How does water and/or liquid get through your body?!


Question: Im just curious i know how food gets through how does water get through? and im 12


Answers: Im just curious i know how food gets through how does water get through? and im 12

When you mix Cellfood with water or juice and ingest it, its proprietary water-splitting action begins the moment you take the first sip. This cascading time release of oxygen typically peaks within 8-12 hours, and then keeps working hour after hour. In partnership with the body's own natural intelligence, Cellfood releases oxygen whenever and wherever it's needed— and if no longer needed, no more is released. And, its essential natural minerals, enzymes, amino acids and electrolytes are delivered simultaneously throughout the body on the deepest cellular level.

Cellfood is a miracle of electromagnetic design. Since Cellfood is colloidal and negatively charged— just like the blood and lymph fluid— there is a natural synchronicity between these fluids. Cellfood and its nutrients move through the cell walls easily, and its vital nutrients are absorbed and assimilated quickly and efficiently. And, Cellfood is a di-pole, di-base delivery system, delivering its nutrients to the cells and tissues under any conditions. (Di-pole means Cellfood is effective in any polarity range of the body; di-base means it's effective in any pH range and will tend to normalize the body's acid/base balance). Therefore, Cellfood is exceptional as an overall delivery system not only for its own nutrients, but for increasing cell-absorption (by as much as 3-5 times) of any other nutrients or substances introduced into the body within the same 24 hour period. Notably, there is no known toxicity associated with Cellfood.

Importantly, Cellfood won't create free radical damage. Free radicals— believed to be a primary cause of aging and disease— are positively charged ions of oxygen. Since Cellfood's released oxygen molecules are negatively charged, they seek out and attract these dangerous free radicals, joining with them to form stabilized oxygen.
Directions for use

Adults take 8 drops in 8 oz. of purified or distilled water, or juice, 3 times per day— or during stress or physical activity. Best taken between meals (at least 15 min. before or 1 hour after). May mix 1 day's amount in water bottle and sip throughout day. Each 1-oz. bottle of Cellfood? contains 90 servings of 8 drops each, or 720 drops.

3. Fluid's flowing under the impact of a force
By following experiments we explain that a liquid can flow only under the influence of
some kind of force. Normally, this force is gravity. But we can apply additional forces.
Parallels with a human body:
? Contraction of a heart muscle makes blood to circulate through the body.
? Heart muscle is a tireless pump, which during the human life can rest only half a
second at a time.
? Circulatory system is a closed system where a constant amount of blood is
transported.
? Blood pressure is formed in the vessels, when vessel walls resist fluid’s
movement.
? In bigger vessels blood flows quickly, about 0.5 meters per second.
? In fine capillaries blood flow is slow, about 1 mm per second.
Equipment:
? 4 to 5 transparent PVC hoses (length 1…1.5 m, diameter 15 mm)
? PVC triplets (junctions) to interconnect hoses
? A hand-pump to pump liquid
? A funnel to fill the liquid circuit
? A cork to close the liquid circuit
? Water
? Some aluminium powder to observe fluid's motion.

12 is not the age to be on the boards, however to answer your question, its call the intestines, after the stomach does most of the digestion, the absorption happens in the intestines.

Water is absorbed in the intestines into the blood stream. The kidneys then remove excess water along with waste materials from the blood, creating urine. Some people are mistaken about this, but there is no direct connection between the urinary bladder and the digestive system, the systems are connected indirectly by the circulatory system.

Some water gets through, along with food. If this does not happen then you get constipated.

Now most get through urination, and yet some get out through sweating process.





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