“Your cells are two-thirds water by volume; however, the water molecule is so small that if you were to count every single molecule in your body, 99% of them would be water molecules”. And this is why it is all about the water for health.
He gives a list of everyday mysteries about water. The one about slippery ice is very interesting. Most solids have static and kinetic friction, where ice doesn’t seem to have much of either. Swelling from an injury like end-stage edema, the cells dumping their water. Water containing tree roots can break concrete. Water droplets on surfaces spread differently depending on the surface. Water condenses into clouds instead of remaining diffused within the air. Squeaky knees have to do with the lack of water lubrication. Ice is less dense than water – usually solids are more dense than their liquid counterparts.
Microspheres in water migrate to positive r and leave a microsphere free zone in the center. The water is also cloudy looking which means the speed of light has changed in the medium which means it is of a different structure than the center cylinder. This must be caused by electromagnetic repulsion and assuming structured water is H3O2-1 then the inner cylinder is positively charged.
Water bridge: 2 beakers next to each other filled to their brims then impose a 10kV potential difference in one. This causes water from the 10kV beaker to jump the rim to another creating a bridge. You can then separate the beakers and the water bridge remains. At what distance apart does the bridge start to sag and then break? If you bring the beakers together, then does the bridge become concave? Ling says you can separate them by several cm and it exhibits an “ice-like rigidity” without drooping.
Water droplets will float for O(s) on water.
Water is a source of electricity – see Lord Kelvin’s discharge (thunderstorm) = hydrostatic generator https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EXMR9r9JrD0