We are what we think. However we are also what we speak. Every word in every language has a deeper meaning then we would ever consciously acknowledge. I was drawn towards researching this field from many sources, however a conversation I had with my loving partner sparked a deeper interest.
My partner is an original English speaker and I myself am a bilingual speaker, English being my second language. We were talking about my first language (that being Croatian which is distinctly different from English) and through some basic translations, we begun noticing that no matter how different the words of the same meaning seemingly are, they seem to have something more to them. Each word appeared to have the exact same feeling and basic sound to it.
From that conversation on, I was compelled to learn more abut this phenomenon, only to come across much, much more then I would ever hope for. There is more to words then we would ever guess.
We are what we think all day. That is absolutely true in mental, emotional and physical sense. However words were coming to existence through evolution as well. Every nation, no matter how distant from another nation, how isolated in language and culture, shares basic, fundamental values of life. Feeling of love is no more or less love in Japan then in England or Brazil. Feeling of hatred is equal at every meridian and equatorial parallel of the world.
That fact brings us to a very logical conclusion which I will prove later on in the article.
Words are carriers of deeper, wholesome meanings. They are soaked in genuine meaning of what they represent not only in written form but also in vibration form. A loving word written on paper vibrates loving, harmonious vibrations and creates beauty and harmony. The opposite stands for hurtful and negative words.
But how do we hurt ourselves with words?
Water is the most receptive of four elements on earth. Thus being the most suitable substance for proving the power of both written and spoken word.
A creative and visionary Japanese researcher Mr. Masaru Emoto, embarked on the mission of finding out how water responds to what we say, think and feel, and in his research he came up with most amazing results imaginable.
When you freeze a drop of water and you observe it under a microscope what you can see is a water crystal.
Water has a very important message for us. Water is telling us to take a much deeper look at our selves. When we do look at our selves through the mirror of water, the message becomes amazingly, crystal, clear. We know that human life is directly connected to the quality of our water, both within and all around us.
From Mr. Emoto’s work we are provided with factual evidence, that human vibrational energy, thoughts, words, ideas and music, affect the molecular structure of water, the very same water that comprises over seventy percent of a mature human body and covers the same amount of our planet. Water is the very source of all life on this planet, the quality and integrity is vitally important to all forms of life. The body is very much like a sponge and is composed of trillions of chambers called cells that hold liquid. The quality of our life is directly connected to the quality of our water.
Water is a very malleable substance. Its physical shape easily adapts to whatever environment is present. But its physical appearance is not the only thing that changes, the molecular shape also changes. The energy or vibrations of the environment will change the molecular shape of water. In this sense water not only has the ability to visually reflect the environment but it also molecularly reflects the environment.
Mr. Emoto has been visually documenting these molecular changes in water by means of his photographic techniques. He freezes droplets of water and then examines them under a dark field microscope that has photographic capabilities. His work clearly demonstrates the diversity of the molecular structure of water and the effect of the environment upon the structure of the water.
Snow has been falling on the earth for more than a few million years. Each snowflake, as we have been told, has a very unique shape and structure. By freezing water and taking a photograph of the structure, as Mr. Emoto has done, you get incredible information about the water.
Mr. Emoto has discovered many fascinating differences in the crystalline structures of water from many different sources and different conditions around the planet. Water from pristine mountain streams and springs show the beautifully formed geometric designs in their crystalline patterns. Polluted and toxic water from industrial and populated areas and stagnated water from water pipes and storage dams show definitively distorted and randomly formed crystalline structures.
However, Mr, Emoto, moved his research a step further. He decided to experiment with distilled water. Distilled water is supposed to be identical no matter what the source is. Its’ molecular structure is supposed to be reduced to bare minimum. But this is not the case.
[More on how we hurt ourselves when we speak in the next post]
I really enjoyed reading your article and about yourself. It is very informative. I am not being critical but please check the uses of ‘than’ and ‘then’. Thank you for the wonderful blog.
By: Serena on December 19, 2006
at 1:26 pm