In a message dated 6/23/00 10:31:45 AM EST, [email protected] writes:

<< Subj:     Re: CS>OT- Distilled water
 Date:  6/23/00 10:31:45 AM EST
 From:  [email protected] (Marshall Dudley)
 Reply-to:  [email protected]
 To:    [email protected]
 
 Fred wrote:
 
 > At 06:31 PM 6/22/2000, you wrote:
 > >Terry: Basically, what you are saying is that minerals which "have become
 > >part of the body" are chemically combined and will not leach out. Is there
 > >evidence to support this reasoning, or are we left to decide which of the 
two
 > >speculative arguments is more acceptable?
 > >  Roger
 >
 > You might try logic Roger! We after all, are not tea bags we pour water 
thru!
 >
 > "The gastrointestinal tract has a strong "need regulated mechanism" of
 > absorption of minerals." Page 156 - [Your bodies many cries for water] by 
F.
 > Batmananghelidj (no, I didn't make that name up) and the stomach extracts
 > excess water (filters it, sans minerals - believe he said in 5 minutes) 
before
 > passing the mush on. Once in the blood stream, the liver functions to
 > precisely regulate the concentration of minerals in the blood, discharging
 > any excesses.
 >
 > Now don't try to tell me you have distilled water in your stomach right 
after
 > you drink a glass of DW! Any leaching would have had to be on the short 
trip
 > down the gullet and then it is part of a strong brew!
 >
 
 The water is no longer distilled, true.  But will it contain the trace 
minerals
 that it leaches?  No it will not, since the trace minerals it leaches are in 
the
 blood and bone.  Thus it will still be able to dissolve those trace minerals 
until
 it reaches saturation.  At any rate it doesn't matter.  Lets say that it 
does find
 sufficient calcium in the spit and stomach to reach saturation.  It then 
leaves
 with them when you urinate.  The body has lost the calcium, it really doesn't
 matter exactly from where.  To replace it requires taking supplements, or 
the body
 will end up stripping it from the bones.
 
 Look at it like this.  You have a jug of lime.  If you pour water into the 
jug
 that is already saturated with calcium, the lime will not dissolve, you 
could do
 it for 100 years.  But if you pour in distilled water, the water in the jug 
will
 be diluted below saturation, lime will dissolve and wash away.  One could 
argue
 that the water is not distilled as soon as it hits the water that is sitting 
in
 the lime, but it makes no difference.  The same amount of lime will be 
removed per
 liter of water regardless.
 
 Have you ever noticed that if you lime the yard, that watering it from the 
tap
 seems to do nothing, but it will dissolve when it rains?  Rain water is 
basically
 distilled, so it easily leaches the lime, but water from the tap already has
 sufficient minerals usually that the lime dissolves slowly if at all.
 
 Marshall >>


Marshall: Sound pretty simple to me. Fred? Are you there? Hello Freddyboy??
Must have gone out to buy some Poland Spring. Roger
 


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