Monday, September 9, 2013

Structured Water is Vitally Important

But How Does One Get It?

There are two ways to have a supply of hexagonal (structured) water in your home.  One is the approx. $4,200 Kangen water system, which has many features, hooks up to your kitchen faucet and sits on your kitchen counter.

The other way, which I have used happily for five years is an appliance called the Vitilizer Plus.  It looks like a large blender, sits on the counter and does not require hook up.  The only requirement is that you use purified water. 

Not only is this more affordable (MSRP: $480), but the water tastes sweeter because it uses a mineral cube which houses Japanese coral to alkalize the water, as opposed to titanium plates which are used in the Kangen system.   It also uses vortex energy (via whirlpool action) to create oxygen in the water, mimicking a free-flowing river.  This action also restructures the molecules into their original hexagonal shape, as found in natural water sources. 

Hexagonal water is the only kind that can enter the body's cells, where it does amazing work flushing out impurities and greatly increasing intracellular communication, both of which slow the aging process. 

Dr. Mu Shik Jhon, the pioneering scientist, is quoted as saying "Aging is a loss of hexagonal water from organs, tissues and cells, and an overall decrease in total body water. Replenishing the hexagonal water in our bodies can increase vitality, slow the aging process and prevent disease." (M.S. Jhon, The Water Puzzle and the Hexagonal Key, Uplifting Press, 2004).

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