Guest guest Posted April 8, 2007 Report Share Posted April 8, 2007 Water has trace elemts of metal in its composition. Water conducts electricity, the array contains bi metal strips, salt energizes and excites electrically charged particles in the water. Now as we all know water is made of oxygen and hydrogen, when the particles get excited the oxidation process is accelerated. Now oxidation and metal equal rust! Now for those of you who make money on this, turn your heads...I have a friend who is an eletrical engineer and another who is a chemist. I will not reveal the analysis results on the water, as the postings in rebuttal will be even more vicious than it already is! I can assure you that to analyze the water by an independant lab will reveal what you all should know. My clinic does employ the foot detox, yet I will not reccomend it or sell it to my clients. And the placebo effect can be a positive one. I do not doubt that the mind can and will heal the body if the attitude is positive, in most cases. But to mask the truth by saying that the negative ions promotes osmosis is just plain criminal. So it works! But please speak the truth when describing the reasons for the changes in the water... He who knows not and knows not he knows not is a child...teach him. He who knows not and knows he knows not is a fool...shun him. Dawn Gilbreath <houstonqidaocoach wrote: Hello Kate! If you are interested, go back and read my message on this list...#25001. I shared a brief explanantion as to why the " no-foot " test worked on these machines based on my own research and experience with them... Hope this helps, Dawn www.windtraveler.net , Kate OBrien <highlandviewdrive wrote: > > But........does anyone know WHY the water changes colors, regardless of feet being placed into it or not???????????? > This seems to be the crux of the matter----proponents claim that the different colors represent different toxins exiting the body, yet the water changes colors when the machine is simply turned on. > I was seriously pursuing this treatment when I stumbled onto these studies and am now at a roadblock----no one seems to be able to answer this question, so that is sort of leading me into the other direction............ > > Michelle <michelle wrote: Hi everyone, > > I've been selling a detox footbath unit for about a year. During that > time, I've heard some amazing testimonials from my customers. I mean > AMAZING! Some are health practitioners using the footbaths on many > others with truly incredible results. Mind over matter? Who cares? > Results are results! > > I've also listened to plenty of skeptics and those who completely > invalidate the benefits of negative ion footbaths. Hey, that's just > fine ~ people are going to believe what they're going to believe > until they don't anymore. > > I was pretty skeptical at first, but after one use had noticable, > very positive results in areas I hadn't " decided " it would work. In > fact, I set out to prove it didn't! I wouldn't have sold the footbath > if I didn't fully believe in it based on my own personal results. > > Placebo affect? I have a friend who takes his blood pressure before > and after with pretty dramatic changes that seem to last for about a > week. No denying those results! > > By the way, I no longer sell the detox footbath because the > manufacturer ripped me off and I won't do business with him any > longer, i.e. this post is NOT motivated by dollars. > > Michelle > http://www.HolisticMenopause.com > No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go > with Mail for Mobile. Get started. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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