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The fourth phase of water

Free episodes:

it's best to be prepared for and open to possibilities...
the_elementals.jpg

I'm also very excited about knowing about 18 phases of water.

Phases shmases ... the important thing is knowing the mood of water. Have you ever drank a really angry glass of water? You know the kind that just refuses to go down? The Randal "Tex" Cobb of agua? Or how about a sad cup of water? And why is it usually you find sad water in cups? Maybe this is where down-in-your-cups comes from. Without a doubt, though, the most formidable water is found mixed in Whiskey. It's basically outraged, as is the whiskey - especially if it's Irish Whiskey, that said - if the water is Irish too, then a reconcilliation can normally be affected.
 
Loved that book. I wonder about, and will look into, the writing that has been done in response to Vonnegut's work as a whole.

One of his books in particular really stayed with me, essays I think or more autobiography ... I'll see if I can turn it up.

Also the idea of Kilgore Troutt and his relationship to God (as a constant source of surprise and amuesement - I can't think of a higher creaturely role to play)
 
And why is it usually you find sad water in cups? Maybe this is where down-in-your-cups comes from ...
That's a good guess. We always hear people say they're going to water things down, or hose down things, never the other way around, and then down the drain it goes, like everything else I do it seems ... LOL ... But that's just the nature of time isn't it? Everything eventually drains down into the bottomless pit of of the past. So how is it that anything persists? The past is gone and the future isn't here yet. So what's really going on? Maybe we're actually in the drain and that's why everything out there is mostly black.
 
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That's a good guess. We always hear people say they're going to water things down, or hose down things, never the other way around, and then down the drain it goes, like everything else I do it seems ... LOL ... But that's just the nature of time isn't it? Everything eventually drains down into the bottomless pit of of the past. So how is it that anything persists? The past is gone and the future isn't here yet. So what's really going on? Maybe we're actually in the drain and that's why everything out there is mostly black.

There you go being left-brained again!
 
Phases shmases ... the important thing is knowing the mood of water. Have you ever drank a really angry glass of water? You know the kind that just refuses to go down? The Randal "Tex" Cobb of agua? Or how about a sad cup of water? And why is it usually you find sad water in cups? Maybe this is where down-in-your-cups comes from. Without a doubt, though, the most formidable water is found mixed in Whiskey. It's basically outraged, as is the whiskey - especially if it's Irish Whiskey, that said - if the water is Irish too, then a reconcilliation can normally be affected.
I find the best mediation between whiskey (scotch preferably) and simply a drop of really angry water, which is enough to create quote a boisterous ruckus in my mouth, is to swallow it straight down neatly. I try not to let moody water get in my way too much though I find the waters of confusion, as waves propel my body haphazardly forward towards the beach line, to be a schizoidal dialogue that leaves my head all wonky. Such water is to be treated carefully, along with lake water that can give you beaver fever if you don't boil it before drinking. Sweet rainwater that children splash in and that birds drink out of from the cup plants in my backyard is a joyous kind of water, but is often elusive when you try to hold this kind of water in your hands. Some water moods are quite elusive and can only be experienced in ways best described as ephemeral.
 
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