Could sound frequency for levitation be different than for water composition change, if singing is involved in the latter ?
I also wondered about the relation to spiritual advancement. As the alchemical prima materia is water, as Cs said, then the achievement of the Great Work would be the transmutation to heavy water.
Yeah, another good question. Looking at it from a purely materialist perspective, here's what is known about
heavy water according to Wikipedia:
Heavy water (D2O) has different physical properties than regular water, such as being 10.6% denser and having a
higher melting point. Heavy water is
less dissociated at a given temperature, and it does not have the slightly blue color of regular water. While it has no significant taste difference, it
can taste slightly sweet. Heavy water
affects biological systems by altering enzymes, hydrogen bonds, and cell division in eukaryotes. It can be
lethal to multicellular organisms at concentrations over 50%. However,
some prokaryotes like bacteria can survive in a heavy hydrogen environment. Heavy water can be toxic to humans, but a large amount would be needed for poisoning to occur.
Us humans naturally contain around 5 grams heavy water. Apparently, it would take replacing our body's water with heavy water to a volume of 50% in order to poison humans. Heavy water can quickly kill smaller animals and mammals, though. You can check the 'affects on biological systems' section for all the details.
Turning to the metaphorical or archetypal nature of heavy water... I'm not sure. If heavy water is the
prima materia, then we can start there. In the alchemical literature, the
prima materia isn't said to be water per se. Here's a section from
Soul Mates by psychiatrist Thomas Moore:
The Alchemy of Intimacy
One of the most fascinating aspects of the life of soul is that it starts out as raw material that can later be submitted to processes of refinement. We meet someone, start up a friendship, and then find ourselves in both the joys of intimacy and the morass of another person's stuff. The same is true of a job. On the first day, everything appears neat and bright. Prospects are high, the salary is all right, coworkers look ideal. Then, in a relatively short time, we may discover the swamp of the workplace. One person is moody, another is bossy; affairs and enmities abound. Soul-work is usually a long process of taking the raw material life gives us, then making something out of it. The alchemists called the raw stuff prima materia. In one of Jung's books on alchemy he describes the rawness of the soul with graphic imagery:
"The prima materia is, as one can so aptly say in English, "tantalizing": it is cheap as dirt and can be had everywhere, only nobody knows it; it is as vague and evasive as the lapis that is to be produced from it; it has a "thousand names." And the worst thing is that without it the work cannot even be begun... It is the most despised and rejected thing, "thrown out into the street," "cast on the dunghill," "found in filth."
He goes on to say that the
prima materia in relationships is found in what we avoid, what we turn from, what we cast away - our shadow, or the shadows in our relationships, our family shadows, or the shadow of our town or our nation.
It's similar to one of Jordan Peterson's quote from Jung: 'People don't see god because the don't look low enough.' Moore has an interesting way of looking at hard, material 3D life lessons as actually being the preferred 'home' of the soul, as opposed to airy spiritual ideals. Earlier in the book, he made an interesting distinction - the Spirit is likened to the branches and leaves of the Tree of Life, whereas the Soul is that which burrows into darkness and soil like the roots.
In therapy I've talked more than once with intelligent people who can't lower themselves to own up to the kinds of situations and feelings that everyone gets stuck in. A highly educated woman told me that even though she felt victimized by her husband's affair, she constantly disowned that awareness by telling her friends: "I can handle it, everything's under control, I'm prepared for this." My sense was that her soul-work would remain stuck until she could take this common piece of "filth" home with her as her own given raw material. "I'm a feminist," she said. "I can't admit that I'm victimized by my husband's waywardness."
We all have high moral positions that keep us from taking the soul's prima materia into hand, getting dirtied by it, and eventually finding that it is sculptor's clay. One of the many paradoxes of soul-making is that its reward is the most valuable and unique a person could ever have, and yet raw material is often the most despised and common.
[...]
Soulful intimacy is not to be found in clean, well-structured, meaningful, unperturbed, ideal unions, if such a union exists. Perfection may well appeal to the mind, or to the part of us that craves spiritual transcendence, but soul doesn't establish a home there. For some perverse reason, it prefers the colors of feeling, the tones of mood, the aberrations of fantasy, and the shades of disillusionment. Although these vagaries of the soulful life may be disturbing and painful, there may be some consolation in knowing that, like a compost heap, they are fertile and promise a rich future.
So the
prima materia is said to be found in the lowest portions of ourselves - this aligns with the idea that in our lower centres and worst habits is where the Work begins. And it may be coincidental or not, but the Tao te Ching suggests that these low places are also where the water - maybe the water of life - is found. From verse 8:
The supreme good is like water,
which nourishes all things without trying to.
It is content with the low places that people disdain.
Thus it is like the Tao.
In dwelling, live close to the ground.
In thinking, keep to the simple.
In conflict, be fair and generous.
In governing, don’t try to control.
In work, do what you enjoy.
In family life, be completely present.
When you are content to be simply yourself
and don’t compare or compete,
everybody will respect you.
So remembering that water has a function of retaining memory or consciousness, this may have something do with simple and karmic understandings, as the C's have suggested that this is what we're here to do in 3D - maybe the primary goal of the alchemical work according to them.
When we give or receive a karmic wound, this displays in a certain pattern in our body's water, and is also stored in our body's connection to the information field. We could think of this as a sort of wireless karmic bank account with a digital currency of suffering and joy. When we give or receive a karmic wound, we can buffer that pain in our 3D mind, and not address it, ignore it and shut it out - but the wound pattern is still there in the Soul's bank account.
This might be one way of understanding the spiritual science of karmic wounds. It's kinda like economics. Say someone dies without resolving a serious karmic issue. This lesson is still 'pending' in their information field, and when they reincarnate, a similar dynamic may play out in the next life in order to give them another chance to resolve the issue and learn the lesson. Or they may choose to suffer in order to balance out what pain they caused in a past life.
In Spirit Releasement Therapy, Baldwin writes about 5D spiritual counselors who prepare the 3D life prior to incarnation:
In the Planning Stage, counselors (usually three to seven in number) assist the being in recalling and reexamining the unfinished business and unresolved emotional conflicts from other times, other places and other earth lifetimes. The being makes choices regarding elements of the coming life-for example, gender; race; health; parents; life circumstances, such as geographical location, affluence or poverty; marriage partners; and children.
The entire range of learning opportunities for the coming life is developed in this stage. Events and opportunities are arranged which will give everyone involved the opportunity to resolve conflicts and balance the remaining karmic debts. This is the foundation for the concept of Karma, the law of cause and effect: For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. In the Christian tradition it is represented by the phrase, "As you sow, so shall you reap."
So the 'cast away muck' spoken about by Thomas More include our 'unfinished business' from childhood trauma or even unresolved past-life karmic wounds. These hyperdimensional ties connecting one person to another, or an entire people to another, give us the shape of our entire lives. That's why having good relationships are so important.
It is my guess that these 5D contracts, or connections, are sort of like 'filaments of light' that interact with our current incarnations via downloading specific lesson patterns (mental, emotional, physical) into our body's water. I think this is perhaps why the C's said water is referred to as the
prima materia - because it is the means by which we can access the karmic nature of the information field. The patterns in our inner water send us adventuring into the lowest parts of ourselves and the evils of this world, where we can learn the lessons, find the highest good and make the best of our troubles, and channel love, light, and knowledge as best we can into the abyss.
It's no wonder that the french word for 'wound' is
blessure, indicating that our wounds - from this life or past lives - are the zone of blessing, in which we have the opportunity to learn and heal.
I gotta say, tho, it's somewhat beyond me to find synchronicity between the scientific information of heavy water and its metaphoric or archetypal nature as indicated by the C's. Then there's also the mystery of how heavy water might interact with the information field. This would be getting way out of my realm of knowledge, but heavy water is used frequently in nuclear applications, and whenever I think nuclear, I start to think 'hyperdimensional'. So maybe heavy water is a mediator of hyperdimensional phenomena in our bodies.
Who knows!?