Dave Perkins, You said, "that is why I'm so excited about drinking water from the Ionizing filters available today, they ionize the minerals".
"Ionizing" is not something done to minerals before utilization, nor is ionizing the same thing as converting inorganic minerals to organic. When inorganic minerals are converted (by plants or in our bodies), they are changed in their molecular structure, they are made to match the composition of the cells of our bodies. Dr. Reams talked about how everything had its own atomic frequency, inorganic different than organic, human different than animal, male different than female. There were groupings of frequencies, and even different parts, areas and organs in the body had specific frequencies. Each vitamin and mineral had its own frequency, that frequency being positively or negatively effected by source, preparation, packaging, etc. Using the frequencies determined by bioanalysis testing, and then doing the math, he was able to determine what a person's body needed to achieve metabolic balance. Inorganic minerals have a frequency which the body has to change in order to efficiently utilize them, something which the body does imperfectly. "Ionization", as used by Dr. Reams, referred to the way organic vitamins and minerals were utilized in the body, sort of like the RPM of a motor needing to match the RPM of the wheels before the gears can be shifted. The frequency of inorganic minerals was too fast or slow (I don't remember which) to be assimilated into the body. When a mineral is converted to organic, that mineral can be joined to the cells of the body, because the frequencies match. This proper joining he called "biological ionization". The way chrome is put on a car bumper is by using an electric current with the bumper as ground. The chrome powder is "ionized" (the molecules are joined) to the bumper. To remove the chrome, the polarity of the current is reversed, and the chrome is "de-ionized", or the molecules unjoin and come off the bumper. In the making of CS, when silver particles leave a silver wire and head for the other wire, they are attempting to be ionized onto the other wire, but the water interferes. The plating which we observe on the surface of the glass jar is an imperfect ionization. (According to Reams, synthetic vitamins are barely utilized by the body, and always at a cost to the body.) To talk about 'ionizing filters' makes no sense to me because "ionization" is referring to a molecular joining, not a treatment of those molecules. Eugene Reams explained in one class that the reason psyllium seed removes fecal matter from the walls of the colon is because the psyllium has a positive charge, and as it passes through the colon, it attracts the negatively-charged fecal matter from the walls of the colon, where it had become attached by an ionization process similar to the chrome on a bumper. I've heard of "ionization" referring to each particle having the same charge - some marketers have announced that their CS or mineral drink is 'ionized' rather than merely colloidal! - but I have trouble picturing a filter capable of causing all the particle matter passing through it to assume the same charge. Even were that possible, it is still not the same dynamic as converting metallic/inorganic to organic. When I referred to rain water as "nature's distilled water", you mentioned how rain water is not drunk straight from the sky (unless you stood out in the rain with your mouth open!), but goes into the ground and becomes filled with elements in the ground. But early settlers had a large cistern or "rain-catcher" of some kind (especially if they were not close to a water source), and the water in that container would have been essentially distilled water. I use the 'rain water' analogy merely to demonstrate how natural the distillation process is. There is controversy over the theoretical value of the minerals found in water, but because of the importance to the body for water to be "empty", water is not an essential source of minerals. Indeed, according to Dr. Reams, more assimilable (right frequency) minerals are garnered from the air we breathe than are found in water (which demonstrates the value of clean, pure air!). In addition to this, the minerals found in water are inorganic, metallic minerals, not readily or easily assimilable by the body, unlike food-derived minerals, which the plant or animal they come from has converted to an organic state. Add to this the uncertainty of the wide variety of kinds and concentrations of different minerals in the water which can be found in wells, streams and reservoirs throughout the country, and it seems to me that water is an uncertain and sometimes even risky source of minerals. Terry Wayne __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get Yahoo! 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