Because the lymph vessels carry mostly water to bathe and nourish all the organs of the body. And when they dry up, general organ failure results—a quicker death than starvation.
Now, you are probably not in the
desert while you are reading this or even preparing to travel the desert
(although you could be). This is not
about harsh-terrain survival methods.
So, I would like to describe
another life-or-death situation. In
fact, three of them.
This story is very interesting
because three men (not known to each other at any time) were diagnosed by three
doctors (also not known to each other at any time). All three men were given the same news: They had less than a year to live. The evidence was irrefutable. And yet none of the doctors could figure out
why. And none could offer any further
help.
Further facts these men held in
common tell the rest of this striking story:
All three were farmers all their
lives.
All three moved off their farms to
"live up" their remaining days in the city.
All three lived out their lives far
beyond the time given them by their doctors.
None of them died by the mysterious
unknown means predicted by their doctors.
Further study of these cases showed
they only had one other thing in common:
The water supply changed: Filtered
by the city's system instead of coming directly from the wells in the ground on
their own farms.
What is it in the water that could be
responsible for these conditions?
The answer is minerals. More specifically,
inorganic minerals.
A very good definition for organic in this sense is: organized
(into plant form). And inorganic means not organized.
Plants thrive on mineral-rich soil. These are inorganic minerals from
rocks, etc.
Plants convert these minerals (or organize them) into plant form on the
cellular level. Only after these minerals
are converted are they organic. Only
after these minerals are converted do they have any food value to humans. They are now digestible in the form of fruits
and vegetables.
Inorganic minerals get into the
body through drinking water. Like the
three farmers above.
Inorganic minerals in water cannot
be used by the body in any way. In fact,
they only get in the way and have to be gotten out of the way before the body
can function normally.
Examining the details of this
scenario shows it is a matter of life-or-death importance, just like the man in
the desert.
Lymph, which is mostly water,
carries nutrients to the organs, bathes the organs and then carries waste
particles away from the organs to exit the body.
Inorganic minerals that are carried
into the body by drinking water interfere with the lymph’s functions of nourishing
and bathing the organs because of the basic nature of lymph (which is that of a
vehicle or carrier). It carries
nutrients to the organs to nourish them and then bathes them and carries waste
particles away from the organs to keep them clean.
Just how important are these
functions of the lymph system?
Extremely important because the
body will die in a matter of a few days with these functions not being
done—like the man in the desert.
And where do you feel it most when
you are very thirsty? Okay, maybe it’s a parched throat. So, why doesn’t just drinking enough to get
your throat wet satisfy your thirst?
Because the real need signaled by
thirst is that your organs are collectively demanding nutrients and bathing as
provided by the lymph system and that
is of extreme importance. Failure is not
an option. So, the drive to satisfy a
mighty thirst is mighty strong.
In order for the lymph system to do
its job most effectively, it must be clean of foreign particles so that it has
maximum room to carry as much nutrients as possible to the organs and then maximum
room to carry as much waste particles as possible away from the organs.
When one drinks water containing inorganic
minerals (foreign particles) which cannot be absorbed as nutrients by any part
of the body, they create a serious problem for the lymphatic system because the
organs must be cleaned with clean water and nourished with minerals and
nutrients they can use. But inorganic minerals are worse than
useless—deliver enough of them to an organ and the function of that organ gets
obstructed more and more by the buildup until it fails. Again, not an option.
Therefore, the solving of this
problem is prioritized ahead of lesser problems.
So, in taking emergency measures
because the lymph system has been forced to do
something with these inorganic minerals which it got from the drinking water,
the lymph system literally dumps them off in various parts of the body. These are parts of the body that are not as important
as other organs are in terms of immediate survival.
Over time, these forced deposits
gradually build up and, later on in life, cause serious problems in those body
parts of “lesser importance.” These are problems that are normally common to
older people such as arthritis, often called a “depository ailment” and
hardening of the arteries—but these and a lot of other conditions aren’t just
“something old people get.” They get it every day, little by little, from
young to old.
Even the medical condition of “old
age” that many are declared to have died from is just something the doctors
can’t pinpoint, like with the three farmers and like general organ failure—the
lymph system has been overworked and has not been able to keep up with its job
of properly nourishing and bathing the organs.
A lab report I read had discovered
a metallic ion to be requisite for the hardening of the arteries—and isn’t iron
a common metallic element in rocks and soil?
Fortunately, there is a way to
prevent further “emergency deposits” from happening and there is even a way to clean
up the deposits that have been accumulating all the years of a life fed by tap
water—if it is not yet too late.
The answer is simply steam distilled
water.
That is empty water.
When steam rises, it leaves all particles behind. Boil a pan of tap water until it is dry and
you will see deposits left in the pan. Run
a water distiller, the same thing happens.
A water distiller is designed to condense the steam and capture it as
purely clean empty water. Just like
nature’s rain water (in a pollution-free environment, like back during Earth’s
native state)—just H2 and O without any additives.
Drinking steam distilled water is
one of the healthiest things one can do.
Anyone who says otherwise, whether he or she knows it or not, has bought
into a line put forth by big drug companies who attempt to crush anything they regard
as possible competition that could eat into their profits which they value much
more highly than their own patients. Their
actual working motto is probably close to something like… “Sell drugs and sell
more drugs to handle any side-effects, etc.,” because that is what they do.
“Spring water” or “filtered water”
is coming to you from the ground and is still loaded with inorganic minerals. Any concept of healthy “mineral water” (or
any water from the ground without steam distilling) is dead wrong. Period.
No matter how fancy the bottle it is sold in and no matter what “everyone
knows” because that is just another line sold to everyone for profits. The true motivational bottom line is money—at
no matter what “expense” to everyone.
One doctor cured patients with distilled water by having them drink a lot of it—one gallon per day for at least 30 days. These patients were in similar conditions to
the 3 farmers above. The doctor, not
knowing why the patients were dying, just knew distilled water was their last
hope—and it worked.
I have not taken any drugs since
1981 (other than for surgeries and dental work). I have also been drinking distilled water
since that time too. And I can assuredly
attest that I’ve had not one single adverse effect from drinking distilled
water and I would sorely miss it if I had to go without.
The best steam distilled water is
made at home with a distiller. A good
distiller has a stainless steel interior and a glass receptacle. Some are better than others.
The next best distilled water is
what you buy from the store in a plastic container. This is not as good as homemade because some
plastic particles are absorbed by the distilled water which, again, is empty,
and therefore has some attributes of a vacuum (similar to the role it plays in
the function of lymph) and it will pick up loose microscopic particles it comes
in contact with. And so it is not as
pure as homemade distilled water—one might easily tell the difference between
the two after a while of drinking either one of them (as I have) but it is
still tons better than tap water.
Ideally, one would drink a lot of
distilled water in small amounts over short intervals throughout the day—each
time before the emergency signal of
any thirst is experienced. Thirst
indicates a certain degree of neglect that must be remedied. It’s healthier to stay out of the realm of
neglect. The lymph system works
constantly and a small continual supply of distilled water will keep it
replenished and doing its job optimally.
A gallon per day is excellent maintenance, not just remedial. (One gallon per day works out to just a pint
every hour or a 4-oz cup every 15 minutes or 2 ounces every seven and a half minutes.)
So, drink distilled water to your
health!
PS.
This is added here to answer “Where to buy a good one?” I have purchased
several steam distillers from a couple of different suppliers and I found this
one to have a superior product and superior customer service: https://www.h2olabs.com/store
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