Subject of ion exchange covers "ionic" EIS/CS in general, home made or
store bought.
You will never get "fresh" EIS at a store though.
Portions also engage suspended colloids, pure metallic and otherwise.
In short:
A substance doesn't have to *have* a charge in a bottle to get one later.
Even having a charge in the bottle doesn't mean it will have one when used.
The whole of chemistry is pretty much about ion exchanges. [relative
outer electron shell valences]
Ode
At 02:44 PM 9/15/2006 -0500, you wrote:
Hi, How does this information apply to CS made with a Silver gen or a
Silver Puppy? I gather that you are discussing CS made with home made
machines.
Ruth
From Ruth Strackbein
From: Ode Coyote <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: CS>How long does it last?
Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2006 10:23:29 -0400
At 09:57 AM 9/14/2006 -0700, you wrote:
So goes my theory that EIS/CS negative charge contributes to
its healing properties.
Ed Kasper LAc. Santa Cruz, CA.
Maybe not.
There goes the idea that the CS has a negative charge "in the bottle"
and "after a while".
Ion exchange and relative charges 'in vivo' or in the presence of
pathogens is a whole 'nother story.
The mainstream is chasing ion exchange like mad men splashing in
puddles. We may just be wading in it up to our necks by sheer accident.
The hydroxyl anions associated with silver ions can make a very unstable
compound out of the silver.
Metallic silver can be re-ionized under various conditions.
The body and pathogens is a conditional soup where anything that can
happen, probably does and no one thing is the limit.
Silver in its varied forms and compounds could work one way, then turn
around and work backwards another way, then make a right, then left turn
to work yet another set of ways in a progression of reactions and
interaction with an ever changing electro-chemical environment. [Chemical
reactions can be stated as electronic equations and still say the same
things ..not that I quite understand or completely comprehend either way
of looking at it.
;-)]
Very fresh CS is obviously "different" than CS that's only several
hours old.
This is easily provable.
What that difference means "In use" "By whom" "Used how" and "For what"
isn't so obvious.
If there's one thing one could say about CS/EIS ...it's, it never stays
the same under sufficiently different conditions.
It's dynamic.
Which also could explain why for some people used in some applications
it's a fantastic miracle and for some it's ho hum.
The deeper you go into the soup, the more varied the conditions, change
and exchange probabilities . The less that it encounters to change it
for better or worse, [ direct surface contact] the more it works predictably.
Some swear by one thing and some swear at it.
Your set of rules in this game may well not apply to *anyone* else
without doing some creative editing and maybe even your set is
constantly changing with a progression of conditions that *using* the
silver sets into motion.
Dosing and methods of use recommendations I've seen often make no sense
at all....and perhaps they shouldn't.
Are prescription meds any different?
Why does the Doc give you a bomb when a pellet would have done, then
change that to a missile? ....then it's a prayer that cures ya.
Mystery used to be spelled, My Story.
Ode
-----Original Message-----
From: Ode Coyote [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, September 14, 2006 6:14 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>How long does it last?
EIS/CS doesn't have a "charge" [as commonly promoted as
ionic charge ]
after a few hours.
Once all the ions find the anions made at the same time,
it's over all
charge neutral and particle repulsion is presented by weak
Vandervals
forces, not "ionic charge". Being extremely chemically
active, it's not
likely that many, if any, "free ions" exist after a few
hours.
What ions get stripped off in vivo and -become- ionically
charged
-again-..and what that does, is a subject for many guesses.
It is, however, generally stable on the shelf for years
if only pure
water is present.
In the presence of other substances, it's not very stable.
Ions strip easily.
Ode
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