As a Cancer moon and with my Vedic sun sign being Scorpio, water is super prevalent in my natal chart and reality, but it’s also the key element for healing which comprises 70% of our bodies and the majority of air flow – an integral element in growth for all natural life on this planet. We need it to survive, it’s in all of the food that we consume and it has been the centre piece of spiritual symbolism and religious rituals since the beginning of time.
Unfortunately, we’re at a stage now where the purity of water has been degraded through pollution, the sewer systems, and the construct of bottled water is equally damaging for the environment from a plastic perspective. Once a symbol of purification, it now needs to be purified. We’re at a stage where it’s negligent to commission bottles, but also at a stage where it is verging on personal negligence to consume tap water that hasn’t been purified. This is where ZeroWater and their filtration jugs come in. I’d recommend consuming the final product from a copper cup, but in the meantime, wanted to explore a little more of what the ZeroWater process has to offer.
The intricate filtration system removes all dissolved solids. For example, when I used the device to measure my regular tap water, it was coming in at 300, as soon as the water had gone through the filtration systems, the stat was literally zero. Really makes you think about what we are putting in our systems and the impurity from a simple glass of tap water, something I have been drinking for eons. It reduces fluoride, chloride, lead, chromium, asbestos and nitrate – which are all in tap water. I know, ew. It’s more efficient that its competitors, you can see a Brita comparison here, and the device has been hailed by Forbes and The Guardian too for removing 99.6% of total dissolved solids.
ZeroWater is easy to use, and well worth the time, considering the results.