Your Body And Water

Crystallized Water

YOUR BODY IS NOT MADE OF WATER, IT IS MADE OF LIQUID CRYSTALS AND THEY HAVE BEEN SCRAMBLING THE SIGNAL

You were taught that the human body is 70% water. You imagine a biological balloon filled with the same liquid that comes out of your tap. That is the greatest oversimplification in modern biology.

The water inside your cells is not regular water. It is Structured Water — a fourth phase of water discovered by Dr. Gerald Pollack at the University of Washington. Not solid. Not liquid. Not gas. A gel-like, crystalline phase that conducts electricity, stores information, and communicates via electromagnetic frequency.

Dr. Pollack proved that when water is exposed to infrared light, it spontaneously forms an “Exclusion Zone” — a layer of perfectly organized molecules that generates an electrical charge. Your cells are lined with this water. It is the battery that powers every biological process in your body.

In 1988, French immunologist Dr. Jacques Benveniste proved that water has memory. He demonstrated that water could retain the electromagnetic signature of a substance even after that substance was completely diluted out of it. The water remembered the frequency. He published his findings in Nature — the most prestigious scientific journal on Earth.

Within months, his laboratory funding was cut. His reputation was destroyed. His career was over.

Why? Because if water can store and transmit frequency, then the entire foundation of chemical medicine collapses. If your cells are filled with liquid crystals that respond to electromagnetic signals, you do not need a chemical pill to change your biology. You just need the right frequency.

Now look at what they did to your water. They pipe it through miles of pressurized metal pipes. They blast it with chlorine. They add fluoride. They strip it of every mineral and every natural structure it once carried. By the time it reaches your glass, it is electromagnetically dead.

You are 70% water. But not their water. Your body was designed to run on structured, coherent, frequency-responsive liquid crystal. And they made sure you never had access to it.

Quantum medicine does not treat symptoms. It restores the signal. Fix the water. Fix the frequency. The body remembers how to heal.

Source: https://x.com/maximumpain333/status/2055785328351604931?s=20

ChatGPT is a bit more conservative on the matter:

There are a few real scientific ideas mixed together in that post — but the conclusions it draws about “quantum medicine,” “water memory,” and suppressed healing technologies are not supported by mainstream evidence.

Let’s separate the science from the speculation.

1. “Your body is not made of water, it is made of liquid crystals”

This is misleading.

The human body is indeed mostly water by mass (roughly 50–70% depending on age, sex, and tissue type). But the water inside cells is not simply identical to bulk tap water. Water near proteins, membranes, and cellular structures behaves differently because of molecular interactions. That part is real and well-known biophysics.

However:

  • This does not mean the body is “made of liquid crystals.”
  • Cells are not giant crystalline frequency antennas.
  • Biology still fundamentally depends on chemistry, ions, proteins, DNA, enzymes, and metabolism.

Some biological structures do exhibit liquid-crystal-like organization:

  • cell membranes
  • collagen fibres
  • parts of the eye
  • DNA packing

But saying “the body is liquid crystal” is more metaphor than accepted biology.


2. Gerald Pollack and “structured water”

Gerald Pollack is a real scientist at the University of Washington who studies what he calls the “fourth phase of water” or “Exclusion Zone (EZ) water.”

His experiments suggest that water near hydrophilic surfaces can form more ordered layers than ordinary bulk water.

That is an interesting and legitimate area of research.

But the leap from:

“water near surfaces behaves differently”

to:

“disease is scrambled electromagnetic water signals and quantum medicine restores them”

is not established science.

Key points:

  • EZ water is not universally accepted as a distinct “fourth phase” in the dramatic way social media claims.
  • There is no strong evidence that drinking “structured water” cures disease.
  • No clinical evidence shows that commercial “frequency devices” restore cellular water coherence and heal illness.

So:

  • Pollack’s work = real research
  • internet claims built on it = often exaggerated far beyond evidence

3. Jacques Benveniste and “water memory”

Jacques Benveniste did publish controversial research in Nature in 1988 claiming ultra-diluted solutions could retain biological effects.

This became one of the most famous scientific controversies of the late 20th century because:

  • independent labs largely failed to reproduce the results
  • investigations found major methodological problems
  • the claims aligned closely with homeopathy, which lacks robust evidence beyond placebo in most studies

The important thing in science is not:

“Was a paper published?”

but:

“Can independent researchers reliably reproduce it?”

Benveniste’s findings did not become accepted scientific fact because reproducibility was poor.

That does not necessarily mean a conspiracy destroyed him. Extraordinary claims require extraordinarily strong evidence.


4. “Quantum medicine”

This term is usually a red flag.

Real quantum physics is a rigorous branch of Quantum Physics describing behaviour at atomic and subatomic scales.

But many alternative-health marketers use “quantum” vaguely to mean:

  • energy
  • vibration
  • consciousness
  • frequencies
  • hidden healing

without measurable physics behind it.

There are legitimate scientific fields involving quantum effects in biology:

  • photosynthesis
  • enzyme tunnelling
  • magnetoreception in birds
  • quantum chemistry in molecules

But there is currently no accepted evidence that:

  • diseases are primarily “frequency distortions”
  • organs can be diagnosed from “energy signatures”
  • consumer “quantum frequency” devices cure disease
  • water can reliably store healing electromagnetic templates

Many “quantum medicine” products are scientifically unvalidated or outright pseudoscientific.


5. Chlorine, fluoride, and “dead water”

This section of the post is highly misleading.

Chlorine

Chlorination of water supplies massively reduced diseases like:

  • cholera
  • typhoid
  • dysentery

It is one of the biggest public-health advances in history.

Fluoride

Water fluoridation remains scientifically controversial in some circles regarding optimal levels and policy, but mainstream evidence supports its effectiveness in reducing tooth decay at regulated concentrations.

Neither chlorine nor fluoride has been shown to:

  • destroy mystical water memory
  • erase biological frequencies
  • turn water “electromagnetically dead”

That language is not scientific terminology.


6. Why these ideas appeal to people

Posts like this resonate because they:

  • combine real science with emotionally compelling storytelling
  • offer a simpler explanation for chronic illness
  • frame the body as naturally self-healing
  • position institutions as suppressing truth

And to be fair:

  • medicine does not know everything
  • chronic disease is genuinely frustrating
  • stress, sleep, diet, sunlight, movement, and environment do profoundly affect health
  • the nervous system and bioelectric signalling are real and important

But that does not validate the broader conspiracy narrative.


7. What is scientifically supported?

There is good evidence for:

  • hydration
  • sleep
  • exercise
  • sunlight/circadian rhythm
  • nutrition
  • stress reduction
  • social connection
  • reducing toxins/smoking/excess alcohol
  • some uses of electromagnetic medicine:
    • MRI
    • TENS units
    • pacemakers
    • deep brain stimulation
    • transcranial magnetic stimulation

The body absolutely uses electrical signalling:

  • nerves
  • heart rhythm
  • ion gradients
  • membrane potentials

But that is very different from:

“all disease is scrambled frequencies.”


Bottom line

This post mixes:

  • genuine biophysics,
  • speculative hypotheses,
  • misunderstood quantum terminology,
  • and conspiracy framing.

Some underlying concepts are real:

  • structured behaviour of water near surfaces
  • bioelectricity
  • electromagnetic effects in biology

But the stronger claims:

  • water memory as established fact
  • suppressed healing frequencies
  • “dead” tap water
  • quantum medicine restoring cellular signals

are not supported by strong reproducible clinical evidence.

A good rule of thumb:
If someone claims a revolutionary medical breakthrough exists but:

  • cannot produce large reproducible clinical trials,
  • cannot reliably outperform standard treatments,
  • and explains criticism mainly through conspiracy,

then caution is warranted.