Crystal Clear – Messages from Water
Could crystals of water be the answer to all our
problems? Dr. Mae-Wan Ho reviews the amazing work of
Japanese water scientist.
What if water, the medium of all
life, were sensitive to our thoughts? Does that mean
human consciousness has shaped evolution, and can still
do so?
Masaru Emoto first started studying water in the
1990s, when he met Dr. Lee Lorenzen, a biochemist in
University of California Berkeley, who has since become
a water researcher, developing ‘micro-cluster water’.
Lorenzen introduced Emoto to a Magnetic Resonance
Analyzer, which was developed to study homeopathy.
In the course of his studies, Emoto began to wonder
about the quality of the water he was working with, and
how it could affect health. While he was thinking about
the problem, he came across a book entitled, "The day
the lightning chased the housewife", which contained
about 50 questions. One question stood out: "Are there
any snow crystals of the same shape?" The answer was no.
Snow has been falling on earth for possibly hundreds of
millions of years, and yet each snowflake is distinct.
"And that was when it hit me", he wrote, "That’s it!"
From then on, he began to make water crystals and to
photograph them under the microscope. And he was richly
rewarded, as attested by the publication of a book,
Messages from Water (HADO Kyoikusha Co., Ltd.,
Tokyo, 1999, 2001. ISBN 4-939098-00-1). This book
contains hundreds of photographs of water crystals, all
different, from the most sublimely beautiful to the most
mundane, or even ‘ugly’, each with a legend that
captures quite precisely the feeling evoked by the
crystal. As I followed the pictures from one to another,
I began to try to decipher the meaning of the crystals.
They were indeed like faces, expressing emotions that
reflect the history and the character of the landscapes
the water flowed through, and the creatures that live on
those lands or in the water.
Tap water in cities subjected to chlorine treatment
or heavily polluted failed to form crystals at all, with
no sign of the characteristic hexagonal (6-fold)
symmetry of snowflakes. Partial crystals sometimes
appeared, as if "trying desperately hard to be a clean
water". Whenever the quality of water was good, complete
crystals formed, each distinctive in detailed pattern
and colour. Some of the loveliest, most perfect crystals
were from natural, unpolluted water sources, such as the
Sanbu-ichi Spring in Nagasaka, and the spring water of
Saijo, a town located in the highlands 500 to 700 metres
above the sea, famous for its sake.
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A
stunningly beautiful, asymmetric crystal
came from the fountain of Lourdes in France |
A stunningly beautiful, asymmetric crystal came from
the fountain of Lourdes in France. It was described as,
"A mysterious crystal that gives off the feeling of
mystical glory."
In certain rivers, such as the Shinano in the Niigata
and Nagano prefectures, perfect crystals were formed
from the water upstream, but not from the contaminated
downstream waters.
The effects of acid rain were abundantly clear in the
poor crystallisation of most rain water. The crystals do
carry messages, and crystal reading is as much art as
science.
One question that came to my sceptical mind was how
reproducible were the crystals? And to what extent is
the single crystal photographed characteristic of the
sample?
Emoto’s method is to place the same small amount of a
single sample of water in 100 petri-dishes, and then to
allow them to crystallise in the freezer under
well-controlled conditions. He then examines all the
replicates. No two will show exactly the same crystals.
Despite that, however, one can see that the replicates
were crystals of the same kind, they were definitely
variations on a specific theme.
Now comes the part of the book that really begins to
take one’s breath away. One can understand how
pollutants in water can affect crystal structure, though
it by no means explains the specific appearance of
crystals from the different sources. But one can
rationalise that in terms of minute quantities of
unknown dissolved substances, perhaps.
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Bach’s Air
for the G String gives the impression that
the crystal is dancing merrily |
However, Emoto’s group showed that starting from
distilled water, which failed to crystallise, it was
possible to generate crystals specific to the music to
which the water has been exposed. My favourite is Bach’s
Air for the G String, which "gives the impression that
the crystal is dancing merrily", and the Tibet Sutra,
which "talks to people’s souls and has a strong positive
energy that can heal people’s feelings". Elvis Presley’s
Heartbreak Hotel, gave three kinds of crystals, one
which looked like "a picture of a heart broken into
two", the second which shows "the two parts trying to
fuse together, and a third that shows "a newly formed
heart that overcame the difficult period". Or do you
think "this idea is too sentimental?"
Well, perhaps it is not so strange that water should
be sensitive to sound, which is a physical, energetic
entity, and that the quality of the sound could generate
some coherent vibrations in the water (see previous
article) that influence the crystallisation process.
But now, for the real stunner; Emoto’s group showed
that water can even respond to words. The same distilled
water to start with, one tube had the message, "Thank
you" written on it, while the other one had, "You fool!"
The one with "Thank you" gave nice crystals, whereas the
one with "You fool!" gave no crystals at all, and was
very similar to the results produced by exposing the
water to heavy metal music. And it did not matter which
language was used: Japanese, Korean or English. The
results were very similar.
"Love/Appreciation" gave a most elaborate, decorous
crystal, so did "Soul". "Demon" (removing the left part
from the Chinese character for soul) led to something
that looks like a disintegration of the soul crystal.
"Angel" made the crystal burst forth in a multitude of
flowers, while "Devil" looked distinctly sinister.
Even names were read by water. "Adolph Hitler" looked
like "You make me sick" or "I will kill you".
And pictures too were registered. When shown the
photograph of an innocent child, the water came back
with a crystal that looked to me like pure joy itself.
So, what does it all mean? Emoto believes all that is
based on HADO or Chi, a vital energy that comes
ultimately from the circulation of electrons around the
atomic nucleus. He believes that Chi changes according
to the consciousness of the observer, "the way they see
things".
How can this HADO be measured? By means of a machine
referred to as the MRA (Magnetic Resonance Analyzer),
"which measures various states of HADO, encodes the
unique energy pattern of each substance and checks
whether it resonates or not". It was developed in the
United States 12 years ago. Unfortunately, no further
details are given.
The same MRA machine is said to be able to
"transcribe" information from substances onto water, but
again, we are given no details on how it actually works,
apart from the following. "The measurement first starts
when the MRA puts out a faint resonance magnetic field,
which is then transmitted to the subject and substances
to be measured. Then the existence of resonance is
checked. By amplifying the output of the measuring
instrument HADO information can be transcribed." I have
to admit this does not make sense to me, which is a
pity, because this is where an explanation could have
been provided for results that border on the incredible,
especially to people who have been thoroughly schooled
to the conventional mechanistic perspective.
The same vague explanation is given for the
‘micro-cluster water’ of Dr. Lee H. Lorenzen. "Water
normally is not composed of independent molecules, but
rather they are hydrogen bonded to form small water
particles called clusters. When you align these water
molecules and make them smaller it is called
clustering." Do you make the clusters smaller or the
molecules smaller?
"Clustered water can easily make sharp turns and
subsequently can reach far into the corners of the
body," we are told.
This lack of explanatory detail and failure to
connect with conventional research findings have
severely hampered the development of what may be some of
the most important advances in our understanding of
nature.
What follows is a remarkable series of crystals
resulting from "information" transcribed, presumably
with the MRA, into various waters. This includes a dam
that stops natural flow, the essence of camomile and
fennel onto distilled water, where the crystal appears
to take on the form of the flowers themselves.
Could water respond directly to people’s
consciousness? Apparently yes. Crystals reflected the
panic during an earthquake and also the recovery period
three months later. Tap water of Tokyo, which was
formless, responded to the transmission of "Chi, Soul
and Spirit" of 500 people to give a distinctive crystal.
And, certain specially gifted individuals could make
the most polluted, formless water respond to the "Chi of
love" or to prayer, to give remarkable symmetries of
perfection. The Reverend Kato Hoki, chief priest of
Jyuhouin Temple, Omiya city, was able to change the
six-fold symmetry of the ice crystal to a previously
unknown, seven-fold symmetry. "Water is the mirror of
the mind".
It is impossible to read this book and see the
pictures of the endless variations of water crystals
without being affected. One may come away incredulous,
yet inspired to look for deeper understanding of the
remarkable phenomenon. Particularly so, now that the
more conventional physics and chemistry are homing in on
the strangeness of water, and of the quantum world.
Take the most incredible hypothesis suggested by
Emoto’s crystals, that consciousness could influence the
structure of water, is that so totally beyond the pale?
Perhaps not.
I first presented theoretical arguments and empirical
observations to support the idea that organisms are
quantum coherent in 1993. I was inspired by others who
have made the same proposal, albeit in different forms.
Since then, quantum coherence has been invoked in
explaining how the brain might work.
Quantum physicists Del Giudice and Preparata have
argued that, in order to account for the anomalous
behaviour of water, we need to consider its quantum
properties, and especially how quantum coherence could
arise in water resulting in long-lasting coherent
oscillations (see previous article).
Recently, there have been many experiments
demonstrating quantum entanglement of coherent systems
that may have applications in quantum computing. The
experimental, ‘long-lived’ entanglement of two
‘macroscopic objects’ was reported last September in
Nature. Admittedly, by long-lived, the physicists
meant 0.5 milliseconds, and ‘macroscopic objects’
referred to two samples, each containing about 1012
caesium atoms, not quite the size of a human being. But
until a few years ago, this would have been
unimaginable.
And so, it would not be beyond the pale to suggest
that our ‘consciousness’- think of it as our coherent
quantum field - could become entangled with that of
water, thereby influencing the structure of the water.
Some 99% of all the molecules in our body are water in
any case.
There is no doubt that these new approaches should be
vigorously investigated. They have large implications
for the health of human beings and the entire planet
earth. |