Friday, February 2, 2007

Water for Life

Through water, life is...
Water permeates every living organism and plant, giving life to all of nature.

It is there as the rhythmically pulsing blood, as the sensitive fluid in our inner ear,
as the substance in which our brain floats and as the liquid world wherein new
creation takes place, the womb.

In every minute detail water plays its creative part, in every plant's
metamorphosing leaves and flowers, even into the fluid construction of our bones.

· Through water, living form is created.
· Through water it continues to live and grow.
· Through water it is dispersed again when life is over.
Water is the bearer of life itself
Water is the bearer of life itself. Life which is freely existing in our universe as an
anti-gravity force, creating nature in its totality.

Since Einstein and Quantum Physics, we know matter is simply energy, and yet
matter is only a small portion of the cosmos. It exists between what is
scientifically known as dark or anti-matter, which appears to have an anti-gravity
effect, and an essentially creative activity. Modern science has led us through the
portal into life.

This life is carried in water through the medium of many varied rhythmic forms
such as waves, meanders and the spiralling vortex.

This carrying of life can be seen most clearly in the short/long rhythm of the
pulsing blood stream and heart. Such a pulse can also be traced in the sap
movement of plants, and indeed when practised at observing life in nature, one
cannot help but see rhythm, rhythm carrying all life in movement throughout the
world.

Da Vinci study, sluice into lake. Rhythms from water into water.
Water the original human being?
Water has a nervous system, a rhythmic system and also a metabolism of its
own. It has a skin, and a purpose. It 'owns' all living forms on the planet as these
forms have been created by the power of water to inform living shapes, and as
such all living bodies are unified through water.

Water remembers and stores information within its manifold sheaths at a
molecular level, taking on the character of its material and conscious
surroundings. Research in BioPhysics shows this, as does the global work of
homeopathy. To see the wonderful crystals created by Dr Masaru Emoto convince
us of the sensitive receptivity of water, its capacity to collect and respond to its
environment and organise itself accordingly.

Water also responds rhythmically to all that influences it. Yet in a stream there
are so many influences we seldom see a rhythm held before it is affected with
further change. However, within a less chaotic situation water, where single
influences occur, water exhibits rhythmical formative properties. Forms akin to
plants, insects, bones, organs and embryos spontaneously develop, causing us to
wonder aloud. Here we meet the creative hands of a fabulous artist, playing with
being living-nature. Yet in living nature, the plant and animal forms are alive, move
and carry out chemical reactions well beyond human consciousness....and are
beautiful at the same time! The scientific life work of Theodor Schwenk on this
flowing movement, shows a wonderland of creativity that we are all suddenly
familiar with.

Within the oceans and artesian waters metabolic processes of mixing and
digestion are deeply at work. The best water, Victor Schauberger tells us, is
minerally enriched water rising from below through springs after long periods of
digestion within the earth. Water mixes and dissolves matter, carries it to new
places and places it into new living forms and ecosystems where it is taken up
and built into constantly maintained life processes.

Water even provides everything with its own skin, its own meniscus, seen most
easily as the concave and firmer surface to any glass of water. Within the water
there are many such sheaths, providing the basis for all skin whether plant or
animal, plus connective and muscular tissue sheaths.

Organs and bones develop out of liquid movement in embryos and harden later to
form what we too often believe are mechanisms. For instance does the heart
simply pump the blood?

The engineering breaking system within the thousands of kilometres of capillaries,
where blood lines up corpuscle by corpuscle, and then has to travel vertically up
hill, is simply too great for a muscle the size of a fist to maintain for 80 years
without stopping. The heart itself is created by embryonic liquid flow in the womb,
and this liquid flow has its own minute rhythms held steadily before the heart even
exists. Simpler organisms in the evolutionary scale have pulsing rhythms within
their bodies but no heart.

The rhythms of life inform the pulsing blood, the pulsing lymph and cranio-sacral
fluids and are not simply driven by a physical mechanism from within.

The problem is human consciousness, which simply needs to expand its
imaginative faculties in a scientific manner, so it can feel and grasp realities in
nature.

To understand something, we must become like it. To understand water, to
perceive it anew from its own point of view (which is ever anew and moving) means
we will come to understand living nature itself in a more helpful light. Our thinking
and perceiving simply need to become more fluid and responsive! Water also flows
to the lowest place, and human thinking also needs to practise this humility in
order to under-stand.

And in the process we may discover that the world is not simply 'out there',
something different to we humans. Then we may well come to care for it in an
entirely new way.

The design and use of Flowforms is a small step in our communal walk into a new
culture where we learn from nature and design with nature, and create a world in
harmony with nature.

http://www.a1articles.com/article_101314_27.html