Pioneer1
Greetings. Thanks for the permission to post under such conditions in your threads, as I am certain it will arise again.
To answer the question. We all access it. Akashic Records. Ancestral memory. These names, and all others, will only relate the secondary source of where people gained the realization of WATER.
That is why it has so many different second source names.
The problem from second source names is that it gives a false basis as an origin or source.
Such as what we are discussing here.
It has been given the secondary names of Records and Memory.
Each person will have a different name for it unless they choose to outsource their experience and assign that experience to a groups definition, thereby linking themselves to that group. Still struggling to grasp what it is.
When in fact it is WATER.
We are all composed of mostly WATER. This is our design. WATER is connected to all. Therefore we are connected to all. This connection is a default setting in our makeup. The ability to intentionally access it, is variable, and based upon many other variables.
In this way. It is almost impossible to find two people that have accessed The WATER for that purpose as we are discussing in the same way.
The reason for this variable is because it is from within our Temple, and our Temples, Temple. It is a personal convenience gifted each of us when we have earned it from The Creator.
Here is a test from China which shows how WATER affects MEMORY
In The way which Akashic Records retains an origin which roots it to WATER
Memory such as Ancestral memory cannot exist without WATER.
No matter what secondary source you will meet in relation to information access from the secondary sources they will always source back to WATER.
Because nothing else in existence has this ability.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 Nov; 17(21): 7792.
Published online 2020 Oct 24. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17217792
PMCID: PMC7662706
PMID: 33114364
Different Amounts of Water Supplementation Improved Cognitive Performance and Mood among Young Adults after 12 h Water Restriction in Baoding, China: A Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT)
Jianfen Zhang,1,2 Na Zhang,1,2 Hairong He,1,2 Songming Du,3 and Guansheng Ma1,2,*
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Abstract
Water is indispensable to keeping the functions of the human body working properly, including that of the brain. The purpose of this research was to explore the impacts of water supplementation on cognitive performance and mood, and to determine the optimum amount of water to alleviate detriments of dehydration after 12 h water restriction. A randomized controlled trial was implemented among 64 young adults from Baoding, China. Fasting overnight for 12 h, and at 8:00 a.m. on day 2, osmolality of first morning urine and blood, cognitive performance, and mood were assessed as the dehydration test. Then, participants were randomly separated into four groups: water supplementation groups (WS groups 1, 2, and 3 with 500, 200, and 100 mL purified water, respectively) and no water supplementation group (NW group). Participants in WS groups were instructed to drink the water within 10 min, while those in NW group drank no water. After 90 min, the same measurements were taken as the rehydration test. There was significant interaction between TIME and VOLUME in thirst when comparing dehydration with rehydration tests (F = 6.172, p = 0.001). Significant thirst reductions were found in WS group 1 and WS group 2 (p = 0.003; p = 0.041), and a significant increase was found in the NW group (p = 0.039). In the rehydration test, significant interactions between TIME and VOLUME were found in scores of anger, fatigue, and TMD (total mood disturbance) (F = 3.815, p = 0.014; F = 10.429, p < 0.001; F = 5.246, p < 0.001), compared to the dehydration test. Scores of anger were only decreased in WS group 2 (p = 0.025), and scores of fatigue and TMD decreased in WS group 1 and WS group 2 (all p < 0.05). Significant interaction between TIME and VOLUME was only found for operation span test scores (F = 2.816, p = 0.047), with scores being only higher in WS group 1 in the rehydration test compared to the dehydration test (p = 0.003). Comparing WS group 1 and WS group 2, scores of thirst, fatigue, and TMD did not differ significantly (p > 0.05). Water supplementation improved working memory and attenuated anger, fatigue, and TMD. A small amount of water (200 mL) was sufficient to attenuate thirst, anger, fatigue, and TMD of young adults, but the larger volume (500 mL) appeared to be necessary to improve working memory. The amount of 500 mL was the optimum volume to improve the cognitive performance and mood among young adults.
Keywords: water restriction, dehydration, water supplementation, rehydration, cognitive performance, mood
This is an excerpt from a research paper.
In my own book on the subject there is much more valuable information and much more layered.
But if you are unfamiliar with the connections of BIOLOGY. TIME. and CHEMICAL FUNCTIONS then this is an excellent start.
For the record. 80% of the information in most biology books are wrong.
Which is why 80% of hospitalized people are further injured or killed.
So if you are going to use this as a basis of advancement that is important to know.
Study that ye may be approved.