The Source...
Around 1930, Austrian inventor Viktor Schauberger realised that water can change its structures by, amongst other things, being transported through straight pipes.
Schauberger had invented a transport system by floating timber logs on water inside of open, wooden channels that he built through the mountain landscape much according to the same patterns as a river would follow in its natural course. The wooden channels were fitted with “fins” that guided and created a spiralling motion in the water. This movement kept the timber in the centre of the water flow. He also demonstrated that using a left-turning motion,“implosion“ was a building force of the structures of life, whilst right-turning motion corresponded to explosion, decomposition and destruction.
According to Schauberger, and many others like him, “Implosion force” or “implosion technology” is the energy and life source of the future.
The Development...
At around the same time, Danish researcher Arne H. Paulsen studied nature in depth, and this knowledge, together with Schauberger’s findings, formed the basis for the Living Water VORTEXèr water treatment system. Around 1950, the idea of creating a water jug was developed by Julia Vøldan at Humlegården in North Zealand (Denmark) together with Arne H. Paulsen.
Julia Vøldan had knowledge about Professor Otto Warburg‘s Nobel Prize in 1931. Warburg described how a cancer cell did not survive in a biopsy/tissue sample with a cancerous tumour if the pH value was above about 6.8. Julia believed that an increased pH value in drinking water could be beneficial and strengthen our immune system.
That was the beginning of the Living Water VORTEXèr.
Simplicity...Naturally
The system is simple and based on nature’s own premises.
Whether you study the movement of the planets in the sky or a drop of water under a microscope, you will find that the microcosm and macrocosm move in the same pattern. Some people can’t understand how something so simple can work. Sometimes the secret is right at our feet, ready to be picked up.
Try picking up a maple seed from the ground and throwing it into the air. It will descend like a small helicopter, making the same vortexing motion as the water in the Living Water VORTEXèr.