9,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

Japanese water scientist Masaru Emoto discovered that water molecules change according to the exposed sounds. M. Meyer, in cooperation with the water artist Ernst F. Braun, found out who realizes water art. The author has explained her research results with the help of many water crystal photos clearly in various works. And for clarity, we should make a special effort in today's time, carried by anxiety and confusion. The book leads us into the depth of our lives and shows us the secret in our genes. In doing so, we realize that the infinite human task of shadow work makes us joyful and free.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Japanese water scientist Masaru Emoto discovered that water molecules change according to the exposed sounds. M. Meyer, in cooperation with the water artist Ernst F. Braun, found out who realizes water art. The author has explained her research results with the help of many water crystal photos clearly in various works. And for clarity, we should make a special effort in today's time, carried by anxiety and confusion. The book leads us into the depth of our lives and shows us the secret in our genes. In doing so, we realize that the infinite human task of shadow work makes us joyful and free. The excursus "Free energy for free people" is about the paradigm shift in energy generation crucial for the survival of humanity. Established physics, with its skepticism and blinkered thinking, must not continue to close itself off to modern physics. It is high time for a paradigm change in energy systems!
Autorenporträt
As a physician's assistant in the Odenwald, a certified educator in Frankfurt and a doctor of nutritional sciences in the USA, M. Meyer always wished to help people become healthy. In 1997, living again in Germany, she published her study results about Spirulina and the immune system in books from Windpferd Verlag. After some thirty health, lifestyle, and water books, she hopes her readers can benefit from her research. Until years ago, M. Meyer worked with juveniles with behavioral problems in Portugal. After her husband died, she edited books for Jim Humble Publishing for two years. Currently, she hikes and rescues free-roaming animals.