bother to stop and ponder, as Schauberger did, the more analogies can be found between the planet and the human organism. To some it may sound a bit over the top, especially for an Aussie male, but for me, it helps to foster a very deep affinity not just with that beautiful eucalypt, but with the planet as a whole.

I'd better think about going to bed soon, before I start attempting poetry!

BTW, My room at work is in a mining camp, and a few months ago I moved into a new section of the camp, with around 150 extra rooms. Around a dozen saplings have sprung up outside my room. No one else has a single one. Neat eh?

Carmody
14th August 2011, 03:46
No, dear Carmody, that was Heyoka quoting. Thanks for that info. As I said, Im only just learning and Im finding it absolutely fascinating. Why they have not gone back to Schauberger's knowledge of water, I do no know! Have watched some of the video and will let the rest load overnight!! They had not mentioned Schauberger at the stage of the video pause.

What is gallium used for? Where is it found?

Thank you, Didnt see the link first off!

gallium arsenide.

Semi-conductors. Resonant molecular systems. inches from being non conductive, inches from being superconductive.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallium_arsenide

hint: it can be made to emit light. LED's.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Led