“Let food be
thy medicine and medicine be thy food” - Hippocrates
Ormus elements
Ormus elements
are also known as m-state elements, the "m" standing for mono-atomic,
although it is by no means certain that ormus elements are all in a
mono-atomic state.
What is the
relevance?
Ormus
elements are on the cutting edge of longevity research by people like
David Wolfe.
They occur
in many biological systems.
The
behaviour and impact of ormus state elements in biological systems is a
relatively new research topic.
It is
possible that these may have been understood pragmatically by some of
our ancestors.
Where did the
name come from?
Starting
the 1970's, an Arizona farmer, David Hudson spent some 15 years
researching to understand mineral traces on his land. He coined the name
ORME to stand for orbitally rearranged molecular elements. The name
ORMUS comes from that.
What are ormus
elements? Obviously the physics of this is beyond the scope of a raw food
recipes website, but here is a brief and simplified explanation.
At school,
we learnt that the elements can be organised into the periodic table,
based on their atomic number. The atomic number increases across the
rows of the table. Periodically, you go back to the first column and
start a new row so that the columns end up with elements that have very
related properties. This table is readily available on the web, for
example see the following link.
The atomic
number is simply the count of only the protons in the proton and neutron mix in the nucleus of the
atom.
The atomic
mass is simply the total count of all the protons and neutrons in the nucleus of the
atom.
Some
elements exist in two or more forms. These different forms are known as
isotopes. Carbon for example occurs naturally with an atomic mass of
12 or 14. Chemically these behave the same way. Over a long time carbon
14 breaks down and becomes carbon 12. Isotopes of some elements only
exist for fractions of time in extreme physical environments.
My
understanding of ormus elements is that they have the same atomic number
as their traditional counterpart, but behave differently. Ormus can be
regarded as an energy state of an element. Over time they may change
state into the corresponding "normal" state of the element.
Ormus
elements are also known as m-state elements, the "m" standing for
mono-atomic, although more research is required to understand this.
Elements
known to exist in an ormus state are Cobalt, Nickel, Copper, Ruthenium,
Rhodium, Palladium, Silver, Osmium, Iridium, Platinum, Gold and Mercury.
The
elements known to have ormus states may be many times more abundant in
their ormus states than their "normal" states.
David Wolfe on Ormus Gold - PART ONE
"Oats, peas,
beans, and barley grow,
Oats, peas, beans, and barley grow,
Can you or I or anyone know
How oats, peas, beans, and barley grow?"
(From a
traditional playground song.)
Links
M-state Walnuts by Barry Carter
"Here are some images of walnut trees and walnuts which were grown using
C-11 as a mineral supplement. Five walnut trees were purchased from the
same nursery at the same time. "