Is Barbara O’Neill correct about cellular hydration?

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The awareness of the importance of salt and its benefits for health is increasing and with it, more controversies emerge. The controversies include all kinds of soyentific explanations for the way salt is absorbed into the body, is it necessary for the salt to be bioactivated, can the body eliminate the surplus of salt and if not, how can we ingest the proper amount of particular salts the body uses…

Basically, the more information we have the more questions pile up when we do not understand the basic truths about the purpose of salt in the body, and the mechanism of action/programming our body is controlled by.

Here is a video where Barbara O’Neill addresses the issue of salt.

I do not want to analyze this video because the article will be too long and those of you following my work know the answers. Still, I will point out and explain some important things to shed light on some crucial misunderstandings that cause some of the confusion in this subject.

The cells have a different mineral composition of their plasma than the blood. While sodium is prevalent in the blood, potassium is saturated in cellular plasma. Potassium cannot escape out from the cell without a bit of push because is slightly larger than the opening of cellular membranes. If it cannot get out of the cell, it is obvious that potassium also cannot penetrate into the cell. This means that the cell has to produce it and it does it by shifting the frequency of sodium. Approaching this through Newtonian physics, sodium + oxygen + energy = potassium.

Barbara mentions that we should place a bit of salt into the mouth and drink a glass of water over it. This way we hydrate since the cells have the time to absorb it. She says that when we drink water too fast, too much at one time, the cells cannot absorb it so fast and the body is forced to eliminate what could not be absorbed and we urinate or sweat it out.

This is not how it works. One can gulp one liter of salty water and not have the urge to urinate, sweat, or defecate. They can become even more thirsty and drink more with the same result.

On the other hand, one can place some salt in their mouth and drink a glass of water and develop diarrhea.

What the body will do with the water it receives depends on several factors. We have to keep in mind that the body is a programmed robot and it will respond to every change in its environment according to the program responsible for that action.

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According to Barbara, the absorption is limited and if we hydrate too fast, what cannot be absorbed will be taken out as an overflow. This is not how the body is programmed to react.

Only properly balanced plasma will remain in the body because it is electroconductive. If the blood is toxic one program will demand hydration, and another program will demand detoxification. The central computer will evaluate and decide either for hydration or for the detoxification to take place, or for both of those things to occur simultaneously.

The speed at which hydration is done has very little to do with the outcome. When we seep plasma slowly, the body will slowly increase the level of blood plasma. As the level of blood increases, some toxins that are embedded in the tissue will be released and make the blood more toxic. The programs continue to evaluate and the hydration will continue until the program decides that it is more important to get rid of some blood toxins even if loss of plasma will be experienced and elimination of blood toxins occurs. We urinate, or if the toxic load is large, the mucosal tissue becomes involved and diarrhea occurs.

Again, the speed at which we provide plasma to the body has nothing to do with the outcome. Frequent urination is not the result of drinking plasma too fast, but it is the result of either elimination of water that cannot be correctly mineralized/electroconductive, so the surplus of water has to be eliminated (too much water and not enough salt in the blood), or the blood is toxic and kidneys are eliminating blood toxins through urination.

If the blood has enough plasma and is toxic, the body will frequently urinate. If blood is low in plasma and toxic, the urination will be slowed down and the urine will contain a higher concentration of toxins which will make the urine darker and smellier.

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The speed of hydration is not only related to the amount of plasma (water with salt) we ingest. It is also related to the level of blood toxicity. The blood remains toxic if the blood is short of plasma. The program that controls the blood plasma level will not allow the excretion of plasma out of the blood unless the toxicity is bothersome.  When the blood plasma level increases, the opportunity comes to eliminate some toxins from the blood and we urinate or experience diarrhea. The body loses some plasma in this process so even though we were drinking plasma, we did not achieve an increase in blood plasma/hydration, due to the cleansing process.

By drinking small amounts of very mild plasma, we basically maintain the status quo. By providing more plasma we activate the blood cleansing process and achieve hydration simultaneously. This is what the hydration part of the SHP is all about. This is the reason why one has to drink a large quantity of plasma when the plasma is utilized to trigger the cleansing process.

In the same way, as our cells produce potassium, they convert some of the potassium into calcium by raising its frequency. We do not have to absorb calcium. We actually regulate calcium and the excess is eliminated through urine.

Barbara does a good job explaining soyence but cuts short due to soyentific shortcomings.

You cannot solve a problem with the same information that has created it.

Because of all that misinformation created by soyence, people have a hard time accepting the truth, and questions about salt toxicity keep emerging.

Here is a video explaining the influence of salt on gut flora

Love and light to us all

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