water.
At least according to Dr. Masaru Emoto. If you have never heard of him, here is an extract of the Wikipedia entry about him:
“Masaru Emoto is a Japanese author and entrepreneur known for his claims that human consciousness has an effect on the molecular structure of water. Initially Dr. Emoto claimed that high-quality water forms beautiful and intricate crystals, while low-quality water has difficulty forming crystals. According to Dr. Emoto, an ice crystal of distilled water exhibits a basic hexagonal structure with no intricate branching. Emoto claims that positive changes to water crystals can be achieved through prayer, music or by attaching written words to a container of water.”
When I first heard about that I was sceptical, yet an enormous photo documentation proves his findings.
In a nutshell, Emoto and his team communicate with the water by playing music, by praying or by putting labels with written messages on the bottle (facing the water). Afterwards, the water is frozen and during a particular moment (lasting about 20 to 30 seconds) when the temperature rises and the ice starts to melt, they take photos of the christals.
The results are astounding: water christals that had „listened“ to prayers or beautiful music from Mozart, Beethoven or even The Beatles looked much more beautiful than the christals that „listened“ to less positive music like heavy metal. Christals that were labled with negative words like devil or hate turned out very ugly. Positive words like angel, gratitude or love, however, produced beautiful christals!
If water reacts that extremely to words, and if we consider that the human body consists of more than 60 % (on average) water, does that explain, why people react to gentle words, to lovely music and to pleasant sounds with a positive attitude?
Regardless of whether Emoto’s findings are valid or true (he has never proven them scientifically), we somehow know that music we love has a more relaxing effect on us than music we don’t like. The same applies for words, whether they are written or spoken. Hence, using words wisely is totally recommended! Because you can feel the difference!
By the way, did you know that feel-good communication by Gaby Feile means: Creating memorable moments through positive emotions?
Do some window shopping at my Kommboutique to feel good.
What do you think? Is water the best listener in the world?
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