What Moves Water Inside the Body?
Untangling the Mysteries of Life, Aging and Spike Protein Injuries
December 12, 2024
One of the fascinating things about science is that while it is an excellent tool for discerning the nature of reality, it will simultaneously refuse to look at data with implications that challenge the existing scientific orthodoxy. As such, an unfortunate situation is created where science advances knowledge to a point but then reverses polarities and paradoxically becomes a barrier to that advancement.
An excellent illustration of this dynamic can be seen with water, and as a result, many of its properties are relatively unknown. One of the most important properties is that provided ambient infrared energy is present in the environment and a polar surface exists, water (H2O) can assume a semi-solid state as H3O2 (H1.5O) where it eliminates a proton (hydrogen ion) and behaves like a liquid crystal. Since a significant portion of the water within the body is in the liquid crystalline state, the biological consequences of this water, in my eyes, represent a key forgotten side of medicine.
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Previously, in this article, I discussed the long lineage of scientists who have studied this semi-solid form of water, followed by listing some of the key properties of this gel-like 4th phase of water and what causes it to form. Since it has been studied by so many, it has many names (e.g., interfacial water or EZ water). Henceforth it will be referred to as liquid crystalline water (which I believe is the most accurate description for it).
Likewise, in this article, I illustrated how water’s ability to become a partial solid through its liquid crystalline phase explains many of the structural mysteries of the body. The body and its tissues have a significant strength and durability one would expect to find in a solid, but at the same time, it has a high degree of flexibility and capacity for rapid movement one would expect in a liquid—two contradictory properties made possible by water’s unique characteristics.
Because liquid crystalline water is effectively both a solid and liquid, it can accommodate these conflicting demands. An incredible degree of natural engineering, in turn, exists within the body to utilize its properties to accomplish both. In addition to creating structure (including, for example, the barriers that protect your blood vessels from damage—which also happen to be a vital target of the spike protein’s toxicity), the body also frequently makes use of phase transitions between water’s liquid crystalline state and its regular liquid state.
The transitions are important because they provide the mechanisms that underlie a variety of physiologic processes our existing models fail to explain effectively. For example, as discussed here, there are a variety of significant inconsistencies within the current model to explain how muscles contract, but they have not been seriously critiqued because no better model exists for muscle function.
The phase transition model instead argues that muscles are designed to form liquid crystalline water. The formation of that water inside the muscle tissue naturally expands and stretches the muscle tissue. Then when the liquid crystalline water is transitioned back to its regular liquid state (which can happen instantly once a zeta potential disrupting ion contacts it—such as calcium entering a cell), the muscle rapidly contracts since an expansive pressure is no longer present to resist the tension in its stretched proteins. Likewise, another application of this expansive force is that it allows plants and seedlings to break apart rock solid objects as they grow.
Note: water is one of the only known substances that expands when it freezes (this property is very unusual). The other seven undergo a smaller expansion (and are already solid at room temperature).
Similarly, the formation of liquid crystalline water (which holds a negative charge) with an immediately adjacent layer of positively charged protons (the displaced hydrogen ions) creates an electrical charge gradient. Rather than dissipating, this gradient persists (essentially functioning as a battery), and this charge can be measured directly.
Thus, one of the most interesting characteristics of liquid crystalline water is that it effectively functions as an energy source living systems can utilize. Its ability to spontaneously move into a more structured form (which the muscles, for example, utilize as a store of potential energy for a contraction) is one such example. Some of the other critically important utilizations of water’s ability to convert ambient infrared energy into a usable form of energy include:
•Photosynthesis. Frequencies of light that increase liquid crystalline water have been reported to increase plant growth, and a particulate material that was designed to increase the formation of liquid crystalline water was shown to create at least a 2-3-fold increase in root length and/or formation of shoots.
•Nerve signal conduction (agents that block the formation of liquid crystalline water block nerve function, and nerve signal conduction depends upon a phase transition within the neuron).
Note: I believe one reason neural therapy (injecting an anesthetic like lidocaine into an overactive nerve or scar to reset the inappropriate autonomic response) is able to create profound resolutions of autonomic dysfunction, pain and trauma is because it breaks apart aggregations of liquid crystalline water and allow microcirculatory pathways to become unblocked and restore the body.
•Cellular transport and division (these also appear to depend upon the phase transitions of water).
•Fluid circulation.
Fluid Circulation and Life
If the flow of a stream is obstructed, the water there will quickly transform from clear pristine water to a murky pool with numerous things growing in it and is no longer drinkable. Chinese Medicine, in turn, frequently uses this process as a metaphor for what occurs within the body when stagnation occurs within the body’s own fluids.
Note: in addition to this stagnation causing pain and infections, this stagnation is also a common cause of inflammation.
Sadly, beyond the dangers of blood clots or strokes, few appreciate just how vital healthy fluid circulation is for the body or how many different types of fluids move through the body. Conversely, I believe many of the benefits attributed to a variety of therapies arise from their increasing fluid circulation within the body.
For example, exercise is well-known for improving anxiety and depression (to the point the benefits of exercise exceed the benefits of the highly dangerous medications we typically give for anxiety and depression). Similarly, the same benefit is often reported following vigorous intercourse. In both cases, various explanations have been proposed, such as “the activity produces endorphins,” but it must also be acknowledged fluid movement within the body simultaneously occurs.
I personally believe in the stagnation hypothesis for a few key reasons:
1. Everything in our modern lives encourages fluid stagnation (e.g., sitting at a computer all day).
2. I typically observe those with the greatest degree of fluid stagnation carry the greatest psychological burdens (e.g., they are more depressed).
3. I frequently observe immediate improvement in individuals with a variety of chronic health issues I associate with fluid stagnation following them doing something which increases the fluid circulation within their bodies (e.g., infrared saunas or restoring the physiologic zeta potential).
My perspectives on fluid circulation are not unique, and a variety of healers employ various approaches to improve fluid circulation in the body (e.g., massage therapists trained in lymphatic drainage). Similarly, I have long theorized that some of the healthiest exercises that exist exert much of their benefit by increasing the body’s fluid circulation.
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For example, the patient I know who has aged the best (they are almost 90 but look and functions like they are in their 50s) has followed three very simple rules. Get lots of sunlight (which increases fluid circulation), frequently fast, and use a large trampoline (not a rebounder). The large trampoline is utilized since the transient zero gravity point the large trampoline creates at the top of a jump appears to effectively mobilize the fluid within the body, which I suspect is due to many of them being low pressure systems (as they lack a heart to create a pumping pressure within them) and hence are much more sensitive to external influences.
Similarly, one of the most common traits I observe in the elderly who have maintained the functionality of their bodies decades after their peers is that they’ve made a point to take a walk daily. I believe the benefit of their regimen is that walking moves the fluids throughout the body and does so without straining or damaging the body (which you see with many other activities over time, like running on concrete or intensive weight lifting). Additionally, I have also seen similar effects in longtime practitioners of traditional Chinese and Ayurvedic exercises designed to support fluid movement within the body. Lastly, certain slow abdominal breathing exercises correlated with promoting longevity also improve the fluid circulation of the body.
Unfortunately, while many healers try to work with fluid circulation through the method they are familiar with, their results are very inconsistent. As a result, there is an immense degree of variability observed in response to the innumerable treatments for fluid congestion (although those who excel in this area often become widely renowned for the results they get).
When I’ve looked at why there is such a deficit in ways to address fluid stagnation inside the body, I’ve concluded the primary issue is a widespread lack of knowledge in the anatomy and physiology of fluid circulation of the body.
Copyright © A Midwestern Doctor

