They won't give up their premium monthly subscriptions you pay for to stay alive. And they won't give up their authority and control over your health, and that is why more most doctors that claim a cure for cancer are "suicided" within a year. Alkalinity is the cure.
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (39)
sorted by:
is distilled water 'good'/ alkaline?
we have a salt water pool, and I've read that we would need to distill it to make it drinkable.
so thought about buying a distiller, then we'd alway have drinking water; alkaline, would be an extra benefit.
thanks for explaining, amazing how complex water is.
Iol- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GF9yYGwPcNw
From what I understand, distilled water (can be from salt or dirty water) is good for you but, should not be the only water you use because, it lacks the natural minerals that our bodies use from natural resourced water. It is too pure though, that alone has its benefits. lol
Distilled water is all we should be drinking... Minerals in water are inorganic which means our body cannot adequately assimilate them. And yes, distilled water leaches minerals from the body... The bad ones. It's the most gentle of solvents.
Interesting, make me thirsty thinking of it. lol
wow that's really neat, and so easy to do, thanks for sharing.
I love repurposing & using simple materials; it's challenging/good for the mind.
I was looking into diy distilling and that one with using empty bottles like this for emergency was the most simple, thought it neat as well.
Another simple and inexpensive solution is to get a stove top distiller.
Look up Little Creek Stainless Steel Water Distiller. They run around $100 US. I have and use one of these. Not super efficient but it works and you can do pretty large quantities. I get about 3-4 gallons in a day if I refill it when it gets low. I fill up a large 5 gallon water container fairly quickly. This also works on an induction stovetop since it's made of steel.
You don't have to deal with all of the pumps and such that a traditional distiller uses.
There are also the Countertop distillers as well but I've never tried any of those.