Wednesday, September 29, 2010

What is Kangen Water®?

Did you know?
1. Residue of food additives and chemicals significantly contaminate your bodily fluids.

2. 80% of newborns have allergies, caused by their mother’s tainted body fluids.

3. Quality high PH water is the key to cleaning up tainted body fluids.

4. There is water that eliminates active oxygen. 



The Japanese word “Kangen” means “return to origin.” We live in a contaminated world full of preservatives, chemicals, and contaminants. It has been said that the current generation is not expected to live as long as their parents did. Health conscious people are returning to their origin by drinking delicious, healthy Kangen Water®, created from Enagic's innovative water technology. 

Not only do these amazing devices filter harmful chemicals out of your tap water, they also produce Kangen and acidic waters through the process of ionization. In other words, the Kangen water ionizers return water to it’s purest form! The various water types that can be made with a Kangen water machine can be used for hydrating your body with plenty of healthy, high PH water, cooking with clean uncontaminated fresh water, beautifying your skin, cleaning your fruits and vegetables, and sanitizing everything in your home.

Kangen Water machines work by applying an electrical charge to your tap water, and then sending that charged water through an ion exchange membrane. Positive and negative ions then mix within the water, breaking molecular bonds on dirt. This is what makes Kangen Water® perfect as both beauty water and as a cleaning agent.

For Beauty 
Kangen Water® can break the molecular bonds on dirt and oil on your face, keeping it clean, smooth, and moist. Rather than using harsh astringents that dry out your skin, and dealing with tap water that leaves a soapy film after you cleanse, Kangen Water® can help clean your face better than regular tap water.

For Household Cleaning 
Kangen Water® can also help you clean your home by loosening the molecular bonds between dirt and the surfaces you’re washing by attracting that dirt like a magnet. In this way, Kangen Water® can actually lift grime and dirt off surfaces, which makes it easy to wipe away. No need for dangerous, toxic cleaners, or abrasive sponges and frantic scrubbing!

For Health
Kangen Water® is also better for personal health and overall well-being. While drinking tap water is better than buying soft drinks, it’s still not the safest solution. Recent investigations reveal that tap water in 42 states have been contaminated with more than 140 unregulated chemicals. Local governments do their best to make the water safe, but as a result, the water tastes heavily chlorinated and unpleasant to drink. Even well water isn’t always safe, especially in homes that are close to farms and animal production facilities with chemical and animal waste runoff.

A Kangen Water® system, with appropriate filters, can clean up contaminated and polluted water, removing the chemicals, bacteria, and other microscopic contaminants that can lead to poor health.

Unfortunately, even bottled water isn’t always a viable solution. It is more expensive, produces environmental damage through creating and disposing of plastic bottles, and is not always free of contaminants. Studies have shown that one-third of bottled water contains levels of contamination that exceed allowable limits. If you buy bottled water from the store, you can pay as much as $1–2 per bottle, just for a false sense of safety. Rather than buying bottled water at a premium price, you can use a Kangen Water System for pennies a day, and create all the safe water you want, right from your tap!
For years we used another common water filtration system called “Reverse Osmosis” water. Reverse Osmosis water is effective in rural and suburban areas that do not have municipally treated water. However, reverse osmosis can’t remove pesticides, herbicides, and chlorine, which are molecularly smaller than water, and can pass through the reverse osmosis filter. Another problem is that reverse osmosis will also remove “healthy water minerals,” which provide a health benefit to our bodies. Stripping these minerals from the water, can actually make it more unhealthy for us!

When we tested the PH level in our own reverse osmosis filtered water, it tested as acidic as soda pop!

Learn how to return your water to to its origin with crisp, clean, delicious tasting, Kangen Water®. Click here for more research. Email lymesgirl@gmail.com for a free DVD.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Strengthened With Courage By Faith!

On Sunday, September 12, 2010 we had a Regional Conference for the LDS Utah Valley region, involving 147 Stakes—17 Stakes in the BYU Marriot Center where the broadcast originated, and 130 Stakes viewed by satellite in the surrounding area church meeting houses and Stake centers. Sister Julie B. Beck, General Relief Society President, told us that only our "faith" strengthens us in our trials. She said, “We must remember that we fought a war in heaven for the privilege of coming here and having difficult experiences!”  Sister Beck reminded us that miracles can happen when we exercise our faith and that we MUST have faith in order to move into the future!

Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, reminded us to have “faith in our Heavenly Father's plan” and “conform our will to His.”  “He” will make us equal to our tasks! Elder Holland reiterated the council from Elder Steven E. Snow that "remembering the past strengthens our faith and courage."  He told the inspirational story of Sister Arabella Jane Coombs and her husband Joseph Stanford Smith recalling the memorable “Hole in the Rock Pioneer Expedition" in Southern Utah. He said as people, “We SHOULD BE "Simple and Deep," NOT "Complex and Superficial."
   

Hole-in-the-Rock Expedition
1879-1880



The quarterly conference of the Parowan Stake in December 1879 witnessed the call of forty-nine men and their families to a new mission. The call came from President John Taylor and the Twelve through Elder Erastus Snow. Later, others from nearby settlements joined the final company. What followed became the Hole-in-the-Rock expedition, an epic in LDS Church history. Two hundred fifty people, with eighty wagons and hundreds of loose cattle and horses, cut their way through the rough, unknown country of southeastern Utah. The area traversed remains one of the least-known regions of the world today. Their objective was the San Juan country. In addition to desert cliffs and canyons, the forbidding Colorado River gorge stood in their way. No highway bridge crossed that gorge until 1934. No commercial airline flew from Utah to Arizona, near their route, until 1959.



Seeking the shortest route, Mormon explorers found a narrow slit in Glen Canyon. The river ran two thousand feet below the red cliffs. This “Hole in the Rock” seemed to offer the shortest route.



Only a slit in the sheer cliffs, the hole was too narrow for teams, or in some places even for a man. Sheer drops of as much as seventy-five feet made it impossible even for a mountain sheep, let alone loaded wagons. In December 1879, after having left the Parowan and Cedar valleys the previous April, the Saints began to cut a precipitous, primitive road with blasting powder and tools. Elder Platte D. Lyman, leading the party, found that if a road could be built, it would drop eight feet every sixteen and one-half, the first third of the way to the river. Thereafter came several sheer precipices. But the party was prepared. With faith, they were equipped not only for blasting cliffs and carving passages, but for building a raft-boat capable of carrying teams and wagons across the river.



A road was built and a boat made by January 25, 1880. Now came the effort to get families and the first forty wagons, camped at the rim, down the “Hole.” The others, back at Fifty-Mile Spring, would follow later.



Kumen Jones has left a description of the method of descent. Twenty men and boys would hold long ropes back of each wagon. The wheels were brake-locked with chains. Otherwise, rolling wheels would pitch, unchecked, into the struggling team. On January 26, 1880, a month later, Platte D. Lyman recorded in his journal: “Today we worked all the wagons in this camp down the Hole and ferried 26 of them across the river. The boat is worked by 1 pair of oars and does very well.”



The family of Joseph Stanford Smith and his wife, Arabella, was the last wagon to descend that day. Stanford Smith had helped the preceding wagons down that long day. His outfit had evidently been forgotten. Deeply disturbed, he climbed the two-thousand-foot incline. He found Arabella sitting on a quilt, holding the baby, patiently waiting. His outfit and their two other children in the wagon were hidden behind a huge, mountainous rock.



Stanford Smith moved his load to the edge. A third horse was hitched to the rear axle. Stanford and Arabella looked down the “Hole.” He said, “I am afraid we can’t make it.”



Bella replied, “We must make it.”



Stanford said, “If we only had a few men to hold the wagon back we might make it, Belle.”



With incredible faith Bella replied, “I’ll do the holding back.”



A quilt was laid on the ground. There she placed the baby between the legs of three-year-old Roy. “Hold little brother til papa comes for you,” she said. Ada, the older girl, was placed in front of them. Behind the wagon Belle Smith grasped the reins of the horse hitched to the rear. Stanford started the team down the “Hole.” The wagon lurched downward. The rear horse and Belle were thrown from their feet. Recovering, she hung back, pulling on the lines with all her strength and courage. A jagged rock cut a cruel gash in her leg from heel to hip. The horse behind the wagon fell to his haunches. The half-dead animal was dragged down most of the way. The gallant woman, clothes torn, with a grievous wound, later said, “I crow-hopped right along!”



On reaching the bottom, Stanford and Arabella heard a faint call from the children. Joseph Stanford Smith climbed to the top to get them. They were safely in place. Carrying the baby, the other children clinging to him and to each other, he led them down the rocky crack. As they approached the river’s edge, they saw five men carrying chains and ropes in the distance. The Smiths had been missed. The men were coming to help. Stanford called out, “Forget it, fellows. … Bella here is all the help a fellow needs!” 



~ Excerpts taken from G. Homer Durham, “The Future History of the Church,” Ensign, May 1982, 67. Also see David E. Miller, Hole-in-the-Rock: An Epic in the Colonization of the Great American West, Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1959, pp. 101–18.



Amazingly Bella Smith performed the work that had previously taken 20 men to do for all the other wagons! Her undying faith gave her the strength and courage to perform a task that seemed impossible. I KNOW she was not alone on the arduous slope of jagged rock. I believe she had an army of angels helping her bear her heavy load! 



We live in perilous, troubled times, in a way much more difficult than those of our pioneer ancestors. They had a heavy physical burden of survival, while we are faced with the subtle temptations of Satan and his angels who want us to fail the test we have been given. Our trials and challenges may not always be on the outside, but may instead be battles within. The slippery slopes of trial we often bear are none more jagged and treacherous than that of Stanford and Bella Smith. ALL of us can do the impossible through our faith in Jesus Christ and His redemption. Sometimes we are required to take life by the reigns and do difficult things, but with faith in God we can be “equal to our tasks!” I bear testimony that we can have the strength to do the impossible if we have faith, trusting in His plan.



As President Boyd K. Packer, of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, said in his concluding remarks, "The Lord's voting for you, and Satan's voting against you … But your vote is the only one that counts!

"

“For behold, this life is the time for men to prepare to meet God; yea, behold the day of this life is the day for men to perform their labors.” ~ Alma 34:32

“And now as I said concerning faith—faith is not to have a perfect knowledge of things; therefore if ye have faith ye hope for things which are not seen, which are true.” ~ Alma 32:21

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

The Secret Life of Bees

“The whole fabric of honey bee society depends on communication—on an innate ability to send and receive messages, to encode and decode information.” ~ The Honey Bee by James L. Gould and Carol Grant Gould

According to Sue Monk Kidd, author of the New York Times #1 best selling novel, The Secret Life of Bees, “Bees [are] considered a symbol of the soul—of death and rebirth.” The complex society of Bees depends solely on “communication” within the hive in order to achieve the ultimate goal of honey making. Their lives are a remarkable lesson on the importance of effective communication. If only we, as humans, could do as well as Bees!

Rarely does a fictional story touch me as much as this particular one did. The symbolism of the bees are woven intricately throughout the book, creating a magical narrative of a mother’s love—lost and found, and finding forgiveness. The book boldly explores life’s wounds as a young girl forges her journey toward healing, ultimately revealing the deeper meaning of home and the redemptive simplicity of “choosing what matters.” It is a story about searching for truth and healing the past.

The novel is set in South Carolina in 1964, when intensifying racial unrest and the Civil Rights Act dominated our nation’s history. Lily Owens is a 14-year-old girl being raised by her verbally and often physically abusive, neglectful father. The only mother figure in Lily’s life is her loving, yet strong-minded black housekeeper, Rosaleen. Isolated on their South Carolina peach farm, Lily spends hours imagining a blissful infancy when she was loved and nurtured by her mother, Deborah, whom she barely remembers. Lily’s memories are haunted by images of a four year old Lily holding the gun that ended her mother’s life.

The Secret Life of Bees is a powerful coming-of-age story, the often unacknowledged longing for the universal feminine divine, and the ability of unconditional love to transform our lives. While addressing the deep wounds of loss, betrayal, and lack of love, this book demonstrates the power of women coming together to heal those wounds.

“When women bond together in a community in such a way that ‘sisterhood’ is created, it gives them an accepting and intimate forum to tell their stories and have them heard and validated by others. The community not only helps to heal their circumstance, but encourages them to grow into their larger destiny.” ~ Sue Monk Kidd

Critic Luanne Rice said, “The Secret Life of Bees proves that a family can be found where you least expect it—maybe not under your own roof, but in that magical place where you find love. The Secret Life of Bees is a gift, filled with hope!”

I highly recommend it! It's truly a magical worthwhile book! Here are a few of my favorite book quotes:

“The world [is] really one big bee yard, and the same rules work fine in both places: Don’t be afraid, as no life-loving bee wants to sting you. Still, don’t be an idiot; wear long sleeves and long pants . . . [Remember] every little thing wants to be loved!” ~ Sue Monk Kidd, “The Secret Life of Bees”

“Some things don’t matter that much . . . But lifting a person’s heart—now, that matters . . . The problem is [people] know what matters, but they don’t choose it.” ~ Sue Monk Kidd, “The Secret Life of Bees”

“It’s something everybody wants—for someone to see the hurt done to them and set it down like it matters.” ~ Sue Monk Kidd, “The Secret Life of Bees”

“I couldn’t make heads or tails of my heart. One minute I hated my mother, the next I felt sorry for her . . . I’d traded in a pack of lies for a pack of truth, and I didn’t know which one was heavier. Which one took the most strength to carry around? It was a ridiculous question, though, because once you know the truth, you can’t ever go back and pick up your suitcase of lies. Heavier or not, the truth is yours now.” ~ Sue Monk Kidd, “The Secret Life of Bees”

“Every person on the face of the earth makes mistakes . . . Every last one. We’re all so human . . . There is nothing perfect . . . There is only life.” ~ Sue Monk Kidd, “The Secret Life of Bees”

“People, in general, would rather die than forgive. It’s that hard. If God said in plain language, ‘I’m giving you a choice, forgive or die,’ a lot of people would go ahead and order their coffin.” ~ Sue Monk Kidd, “The Secret Life of Bees