Source Water Memory, (2014). [Documentary]. Icarus Films
Deep Ecology and Consciousness Dispatches
What if water remembers what the world forgot? In the vibrating space between molecules, water may be telling us the story of life, not as it once was, but as it always is. A story of form shaped by vibrational frequencies. Water is more than H₂O; it’s life’s essence, connecting all beings. Modern science often overlooks its dynamic properties. For most scientists logically thinking in terms of water, it is treated as a solvent, useful, yes, but inert.
Water is not just something we drink; it’s the substance for the building blocks of life, providing us rejuvenation, and health. The human body is composed of more water than anything else, making up over 60% of our total weight. In a healthy adult male, that translates to roughly 42 litres of water flowing through every organ, every cell. Women carry slightly less on average due to higher fat composition, but the difference is slight. Some researchers argue that, by molecular count, water makes up as much as 99% of the body. Water regulates temperature, cushions joints, nourishes cells, and carries signals through our nervous system as a liquid conductor. We are, quite literally, beings of water. If water has memory, then what does that say about us?
“Water is the first thing we should be taught in a biology class,” said Dr Luc Montagnier, co-recipient of the 2008 Nobel Prize for discovering HIV.
Despite its importance, in textbooks, water is described in a page or two, rarely more. Yet, in the hands of pioneers like Jacques Benveniste and Luc Montagnier, water becomes an intelligent medium capable of holding memory, transmitting signals, and carrying the blueprints of life itself.
What they rediscovered is something many ancient traditions always intuited, that water listens and remembers. It carries the resonance of emotions, thoughts, molecules, and medicine. However, when such findings threaten the foundations of reductionist materialist science, the cost is persecution, exile, or worse.
Keep reading with a 7-day free trial
Subscribe to Carlita Shaw to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.