Our Ideas and our Mission
Remember Masaru Emoto, water memory scientist

Remember Masaru Emoto, water memory scientist

Peace and the water, was the title of the interview the great scientist, recently deceased

29 December 2014 / Our ideas

 Q - We learn in your  studies,  and that fascinated me very much,  is like water has a strong "receptivity". Do you think it is correct to say that water has a magnetic nature?
A- I think it's a right definition. The water is very sensitive, emotional from everything and from everyone.


Q - But the  vibration level of  water, has its own "footprint" or is it simply a vehicle that  load it self by vibrations from other sources?
A - I think, we think, that water is the means par excellence to transmit what we call Hado, or vibration.

 



Q - Another thing that struck me of his experiments is like the water crystallizes differently even if exposed to photographs. You might then think that photographic film, the paper on which you print photos, all these things might charge Vibrationally like water? What is the difference then between water and these things? What is the peculiarity of the water?
A - It is clear that by exposing the water to a source such as a photograph that, unlike a written word, is more elaborate, this receives a broader range of information and emotion. For this the Crystal which will be more particular and certainly more complex

Q - Personally reasoning on this thing I thought that everything is actually a single "thing", one "spirit", which takes on different forms and States. Her in his book relates the 108 known chemical elements with 108 emotions trying man, according to Buddhist doctrine. It can be assumed that water is the main element that puts everything in relation with each other?

A - I think that the water "represents" all these items 108, of this I am sure. And then I also think that without water there can be nothing, no life. Yes, the water has to do with all the existing elements, and can "contain" them all.
In fact, I believe, for example, that even a diamond "contains" the water.