16. Water holds memory. Experiments show water molecules change structure when exposed to thoughts, music, and emotion. Which means: Your body—70% water—is deeply influenced by your thoughts. The proof:
Water reacts to the patterns of information to which it is exposed – whether consciousness and subtle energy or electromagnetic information – and rearranges its own pattern (or structure) accordingly to incorporate the new information.
Carly Nuday PhD • Water Codes
“Water is versatile. It can be big and powerful, it can quench thirst, it can be healing, it can drown us. It finds its own level, always. That is, water is always seeking balance and has a place it has to go. It can be scarce, it is necessary. We’re utterly, devastatingly dependent on it. It’s beautiful and tragic and it feeds us sometimes. When w
... See moreadrienne maree brown • Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds
As Democritus said so simply many centuries ago: “Water can be both good and bad, useful and dangerous. To the danger, however, a remedy has been found: learning to swim.”
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi • Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience (Harper Perennial Modern Classics)
Each time the mind thinks thoughts, especially when they are charged with emotion, desire or intent, they become patterns of energy. As these thoughts are repeated again and again, they take on a very clear pattern and are picked up by the subconscious.
John Kehoe • Quantum Warrior | The Future of the Mind
Water as a liquid crystal is easily influenced by, or responsive to, stimuli and energy. It changes its pattern to incorporate this new information, that to which it is exposed, and uses these various bonding mechanisms to effectively change its inherent energetic and information content, storage, or ‘memory’, essentially changing its inherent ener
... See moreCarly Nuday PhD • Water Codes
The Buddha similarly commented on the powerful ability of thoughts to shape our experience of the world when he said, “Whatever a monk keeps pursuing with his thinking and pondering, that becomes the inclination of his awareness.”