Thursday, December 11, 2014

We Got It All Wrong

There is something wonderful about winter.  It is an inward time.  Time to reflect on the past year.  The events.  The twists and the turns. The beautiful and rawness of earth and all its geology.  Nature.  It tells the truth if we are willing to just observe.
Snowflake:
 
But my English upbringing told me to hide our emotions.  They aren't polite and nobody is interested in the first place.  WRONG!  Good friends care about your emotions for starters.  Who said emotions were polite.  That is just another social construct and I don't buy it!
 
The truth about our emotions and the toll they take is evident in many things.  One is water.  Did you know that water in all of its forms tells a story? 
 
Let's look at snowflakes, although water droplets tell a story, too.  The story of the land, the story of your emotions.
 
The late scientist, Masaru Emoto, Ph.D. studied he hidden messages in snowflakes:


According to Dr. Masaru Emoto from Japan, the formation of ice crystals and snowflakes is influenced by different environmental conditions, pollution, human thought and even music.

Studies undertaken by the japanese researcher have shown that aesthetically beautiful snowflakes are produced by pure water, music from classical repertories written by Beethoven and Mozart, and even positive thoughts and spoken words such as "Thank you". On the other hand, distorted and incomplete flakes developed when water molecules were exposed to heavy metal music and negative thoughts such as "You Make Me Sick, I Will Kill You".

Dr. Emoto's work is widely published worldwide but unfortunately at present has little hard scientific research to back it up. If the findings are true though then one thing is certain: with the current temperatures showing no signs of dropping in the Alps, we'll soon all be joyfully singing "Let it snow let it snow let it snow".

 
What does your snowflake look like?  Your water droplets on a given day?  Yes, we got...we had...it all wrong.  
 
Now we know.


 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment