The Salt IV

Natural Salt Mines

Salt is plentiful on the Earth, especially in the oceans, which cover approximately 70% of the surface. However, the oceans are being degraded to waste disposal-dumping facilities and are being polluted with heavy metals like, lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury and more. Not a single year passes without major news of at least one fractured oil tanker causing a catastrophe. Of course, the poison elements also have their own vibration patterns which are dissonant and therefore, harmful to our bodies. So, today, sea salt doesn't have the same positive impact on our health as it used to. In addition, 89% of all the sea salt producers are refining their salt.

Rock Salt

Mined salt consists of 95% rock salt. Even natural rock salt comes close to beings holistically intact and is more valuable than industrial table salt. From a bio-chemical standpoint, it is not aggressive. However, the elements contained in rock salt haven't been subjected to sufficient compression to be included in the crystal lattice, but are only attached to the surface and in the gaps of the crystalline structure. Natural stone salt is being used today only for feeding animals. It's a cheap alternative to table salt because at least it's a natural product. From a biophysical as well as bio-chemical perspective, it has little value for us. Only under considerable pressure are the elements brought into specific particle size, so as to transcend to an ional or colloidal state. This is important because our cells can only absorb what is available organically or ionic-colloidal. Therefore, we cannot absorb minerals from mineral water because they're not refined enough to penetrate our cell walls. And what doesn't get into our cells cannot be metabolized. Therefore, the best calcium is useless if it cannot be available to the body's cells.

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