Masaru Emoto

2012-03-26 19:36:42

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Japanese researcher Masaru Emoto is known for his fascinating pictures of water crystals before and after being exposed to certain words.


Masaru Emoto

What he found was water that was labeled with harsh and negative words resulted in deformed crystals (if they could form at all). The most perfect crystals developed when the words "love and gratitude" were pasted onto the bottle. He also found water reacted in a similar way to music. Harsh heavy metal was not an aqua favorite.

His book "The Hidden Messages in Water" is a New York Times best seller. He has also written "The True Power of Water." He will be in Cranberry 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday for a talk, "The True Power of Water," at the Regional Learning Alliance. Visit www.regionallearning-alliance.com for directions. For tickets, $35, go to www.epiphanyworks.org or call 724-452-1131.

Q: Did you ever expose water to the word "fire"? How did it react?

A: We didn't do that testing yet. I think it would depend on fire from wood or fire from plastic or fire from something else. Yes, the crystal of water might change.

Is there a difference between a frozen water crystal and a snowflake?

Yes, there is a big difference. Frozen water crystals are much bigger than snowflakes, maybe 100 times or so. But the shape is very, very similar, a hexagon.

Do you believe water has intelligence?

Fundamentally no. I believe water is a mirror of our human mind. So if a human being is good, the water is also good.

So, if a person talks to water before he drinks it and asks the water to heal him, it will work?

It does work. Yes, I tested such a thing many times.

In your books, you talk about vibrations and say that everything emits a vibration. Does water only receive vibrations? Does it give off its own?

I believe water is the only medium that carries vibrations. But every material includes water, even diamonds. So everything has a vibration. Vibration is energy and, without energy, we have to die.

Patricia Sheridan can be reached at psheridan@post-gazette.com or 412-263-2613.
First Published September 26, 2005 12:00 am
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