Know Thyself - E138 - Veda Austin: The Hidden Intelligence of Water: Structure, Memory & Healing
Episode Date: March 11, 2025Crystallographer Veda Austin unpacks the mysterious intelligence of water and what she's learned from 15 years of researching it's design. She reveals the freezing method she uses to study 4th... phase water, capturing fascinating images of water reacting to photos, words, music, and more. She shares the molecular difference of tap water and spring water, the memory and consciousness of water, and how she reacts to claims of pareidolia and repeatability in her work.Try Alive Waters & Save 50% on your first order: https://alivewaters.com/ Use Code KNOWTHYSELFAndrés Book Recs: https://www.knowthyself.one/books___________0:00 Intro1:06 Water as an Intelligent Designer8:23 Powerful Phase Between Solid & Liquid14:24 Her Favorite Examples of This16:31 Addressing Criticism, Pareidolia & Repeatability 31:05 Structure of Spring vs Tap Water34:41 Ad: Alive Waters35:44 Impact of Water Quality on Our Health39:44 Spiritual Side of Water & Tears41:53 To Become Like Water44:16 What Water Reveals to Veda48:33 Memory & Water's Eternal Nature52:21 Energetically Charging Your Water57:25 What Water to Drink1:01:26 Coming Into Right Relationship with Water1:04:41 Conclusion___________Episode Resources: https://www.instagram.com/vedaaustin_water/https://www.vedaaustin.com/https://www.instagram.com/andreduqum/https://www.instagram.com/knowthyself/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJ4wglCWTJeWQC0exBalgKghttps://www.knowthyself.oneSpotify & Apple: https://open.spotify.com/show/4FSiemtvZrWesGtO2MqTZ4?si=d389c8dee8fa4026https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/know-thyself/id1633725927
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There are more water molecules in our body than all the stars in the perceivable universe.
The study of water is the study of self.
I've been a crystallographer for so long, and after seeing water respond rather than react to conscious expression,
that's when I really started to see water in a completely different way.
We can see the voice of water in picture form, and it can get much more complex than that.
I've seen water override what I'm thinking to show me what I'm feeling.
Water shows me reflections of myself that are so beautiful.
And yet sometimes I find that hard to see.
Water is not to be taken for granted.
Water is the house of God.
To see water as a representation of something divine.
And then we could start seeing ourselves as something divine.
Austin, thanks for being here.
Thank you for having me.
What was the shift for you from seeing water as a substance to a living intelligence?
When was that shift for you?
Well, I've been a crystallographer for so long, 14 years.
And after seeing water respond rather than react to conscious expression,
that's when I really started to see water.
in a completely different way.
I mean, I was in a horrendous car accident
and I had a healing experience with water.
But until I was working in the realms
where the unseen becomes seen,
where thoughts literally are being crystallized in ice,
I don't know that I fully comprehended
that water was an intelligent designer.
And I would say that
some examples might be helpful
when I was curious
is my consciousness
impacting the water or is water conscious
and so I started working with words
that are conceptual words
words that I don't have a picture for
and one of those words was ego
so we don't buy ego at the store
and we don't know what ego
exactly looks like. So with the word ego, I wrote it down on a piece of paper, put my petri dish
of water on top of it for 30 seconds, removed and froze using my short-term freezing method.
And what water designed, I could never have even thought of myself. It had big shoulders,
this little neck, a little face and a giant balloon head. And it was such an incredible
representation of an outward expression of ego.
and I couldn't only think gosh
I never thought this
I never projected that thought
this is what a designing
something from its own
from a unique place
I also used the word grief
thinking or maybe I see a broken heart or tears
but what it designed the outline of a person
with holes inside
I spoke the word
yeshua
and got this amazing, like, kind of urn shape
where all these beautiful, intricate patterns.
But as I looked closer, there was something that looked like writing.
And it didn't look like English.
And I ended up zooming in on that, taking a photo,
and I put it out on social media saying,
does this look like anything to anyone?
I had over 1,000 people reach out to me saying,
that's like handwritten Hebrew for Yeshua.
none of these things I could have expected.
And I think when I started to see Water as a designer,
so it doesn't design exact replicas of the influence.
For example, maybe I put my hand in the water
and I might see an image of a hand,
but for the very first work I ever did with Water,
that's kind of what I did,
and Water designed what looked like an X-ray of my hand.
So how is it doing this?
It's not an exact photocopy.
It's like an artistic expression that is recognisable.
So that led me into the query of water as an intelligent designer
and not just a drink or not just something we bathe in,
but actually I think it could well be the house of the divine.
So like anything in life, you can look at something through multiple perspectives.
We could look at water through the philosophical, the mystical, the mystical, the energetic,
the biological, the environmental, so many different components in which we could look at water.
And perhaps because it is that analogy, like a fish doesn't know what water is because it's so ubiquitous within its environment.
Like we've always known water. It's been a part of our life.
So we just, you know, we almost take it for granted. We forget to drink it.
We don't recognize the power of bathing in it, and we don't understand the intelligence of it.
And so before we dive deeper into your experiments and the work that you've been doing
and the possibility of water being more than just a mere substance or liquid, as we know,
H2O, from a molecular standpoint, why do you feel like it's important to have these conversations
about what water is right now?
Like, why is now an important time to be talking about all this?
I think any time is an important time to be talking about this.
But especially now, I mean, water has revealed itself
so that it can be seen and heard and understood.
Certainly in this visual way,
with my work and with other people's work,
where we can see the voice of water in picture form,
it's important because water essentially is teaching us about transatlantic
about transparency, about a universal truth.
Water is teaching us that not only just by the molecular count,
but it's helpful to say this.
By molecular count, not by volume, we're 99% water.
There are more water molecules in our body than all the stars in the perceivable universe.
The study of water is the study of self.
The study of water is the study of.
spirit and the study of water is the study of the divine. So when is this not a good topic to
talk about or focus on? And I think in ancient times, and certainly I know in indigenous
cultures, water is still riveted, is still considered holy. In ancient times, water
wasn't even called water. It was called the waters because it was considered to be a sacred body
of water. When Romans brought plumbing into creation, people started to suddenly see the waters
taking away their waste. So the waters was reduced to the word water. And now we reduced it even
further to H2O. But in the English language where the waters or waters outside of biblically is used
is when we say who waters broke. There is this memory of water being sacred and
something that houses the divine.
There is something really unique in the perspective of us entering Earth,
being through amniotic fluid and in water and, you know,
just stating in that period for a while.
So there's a lot of really philosophical understandings that I'm excited to dive into.
I love how you said the study of water is the study of self.
And it's very on brand for this podcast.
What I'm very much so passionate about.
But when you started crystallography and taking photos of water in a certain state, right,
would you say it's not quite ice but it's not liquid yet,
how do you describe what is the stage in which you're taking photos of water
that are infused with different intentions and stuff?
It's more of a plasma stage.
So the stage between liquid and ice, water is more like a plasma.
Sometimes it's called the fourth phase of water.
There's a liquid, solid gas and then a type of gel or plasma.
And that type of water is actually H302.
It has an extra hydrogen and oxygen atom.
And it is more viscous.
So a good example of a fourth phase water is aloeira or airquite, thinks it's stretch.
And it has an ordered molecular structure.
It absorbs more light and it has negative charge.
So all of those things are qualities of fourth phase water.
And I discovered this freezing method through my own curiosity
and learning about the fourth state of water
and reading Dr. Gerald Pollock, the fourth phase of water,
and his book and his writings.
And so he said that in the stage between liquid and solid,
in the freezing stage and also in the melting stage, this fourth phase water is there.
So I was curious, like, when are these structures starting to form?
And is it actually in this fourth phase stage?
So I started to open my freezer earlier and earlier to see what was going on in there
because I use a regular freezer.
I'm not using a microscope.
I take all my photos on my iPhone.
And at about five minutes and 20 seconds in my freezer,
I saw there was liquid on top and ice underneath.
So I took it out, naturally tipped the liquid away, and photographed the ice that was stuck to the dish.
And what's interesting about this ice is that it's not exactly ice.
It's not exactly a solid.
It's more of a plasma.
And a wonderful example that a friend of mine who also is a crystallographer who learnt my method,
Christina, she had done some crystallography using a glass baking dish.
So you saw all the beautiful wave patterns there.
And she's holding it up.
And so what normally happens is that the water will just melt or evaporate.
But with her particular dish, the sheet of ice moved down the dish and then scrolled upon itself,
with all of the information still embedded.
bedded on the ice. And when we showed that to Dr. Jerry Pollack, he said that the most likely
answer was that it was sheets and sheets and sheets of fourth phase water. So we know that it is
more of a viscoss type of lasmatic ice, which allows more light not only to be absorbed,
but more light also to be released. And when I've opened,
the freezer at the perfect time, I filmed and photographed the ice shoot. And coming out of the
ice shoot, there is a light that looks a lot like a halo. And I think it is light that paves the way
for the design of the imagery. And given that water is only one part matter, the two hydrogens
and oxygen, and that the rest is photonic light, that literally makes water a lighthouse.
So that's the shortest way I can describe that the stage of water that I'm working with is not an ice, it's not a solid,
because water freezes in three main stages.
I think of those stages like spirit, blood and body.
The spirit stage is the stage where I take the ice out and do my crystallography.
it's interesting because that ice, essentially if you want to call it that or plasma,
has pushed all of the solates out.
So everything that's in the water that you would see in an analysis, for example, has been pushed out.
So it's extremely pure state of water.
And then the second stage of freezing is where there's like a water sandwiched between,
water sandwiched between two layers of ice.
So water has built scaffold.
folding, and the liquid water, when that is frozen, and then you have a solid.
So we know you're over-frozen when there's water trapped between two layers of ice,
or if it's a solid and there's lots and lots of bubbles or darkness in the ice.
And the dark bubbles, they come from the colour of all the solates.
So the clarity of the ice that I'm working with is so clear because it's not holding the things that are in the water,
what water holds. Once you finally get to a solid, if anyone's seen an ice cube, it's quite cloudy.
It's cloudy because of what's in the water. If you freeze a distilled water, you'll see a clear cube.
So, but I like to work with water with salts and minerals. I think of distilled water more like
the observer only, whereas I think of spring water like an active,
participant with the ability to observe.
And our bodies are much like the ocean.
We have salt, water, and minerals within us.
And I think it's the salts and minerals that also help to store and ground the memories
that we have.
So the idea that thoughts and intentions can literally affect the molecular structure
of water from a secular point of view is pretty out there.
You know, it's not really widely accepted.
I think a decent amount of people, especially in, you know, certain spaces are familiar with
Masaru Imoto's work. And as his work wasn't as, you know, embraced by the scientific community
for its kind of repeatability and the scientific approach of being able to kind of, you know, show this,
I'm just curious because in your process, you were infusing intention or through music, through
seeds, through words, through photos, different imagery, and you're seeing how water is responding
to it, right? And so before we kind of address the first thing that I mentioned, what are a couple of
your favorite examples of this that you've done? I remember seeing the sunflower one,
which was really beautiful. What are a few that stick out off the top of your mind? Yeah, I love that one,
because in each seed, there's about 10% of water still in it, and water is always in conversation with
itself. So when I put the sunflower seed into the dish of water and then removed it, water didn't
design the seed. It designed the outcome of the seed. It read the information of the seed and
designed the sunflower. Same thing with a flax seed. I see the flax pod, which is kind of like
the fruit of the flax where the seeds are. And same thing with an apple seed. I see the apple.
But I also see with the apple, for example, that I've let that wooda melt, then re-frozen it three
days later and seen the apple is still there and then let that melt and re-froze it seven days later
and the apple is still there. So I love that. I mean, there are, I have over 64,000 photos of
water responding in an intelligent way. It's really so hard to choose. That's incredible. Yeah,
there's so, so many and just flipping through some of the imagery in your book was, it's really cool
to see it so artistic and feel so creative, which I know is obviously like you see yourself also as a co-creator
and lover of art in this whole process too. And I think that in pursuit of, I guess, total materialistic
validity, we kind of lose the metaphorical, poetic, and beauty of a lot of these things, too. So, but how do you
address head on the criticism of paradolia and the lack of potential repeatability with these things?
Like, ideally, we should be able to put a sunflower seed there every time and see this same result, right?
So what do you say?
If water was a machine, maybe, that's not what we're working with.
We're working with something quite different.
I do get a lot of more scientific attention for hydroglyphs
because of the vast amount of repeatability I have.
And what are those?
So essentially what I have is three ways that water shares information.
A signature pattern that allows us to see the type of water it is
and that's also very much seated in repeatability.
So I see a repeated pattern.
For rainwater, for example,
which is like a fanning pattern,
it always is the same kind of pattern.
Spring water that's frozen within half an hour of collection from a spring,
forms what I call a star fern hexagon.
It's like a six-pointed star with ferns off each leg
that would form a hexagonal pattern.
Municipal tap order has a lot of,
disorder. Filtered water has a lot of compacted lines that are kind of stuck together. So you can
identify the type of water you're working with based off repeated patterns. So that's a very
scientific kind of way of viewing that because repeatability is there. The repeatability is there.
Yeah, and the structural differences of those different types of water, filtered, well,
spraying, tap. Yeah. Yeah. They all,
correlate to have repeatable different structures.
That's right.
And I have an ability over all of these years of doing this, of neutrality.
So I simply don't have a desired outcome quite often.
That's come over time.
It's really easy to get your head involved because you want to see something.
Right.
And water is wild.
So we can address a number of things about that.
The fact that water is in what many mainstream scientists would say molecular chaos.
It means its hydrogen bonds are breaking and it's reattaching.
It's in what you could see as chaos, like changing or updating its information every trillionth, trillions of a second.
So like, well, you know, water components wouldn't possibly have memory based off the fact that it's in constant chaos.
So if you were to ask a quantum physicist the same question,
they could say, well, yeah, there's molecular chaos,
but there's a difference between chaos and excitement.
What we're seeing here in water is more of a molecular excitement,
where water gets excited about something.
There is a connection between the observer and the observer,
observed. There is a connection between the conscious expression and the receiver, that is water,
that can be, I think, explained better through light. I've already mentioned that I've seen
light coming out of the tip of the ice, just as it's beginning to take form, and it takes form
of that information. And human beings, essentially, they have emit light. We have conscious expression
and we emit light. That's not woo-woo. And I got some really wonderful information from an
indigenous lady. Now, this might say, like, where is she going with this? Because when we're
talking about science, but I spoke about this at the annual water conference in Portugal last year,
a bunch of physicists and biologists and water scientists,
and many of them had like this aha moment.
And I said, well, this lady said she could speak to bees.
And she said she'd watch their hives for long periods of time
until one day a bee somehow communicated to her and said,
look, I always give them some kind of personality.
We don't mind you looking at the hive.
Could you please just not look at it for so long
because your conscious expression is putting too much light,
in the hive and we prefer it to be darker.
When you're working with water,
you can't ignore the fact you're also working with light
and frequency.
And each person has their own frequency.
Water is a receiver.
And when it's given the right environment,
it can share that received information in picture form.
But we're seeing like snapshots.
shots of information.
And it can get much more complex than that.
But I kind of want to address something as well, is that people talk about paradolia.
Oh, it's, you know, it looks like a crack and da-da-da-da-da in the wall,
and that looks like Mother Mary or something like that.
Well, to address that, Dr. Jerry Pollack, in my earlier part of doing this work,
He said, why did you put 25 of your photographs together?
Make a survey, circulate it, you know, through social media or something,
and simply say, what does this image look like to you?
Not leading anybody on in any way.
And so that's exactly what I did.
And I gave it to other people.
So people didn't know that it was me.
They didn't know what they were looking at.
And 298 people did the survey.
And 85% of those people were able to recognize.
the ice imagery for what the influence was prior to freezing.
And there were three images where 100% of people were able to recognize the image.
So that's a kind of a big deal.
So the images are recognizable.
And then you talk about repeatability as being like the gold standard for science.
Well, a nice example, even with the art, and then we'll get to hydrocliffs,
which is where all the repeatability is.
But even within the art,
people often ask me, yeah, but it, you know, can it repeat that?
Well, actually, it can do something quite complex.
In my talks, I often show this picture.
So I have my friend Wendy,
who was the first face I ever saw in water,
and I used to her photograph as an image,
because I was in the early days wondering,
well, you know, is this just some random thing?
And what if it starts to show me different people's features,
and maybe it's not random?
And so I put the dish of water on top of her photo and sure enough I see her face.
So then I took the face of the ice face and I printed that out and used that as the influence.
And water designed a negative of her face.
Side by side you can literally put them one over the top of each other.
There's repeatability even in imagery.
So when it comes to hydroglyphs, essentially what I'm using is words is my rosetta stone.
I noticed that if I put something in the freezer and it was on top of like,
this is a example of like a pizza box and it had pizza on it,
would design a pizza.
Like I said, oh, that's really unusual.
That's interesting.
And then I noticed that words seem to affect the way words.
behaved. I had a petri dish of water on top of a wedding invitation and the main word was
marriage and it showed its amazing ring. I'm like, huh, that's really interesting. But hydroglyphs
evolved from music. So my son had read Emoto's book, Messages in Water and he had looked at
all the pictures and he came to me and he said, oh, Mom, I think what a
hates me. I'm like, why, honey? And he said, but look, look, water only likes classical music and
John Lennon and it hates heavy metal. And I'm like, oh, I didn't know you liked heavy metal. He said,
I don't. But he said, it also suggests that water doesn't like swearing and I like Tupac and Tupac
swears therefore water must hate me. And he said, even I swear sometimes when you're not,
when you don't know about it. I'm like, my baby, what is not in judgment?
it may make that clear, water is not in judgment.
I said, let's see what water will do.
I said, I'm pretty sure we ever did the heavy metal,
probably just didn't like it.
So we did this whole exploration over a very long period of time
with different genres of music,
simply playing a song, leaving the room,
coming back and freezing.
And we started with Tupac, a song called All Eyes on Me.
And we got this big eye in the ice.
And so he was like, okay, I think water's like, I think I'm good with water now.
And then that led on to like the House of the Rising Sun with two pillars and a sun coming up.
The bane of almost every parent's life, baby shark, there was like this shark with a big open mouth.
It went on and on and on and on and that's why in my book it's got a huge music section.
There's rock, there's heavy metal, there's classical music, there's R&B, there's electronic music.
there's chanting, you know, a bit of everything, reggae.
And over and over again, I saw, well, water kept, like, picking up from words of songs.
And when I did stairway to heaven, I kept seeing the stairway image.
And I repeated that over and over again.
And each time, not one in ten or not one in a hundred, I would see this kind of ladder
image.
And after seeing it multiple times, I started to think, no, I wonder.
of that actually is like a symbol for this word. And so I simply wrote the word stairway down
and then did my whole process by putting the dish on top of it for 30 seconds, removing and freezing.
And the reason I say 30 seconds is that it's not too long and not too short. It's not true
that if you leave it there for like four days, it's going to imprint it stronger. Water is far
more receptive when your conscious expression is part of the equation. As soon as you remove your
conscious expression, it kind of goes back to whatever it was doing. That piece is quite important.
It's like a relationship. You know, when you meet somebody for the first time and you're
already really interested to get to know about them, you might be in a cafe, but your focus is on
one another. So it doesn't matter if there's noise in the background and the waiter or waitress
comes and serves you. Your attention is there as it's being held. And that's the same within
this relationship aspect of water. Coming into right relationship with water is a very important
piece. So I started working with words. And so when I kept seeing the same symbol repeat by using
the written word stairway, I realize that there is a symbol here because to say I have one,
I need to have seen the same symbol repeat using the same word not only in English and multiple
languages at least 50 times. And so in my talks, I generally give 64 examples of each repeated
hydroglyph. And since then, I now have somewhere in the region of 45 hydroglyphs that have multiple
layers of meaning. So there are several words attached to one symbol and they interrelate.
So this is kind of a big deal. To put it mildly, it allows us to have a kind of universal
language, a way in which we could potentially even decipher languages that are undeciphered
so far. I'm so fascinated at just in the topic of science.
climatics and seeing how sound and the reverberation of energy affects the physical,
molecular, structural components of water and sand and just how the vibration carries information
and correlates to certain geometric patterns. Because in many ways, geometry is like the silent
language of nature. And we see that it is carrying information. And what geometry is showing,
and for example, you look at a snowflake or you look at the structural.
component of water or how it's different and it comes from these different sources like in your
hydroglyphs. There is a direct correlation between order, proportionality, symmetry, and beauty and
geometry. And it's fascinating to me because often we think when we see something beautiful,
it's just it looks pretty, but it's actually signifying deeper order behind what we're seeing.
And when we look at like, what is the health of the water I'm drinking, for example, you, you know,
water that is structured and both its appearance of how it looks,
but in this actual geometric form is going to have a better impact on our physiology when we drink it.
And I just, yeah, I just find it really fascinating that link between beauty and geometry
and the vitality of the water.
Because, I mean, it's just, it's magic.
You know, you look at like a snowflake and you see this incredible, unique design every time that's formed.
and there's no word or system of thought that can explain what that is.
You know, it's just, it's beyond, and it's really incredible.
And so I'm just curious what your thoughts are on geometry is sort of the silent language of nature
and how it's portraying different information across different structures for water.
I mean, the signature pattern of spring water, for example,
is this beautiful geometric hexagon.
and its geometries are perfect.
In fact, I'm looking at the energetic state of health
when I am looking at the crystallographic patterns of water.
And so...
And so in your study, you've like, for example,
this is spring water and a cup like this,
that, of course, the vessel water is held in affects the structure as well.
You'll see a very different structure of the water
versus filtered water that comes out of the tap.
You do see different patterns.
But I would also say that, especially spring water that's been moving through the earth,
it's very sensitive to light.
And those patterns do change when it's been exposed to light, particularly...
PV?
No, particularly artificial light.
So just like humans are impacted by artificial light, so is water.
But even just sunlight, its structures do change.
So when it's been going through the infrared light through the earth
and through that kind of filtration system,
when it comes out of the earth,
what I've seen is that its structures can change
within 72 hours when exposed to light.
And it's always interesting to me when you go to like Whole Foods or somewhere,
so many beautiful springleaders that they're held in plastic,
see-through bottles. So I love to collect my own spring water and collect it in blue glass bottles or
myron glass bottles because myring glass kind of creates a force field around the water.
Very, very helpful for people that want to drink water whilst they're doing a therapy
session with someone, for example. So a practitioner who is...
Is that like blue glass?
It's actually like a violet glass, but it looks black.
And that is a protector of not only structure, but of the outside information.
So good for traveling through a lot of EMF,
where through airports, airplanes, and that kind of thing.
And you can make blue solar water with blue glass bottles.
It has to be glass.
That is the only time I would recommend to put.
water into the sunlight for any length of time. Because if you think about it as a spring
water, spring water when it has been left in the sunshine in a C-3 container for a couple of weeks,
maybe even a week on its own, it should start to grow an algae because spring water has all
of the components for life. There's water, there's light, there's minerals, so an algae should
grow. And yet, usually when you buy water, the spring water, it's often gone through some
process, whether that's certain filtration, that maybe some kind of sterilization might be
some kind of silver ionizing. There's various aspects to it to stop that from happening.
A quick note on that, by the way. If you're curious about the water I personally drink and
recommend its natural spring water from alive waters. They are the only unprocessed fresh spring
water delivery service here available in the states. Some benefits of the water are its perfect mineral
balance, silica, and it tastes great. They sell these Italian glass cups, and their glass for their
jars are infinitely recyclable, and I feel it helps maintain the structure of the water as well.
currently they deliver to most of California, New York, Austin area, South Florida, and Portland.
But if they don't service your area, they have resources on their website to help you find wherever you live in the world,
find natural springs in your area, both hot and cold.
They were kind enough to give you guys half off your first order with them.
So if you want to take advantage of that, just go to alivewaters.com and use code know thyself for 50% off.
Your first water delivery and everything purchased with it.
Link in the description, stay hydrated folks, and back to the episode.
I'm curious how much of physiological illness and disease could really be supported by drinking water as it was naturally intended to, which we're so divorced from in the modern world.
We are.
I mean, in New Zealand, I'm very fortunate.
There are many springs where you can go and collect water from.
I mean, it is nice for people to feel safe.
there's been a lot of scaremongering going on, you know, with spring water and all this kind of thing,
which is interesting since it's gone through such an incredible filtration system.
But going to the mouth of the spring, it's a wonderful experience.
Many people don't even know what spring water behaves like or looks like.
They have never been able to go there.
They're used to it kind of being pumped through some kind of tap.
But it's a whole incredible organ in many ways.
Most spring waters that you have access to have already had an analysis done.
And you can see there's a living quality within that water.
And many people have shifted from drinking municipal tap water
over to raw wild harvested spring water
who found a really big change in not only their health,
but even in things like your eyesight, your eyelid.
your eye lens is 99% highly ordered structured water.
When I had a healing experience with water,
it was from a deep, deep underwater artisan water.
And nearly everyone who tried it had their eyesight improve.
So there are many, many things which indicate that nature knows best.
I find a lot of, and I'm grateful,
there's a lot of people turning towards non-GMO to growing their own food, organic,
and all these different kinds of things, and yet they turn to different machines,
like different ionising machines, for example, to get their water,
rather than going to natural sources.
And those ionizing machines are forcing water to go through a process
of electricity and an electrical process.
And that's not as stable.
For example, that unnaturally lifts the pH up to like a pH 10, for example,
they might go for that, or say, a pH 9.9 or 9.5, which is very high.
And then also has a stream of acid water,
so it splits the water into two parts, acid and alkaline.
and you can modify the measure of alkalinity.
But when exposed to air,
that then that pH starts to drop within half an hour to an hour.
Whereas we've done many tests with the spring water,
for example, the artisan water that helped heal me seven years of time
and it is still in the high nines.
It's so fascinating because it's really,
right in plain sight, like when we look at water for its cleansing, purifying capacity,
both in drinking and its ability to dissipate elements within our system and cleanse the system
internally, but also anybody who's like bathed in a river or like I was in Kauai about six months
ago and there's this amazing cold river that I creek that I love going to and just laying as
it like wash over my head through my whole body literally feel like reborn after.
I mean, it's no coincidence that, like, baptism and like Jesus, you know, and being reborn
is literally in water, funny enough.
Funny enough.
So it's like there's not an aspect of life in which water doesn't touch.
Even in the Bible, water is mentioned 722 times more than faith, love, and worship.
So that's kind of a big deal.
And it's interesting too to me because the smallest verse in the Bible,
The shortest is simply Jesus wept, which is all about the tears, which is the water coming from the eyes.
Which have a different chemical molecular makeup based off of tears of joy versus tears of sadness.
Yeah. I've done some work with tears and different emotional tears and also with chemical tears,
which are the ones where you like cut an onion, you can't help but cry.
And the one where I cut the onion, it looked like the iris of my eye.
But interestingly, the one with the different emotions of joy and relief and sorrow,
they all showed variations of emanating hexagon.
It's fascinating because Dr. Joe Dispenzo, who's been on the podcast a couple times,
is doing actually work in his retreats where they're capturing tears.
And there's three different types of tears that can come from our system
and they'd have different chemical and hormonal makeups.
And it's fascinating what those reveal about, obviously, our emotional landscape.
as water is the element of the emotion.
So, so fascinating.
Well, our faces are designed in such a perfect way
that when we cry in our sorrow,
but also in our joy,
there's two different things have gone on there.
But the same thing is,
is that they come out of our eyeducks,
come around our cheeks,
but roll back towards our mouths
because they've been reordered and restructured
to either heal our heart
or help heal our heart
or to expand our heart further.
So we have this beautiful liquid system,
this liquid medicine right within us.
They always think it's beautiful
that water reveals itself
in those moments of joy and in sorrow.
What does it mean to you to become water-like?
To become water-like?
Become like water.
Yeah.
To become like water.
transparent
to become non-judgmental
to flow
not force
to forgive
it's interesting to think of water
as a mirror in that aspect
because of course
when water is still we can see a reflection in it
but it also in many ways reflects
our emotional state and
is responding to it and
I feel
a difference and in the
yogic tradition in Eastern wisdom traditions, it's said to, like, actually, like, hold your water
with both hands and, like, be with it for a second as you drink it slowly. And I know a lot of us,
especially in the Western, more flippet and drinking it with one hand and standing up and walking
around. But it's best physiologically to be, you know, had sitting down and drink and
intentionally, just like eating intentionally or an intentioned deficit. Very much so across the board.
But it is interesting to see the mirror-like aspects of water.
I've also seen water override what I'm thinking to show me what I'm feeling.
It's very aligned with how we're feeling.
And an example would be if I'm genuinely sad.
But doing some crystallography, for example, people offer,
I have a waiting list of two years for people who are sending me stuff to do crystallography with.
So I was working on a project with flowers.
certain flowers in water
and then taking them out to see if we'll see the
flower signature.
And
during the whole time,
that whole day of working with water,
water never showed me one single flower.
It just showed me sad faces every day,
all day.
Whenever I'm sad,
it just shows me some reflection of my emotional state.
When you mentioned what it's like to become water-like
and most people are familiar with that Bruce Lee quote.
And we look at the qualities of water of how it adapts, changes evolves, fits to its environment,
flows, is reflective, all these things.
What does that look like in a daily practice, like in a really practical aspect of being like water?
What does that look like to you?
Well, I have been on this journey with water, and it has been a journey.
I have seen reflections of myself.
I wish that I could see.
water shows me reflections of myself that are so beautiful
and yet sometimes I find that hard to see
because I look in the mirror and I don't always see that
and I know that so many people do the same thing
we can be so nice to other people
and yet we can be so horrible to ourselves
and when water shows me something
if I even say show me to me
you know, show me a reflection of me.
And it shows me something like the creation hydroglyph back,
which is one of the most beautiful hydroglyphs I have,
which is like waves throughout the dish,
or it shows me a star,
or it shows me just the incredibly beautiful things.
And I'm like, it's not just looking at all of the stuff that I focus on.
It's seeing the fluids,
love in me. And what water's shown me and has helped me practically each day is that
being in right relationship with all bodies of water, it's not limited to people, that includes
the air even. It includes animals and plants and bodies of water outside of ourselves even.
and I don't see myself as separate all the time.
It's easy to see ourselves as separate
because we look in the mirror and we see this body.
But the water we drink, it's gone through the trees
and the clouds and the dinosaurs and ancestors.
It's wild to think about.
It is wild to think about.
And then we drink it.
And it becomes us.
Even with food, you know, like there's so much water and fruits, for example,
and we take on the energy imprint of that thing we're eating.
We're taking in, so we have energy of the apple.
We have the energy of the banana becoming us.
We literally are connected to everything.
And yet we just don't think about it in that way.
And we also, it's so easy to take things for granted,
take water for granted.
Sometimes the power goes off where we live
and we don't have running water.
It's like we have spring water
that we've collected in these containers,
but it quickly reminds you
of how much we work with water every day
and how much we take it for granted.
Water is a mirror.
And when I'm working in crystallographically,
I see it's speaking to
the energy inside of me, and it's reflecting that. It's reflecting like an energy signature of myself.
It's reflecting things that I'm thinking about, or even things that are about to happen.
Hydromancy has happened many times in my work, and like an example would be putting my
thumb into the water, obviously removing it, and it's designed an amazing thumb with the details
of the lines on my knuckle and the nail.
But in the nail, in the ice, there's been a chip.
And I literally chipped my nail three hours after doing that crystallography.
And so it kind of predicted my nail was going to get chipped.
So it's kind of extraordinary.
But I've seen that several times.
But bringing it back to what water shows me is that water is not to be taken for granted.
Water is like the house of God.
Yeah, I mean, without it, none of us exist, right?
It's the connective tissue of the planet.
And we're looking for life out in the universe.
We look for water.
There is no life without water.
And I love how you shared the interconnectedness that water is,
the binding force between us all and between all life.
And it is poetic, existential to think about how the water that is in us now
and that we drink tomorrow has been on the planet for a very long time
and it has gone through glaciers and rainforests and Jesus
and the great stages of time.
And it's interesting.
And if water does continue and hold memory,
then what does that say about the water that we're, you know,
spending time in Iran and drinking.
Well, some of the water even came from meteorites, from outer space.
So there is different energy signatures and all of the water bodies where it lands,
but then it evaporates again, so water reincarnates for all to see.
And earlier on in the podcast, we were talking about, you know,
how do we know, how does water receive information?
Well, how do you feel me?
there's water speaking to water. How can we know that our child is sad or something has happened
and we just have this sense, this feeling like, oh, it feels like there's something wrong.
And then if we ring them and we find out that we were right, if we think of somebody and then they
call us, this is all explanations and things that we may have experienced in the world where
water is speaking to water and it's not limited to time, space or distance.
So I always kind of smile inside in this thing where it seems so difficult to imagine that water can
receive information and share it within a crystallographic medium because we feel, we're feeling
beings made of if you reduce it down or you boil it down, so to speak, where salts, water
minerals and consciousness.
And water is not just a liquid.
It's all these multiple different stages
and there's water in the air.
The fact that we breathe out means there's water in the air.
And that also helps us
have a liquid crystal antenna or a liquid antenna.
whereby through our electrical charge,
the water in the air is able to be attracted to electrical charge.
And through the both of them, electrical charge and a very,
kind of more like an evaporated water,
we're able to receive information and share information,
but also feel and feel and sense
the information in what we might deem
as future through intuition.
When we don't listen to our intuition
we always wish we had,
it's sort of saying,
oh, maybe we shouldn't get in that car,
or maybe I should ring that person.
And we're receiving information
that's just that the water is already received.
It's just a bit ahead of our timeline, if you will.
And we received that as a kind of knowing,
as a feeling.
So there is ways in which we can really explain a lot of the way we are through the waters.
I would love to bring this in a really practical aspect.
In Ayurveda disease, the first step of disease is accumulation.
And water has the great capacity to dissipate, purify, cleanse through water fast
and then just drinking good water throughout our day.
And like you said, the humidity in the air,
the water that we're bathing in and breathing in in hot showers.
And today's day and age,
because we have covered a good bit of the structural component,
when it comes to a little bit more of the material aspect
of what's in water from the TDS to the mineral count
to unfortunately a lot of fluoride, chlorine, heavy metals, and whatnot,
for people that want to come into best relationship,
bright relationship with water, what would you see are like all the categories from a high-level
overview that one would consider in, you know, having the best water?
You know, I've been working with the autistic, non-speaking children from the telepathy tapes
and ask them that question, because I get asked that all the time.
Like, what can we do for the waters that are polluted?
what can we do to make a difference?
And they essentially said to ask to be a vessel for source to flow through
so that the waters can receive that information from source
because through mining and various other things that have happened,
they feel like they want to feel that source energy again,
that connection, and you can literally be that for them
to simply invite source to open up to give the waters everything they need.
We're so used to everything having to be so practical and so physical,
and we have completely forgotten the power within us to affect and improve things.
We have bodies of water that are able to communicate with other bodies of water.
And although at the moment I don't see chemical change, I see structural change,
when, for example, I'm walking with municipal tap water that holds all the varied things
that tap water has, but then when you let that melt and refreeze it and hold it to your heart for
one minute lovingly and refraise, you see massive structural change, ferns and flowers and whatnot.
Well, I think in time we might see, I hope, I haven't seen it yet, but I hope that there can
even be physical change, the chemical change. But all water has potential still. And I think sometimes
we don't give water enough credit.
If water is a sentient being, for example,
why would we think it couldn't shift?
Why would we think that this world,
you know, perhaps it is that water doesn't want to flood,
it wants to flood the hearts of people?
What if as a collective people could simply come together
as bodies of water to help shift
the open source waters that we have?
I see biggest changes in tap water with collective consciousness more than any restructuring
device or anything out there.
And what encourages me so much is I'm hearing these words of wisdom from people who I believe
have, who genuinely are tapped in, not only, uh,
as young people from the telepath who have telepathy,
but who can also tap into other realms of consciousness
and a divine consciousness.
And I trust them.
I trust that they are saying
there is simple ways we can transform the waters.
Even municipal tap water still has potential.
Of course.
And it doesn't take away from like the changes,
structurally and how it feels in our system when we're intentional with the water and
how we drink it and how we care for it and of course we live in a world where it will serve us and
our loved ones and family and children best if we're really also mindful of of what before like
how it gets to the stage before we're about to drink it or bathe in it you know and so um
i really love all the emotional and and like intentional like components to it and how it's important to
and how consciousness can affect structure of water and whatnot.
But do you pay much attention to how chlorinated
and the heavy metals that are in water and stuff like that?
I mean, you can smell it.
So when I can smell water, I don't drink it.
That's interesting because I feel like you get to that point
by drinking pure water for a while
and then you can really actually smell water that has stuff in it.
It's so strong.
Yeah, it's pretty obvious.
When you become cleaner and cleaner in your body,
you can taste the difference in different waters.
You can smell when there's things that really shouldn't be in water.
Like water has many subtleties.
I'm fortunate enough.
I don't have to drink municipal tap water.
Even where we live, we have tanks that click rain.
And in New Zealand, where I live rurally,
we don't have a lot going on in our skies, fortunately,
so the rainwater is pretty beautiful.
But many people don't have that option.
And so many people, all they can afford is like filtered tap water,
and I see that a lot of people still drink that.
That's why I do talk about your conscious expression,
because I've seen it makes it at least structural change.
But if you're collecting water, I love to keep water out of light.
like even by making little bags out of raw silk, silk itself even builds exclusion zone when water is near it.
You can do the same thing with linen because it has a high hertz frequency.
It keeps it out of the light if you wrap it around your bottle, but it also helps to keep structural integrity last longer.
Yeah, I think I have linen kind of covers over the spring water deliveries that we get here.
And it just helps, I think, preserve the water and like algae after a month from building.
Yeah.
But, you know, my area of specialty is in crystallography.
And so there is lots of people out there with lots of different options for you being able to get the water to a beautiful state.
and also so that it's filtered all of those things out.
I think that that's where I'll leave that
because I don't promote anyone's stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
It's just a good reminder and invitation to filter out
a lot of the bad stuff that you're going to be,
like people don't realize also like the effects of breathing in
from showers and bathing even more so than drinking.
Yeah, because it's become like a,
a gas that we're inhaling, it's much worse.
So, yeah, there's lots of different filtration systems
that you can choose to use,
but it's up to the person as to what they most resonate with.
But there's also a lot of fear out there,
and it's a lot of, you know, not feeding the fears.
Yeah.
Because...
Yeah, awareness.
Like, you know, I think awareness that just leads to fear
is going to perpetuate disease,
but awareness that leads to action that empowers you, I think, is ultimately the goal.
I think if we were able to get back to the time when the waters were clean
and the waters were, we could just go and easily go and collect our spring water
and live off the land and live on the land with bare feet,
you know, we would definitely feel quite different as an entire society.
everyone that goes walking along the beach barefoot
it's getting all the negative ions
they're already starting to have that feeling
of feeling a little bit better, a little bit lighter.
What's one shift you wish humanity would make
in its relationship to water?
I wish they would stop seeing it
as only something to drink,
as only something that washes away.
You know, our way
in our dirt and to see water as a representation of something divine.
And then we could start seeing ourselves as something divine.
Because water is a reflection of something that's related to God.
You know, and I think it's everywhere.
there's very few places we can ever go
where there is not a body of water somewhere,
whether it's a plant or a lake or a person or an animal.
And when you see, for the last 14 years,
I've been immersed in water proving to me,
showing me, I don't think it, I know it,
that water has conscious,
expression. It might well be emotion that we can see. And yet someone once said to me,
what if water is expressing its consciousness now this through us and every living thing to
observe itself from every different perspective? So it could well be that. But even just starting to
think, well, why is water in every creation story? Why is water in every creation story? Why is
water talked about so much in virtually all religions.
Why is there something special about water?
Why can water be holy?
You know, why is it that even in the Quran, it talks about all living things were made
from water?
There's cleansing, there's healing waters.
You know, and even in my Maori culture, my father's native New Zealand Maori,
The word for spirit is Wairua,
why meaning water and ruah meaning two.
It's a rudimentary way of saying it in English,
but the two waters, the physical and spiritual waters,
like the heavenly waters and the earthly waters.
So I think the simplest answer was the first answer,
and that simply is that to stop seeing water is something that
is just something we drink,
something that we just have around us,
something that's just H2O.
Someone once said the two hydrogens are feminine,
the mode of levity and the large oxygen,
it's masculine in the mode of gravity,
and together they create harmony and liquid water on Earth.
And I loved that.
I love the communion,
the connection between masculine and feminine,
creating harmony.
What I love about getting to do this podcast,
is getting to talk to many people from disparate fields of different areas of study,
you know, from philosophical and to the environmental, into water,
into like seeing how intercorrelated every aspect of this all is.
And you have shared a lot of reminders that I know are really impactful and needed right now,
like, re-inviting that reverence to all life and the water that enables it all.
So just this has been amazing and sharing a lot of gratitude for you and for sharing your work.
And before we close out, do you just have any last words you like to share with our audience or anything before we head out?
A couple of days ago, I spoke to two autists and one of his name is Noah and his sister, Adriana.
and Noah said when I asked you know the question what is water
he simply said that water is the first expression
of the creator's first love
that's a big mic drop right there
the love that you share for water
just radiates out of you and through your eyes
and how you show up and so it's been a joy
and I'm looking forward to connecting
and just being friends.
So thanks for coming on.
Thank you so much.
It's been wonderful.
Yeah.
For everybody, thank you so much for tuning in to this episode of the Know They Self podcast.
Let us know what this episode has shifted in your perspective of what water is and your
relationship to it.
Until next time, be well.
