A reason other than water-memory behind the formation of ice crystals of different shapes

Subhash Chandra Sawhney
3 min readOct 8, 2020

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Though we feel awed to see various pictures of water crystals developed from the water exposed to different types of sound-waves such as the crystals shown in the following two pictures released by Dr Masaru Emoto (who had been awarded Nobel Prize in the year 2008 in Medicine or Physiology), we can’t spurn the facts.

Source: The New York Bestseller “The Hidden Messages in Water”

We have to agree that when water is exposed to some melodious song, its sound waves may be able to bring its molecules into a pattern that may be quite different from the pattern into which a shrilly whistle may be able to bring.

We may even agree that we may get different shapes of icicles [1], if we freeze the water that may have been exposed to a melodious song and the water that may have been exposed to the shrilly sound of a whistle or, say, the jarring sound of a horn of a car.

But it is not necessary that we also believe that different shapes of icicles are formed since the water molecules memorise what they should have heard or should have interpreted whether they had heard something that may have been sympathetic or something meant to terrorize or abuse somebody.

Something may have memory only if it has a mind.

It may have a mind only if it has a brain and as we know — “Water doesn’t have a brain”.

If you may have seen different formations the students make during their annual day functions or on other special occasions, such as the formation shown in the following picture, their PT teachers, teach them to form — you may just think that the water-molecules should be also getting arranged into different types of formations, depending on the type of sound waves to which they get exposed.

A formation formed during a PT drill

You may even look into the possibility of the ability of the water- molecules, to bend themselves into some postures of the type shown in the following diagram, much the same way as we can bend our body into different types of postures.

Doesn’t it make sense?

If it makes sense, don’t you agree, it explains — why we have so many shapes of water crystals?

It does not matter even if the molecules of water may not be in a position to bend themselves into different postures; it should be, anyway, possible for them to get arranged into different types of formations as the students of the schools arrange themselves during the PT display of their school or in their annual functions.

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[1] https://www.pinterest.ca/likenosmosis/water-memory/

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Subhash Chandra Sawhney
Subhash Chandra Sawhney

Written by Subhash Chandra Sawhney

A mechanical engineer, has an experience of about 30 years in the field of Management Information Systems. Lives in Lucknow, India. Has authored eight books.

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