Download audio file (water treatment.mp3)
First Man: see…and put it on containers of water; the words “love” and “gratitude”.
And “gratitude” seemed to have more effect on the water than the word “love”
but they both had a very strong effect on the water and they realised
that the simpler the message, the better because when they tried to
put more, you know, like longer messages or when they tried to speak
in longer sentences to the water saying you know like “I really have a
great deal of respect for you”; you know “without you we wouldn’t
have”…that didn’t have as much effect as …
Second Man: One word.
First Man: …as just saying “love”, “respect”, “gratitude” and he said…
Second Man: BEAUTY!
First Man: …and he said something that …he said we were
constantly struck by things that happened, when we did these
experiments, for example and I think I am remembering this correctly
when he said that saying the word “gratitude” twice as many times as
the word “love” seemed to be the perfect combination almost like H2O.
Second Man: Right.
First Man: And this was a very interesting idea again as well.
Second Man: Love gratitude gratitude. Love gratitude gratitude.
First Man: Before we leave off on
Emoto,
there were two other things that really struck me in the text. One
was in the introduction. It was where he was talking about his despair
about society. And I suppose he was meaning mostly Japanese society
but more generally modern society and he was saying that …
(the sound of coughing)
….that after he came to understand water better…
(the sound of a coin dropping)
… he became much positive about the future of the world because he
realised that all of us everywhere in the world for all of our problems
are, you know, for the most part, a bit more for kids and a bit less
for old people, about seventy – seventy five per cent water…
(coughing again)
…and this filled him with hope.
Second Man: Yeah.
First Man: … and I thought this was an astonishingly beautiful simple …
Second Man: Mm.
First Man: …naive, if you like, but wonderfully hopeful idea,
and a wonderfully expressed simplicity about life, and the other thing
was when he was just beginning and he didn’t really know which way to
go with this research…
(coughing)
… he was encouraged…he … I forget how he came to know this woman but
there was a woman who has an Anglo name … I don’t know if she was
American or English or whatever, that was living and working in
Switzerland
and had been for many many years and she was around retirement age or
perhaps had already retired as a university professor; she devoted
her life with her team to finding better ways to deliver larger
amounts of water…
(coughing)
… to big populations of people in a healthy form and somehow somewhere
along the line during his kind of initial attempts to study water, he
had come across her… Maybe he had been to one of her conferences or
something … but anyway he was in correspondence with her and and she
was trying to encourage him in any way she could. When she retired from
university she continued her work with a private foundation and again
her main function was…focus was trying to deliver good quality water
to very large numbers of people in various parts of the world. Right?
Second Man: Mm.
First Man: This was her dream. And a wonderful idea and it was good to hear that there was somebody in the world thinking about that …
Second Guy: Mm.
First Guy: … but again it is not what is normally the idea. You
know? When people talk about irrigation schemes or you know providing
water, they just think of water as a basic commodity. They don’t think
about the quality of that water. Right?
Second Guy: Mm.
First Guy: But she said something to him that really struck me.
She said, it will be a great journey and whatever you discover about
water, it will be a great journey for you, and the one thing that I
always try to keep in mind is that we don’t have to treat water.
Everybody always talks about, you know, “water treatment” and
“treatment plants” and , you know, what do we do to water… We don’t have
to do anything to water. We just have to respect it. This really
struck me. You know?
Second Guy: Mm.
First Guy: And even more so as he developed his research…was…you know… It would be very simple to take care of water in the world.
Second Man: Mm.
First Man: We could go out there and sit next to that pool and
if there were enough of us and maybe even just two of us, we could
improve the quality of that water just by thinking good thoughts for
that water.
Second Man: Wow!
First Man: I am convinced of that.
Second Man: Wow!
First Man: On a scale like…you know….It was few years ago, I
think when we were both still living in Kyoto, where a whole bunch of
Japanese NGOs got together and they circled
Biwako and they prayed for its health.
Second Man: Mm.
First Man: And I didn’t know anything about Emoto at the time
but I am absolutely sure it was based on his research that those people
came up with the idea for doing that.
Child: Where’s my book?
Second Man: Excuse me. Where’s your what?
Child: Where’s my book?
Second Man: Your book? Do you want to draw a picture?
Child: Yes.
Second Man: … Yeah. Go on.
First Man: So rather than putting chemicals in the water to clean it, all that is really required is…
Second Man: … to speak to it.
First Man: Good will.
Second Man: Yeah. Good will. Love it.
First Man: In the same way that
the Ganges by all scientific standards is a dead river without oxygen and yet it has freshwater dolphins.
Second Man: Yep.
First Man: …living in it