Is All Spring Water Safe?

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Q&A with leading Health Expert and BodyMind Visionary David Wolfe.

Question: Is all spring water at the source safe? I’ve read that spring water can contain nuclear contaminants? True or not?

Answer: Not all spring water is safe. Let’s first differentiate between hot and cold springs. Generally, I do not recommend drinking hot springs waters, although some are drinkable.

There appear to be three different types of cold springs:

1.) Primary water springs:

This type of spring comes from a vein of water in the Earth and is usually rising in volcanic areas or where dissimilar mineral strata are next to each other (Example: granite rock against limestone rock or igneous rock against sedimentary rock).

This type of spring water is not contaminated with atmospheric debris, but could be high in bad calcium. To check this kind of water: I recommend boiling the water off to see if it leaves behind calcium residue.

Also, get a TDS (Total Dissolved Solid) reading for this water. Any number over 100 indicates too many particulate minerals in the water for regular drinking. Since this is living water, you can filter it, lower the TDS, add the Adya Clarity product, and use it for drinking.

2.) Seepage springs:

This is the type of spring that can be bleeding out of an aquifer inside a mountain or a valley. These are usually found in valleys or at the bottom of a mountain. This type of water can be contaminated with anything that is sprayed or put on the land. To check this kind of water:

I recommend boiling the water off to see if it leaves behind calcium residue. Also, get a TDS (Total Dissolved Solid) reading for this water. Any number over 100 indicates too many particulate minerals in the water for regular drinking. Since this is living water, you can filter it, add the Adya Clarity product, and use it for drinking as long as an objective review of the aquifer indicates no possibility of pesticide or nuclear contamination.

3.) Forest springs:

These are low TDS (Total Dissolved Solids) springs that are created by the forest itself. This is an ideal, Ormus-rich, hydrogen-rich drinking water. Water rises up hills and mountains in these forest ecosystems and forms springs at the top of hills and mountains in the same way that sap rises up trees until the water reaches the tree’s springs: chlorophyll in the leaves.

The debris of the forest–stones, pebbles, wood, mushrooms, leaves, twigs, etc.–eventually builds up soil that is similar to bark. The forest soil allows subsurface water to be protected from light, heat, and oxidation.

The fractal, golden-mean spiral pathways and tubules present in this type of soil allow water to fall upwards (just like in bark), eventually reaching the top of the hill or mountain where the water can rise no farther and must reveal itself. At that moment the water bubbles from the ground, is imprinted with astrological energies of that moment, is oxidized (mated), and as a result multiplies.

What comes up as a trickle is within 10 meters suddenly a creek. The water running down the creek takes on gravitational atmospheric forces, becomes heavy and continues down the hill. While in the Earth, before it shows itself, the water has dropped its sedimentary minerals (iron, calcium) in order for it to fall upward and gained levitational qualities.

To be clear, what I am saying here is that gravity is a force that can be displaced by certain phenomenon: absence of light, heat, oxygen, and the presence of fractal golden mean spiral tubules and pathways, allowing the substance to move upwards without friction.

Forest spring water is excellent for the joints, nervous system, and immune system as it contains high-quantities of levitational Ormus minerals and hydrogen.

Article by David Avocado WolfeDavid Avocado Wolfe’s Free Membership >>Website: www.davidwolfe.comDavid Wolfe on YoutubeFacebook: @DavidAvocadoWolfe