Most books treat the human body as a biochemical machine that must be fueled, supplemented, and managed from the outside. Internal Waters presents a radically different model grounded in physics, not ideology: the human organism is a self-manufacturing, light-driven, electrically coherent system that builds its own hydration, membranes, and metabolic capacity from within.
At the center of this model is water — not as bulk fluid, but as a structured, charged medium formed by infrared radiation, minerals, and membrane geometry. Inside this medium, mitochondria do more than generate ATP: they produce metabolic water and electrical fields that stabilize enzymes, lipids, and genetic expression. Cholesterol, phospholipids, and cellular hydration are not merely consumed — they are continuously synthesized when the energetic field is coherent.
This book shows how sunlight, vitamin D, circadian timing, electrolytes, and lipid architecture converge into a single self-regulating loop. When that loop is intact, cells sense voltage, hydration, and redox state and adjust their own structure accordingly. When it weakens, metabolism, immunity, and cognition become unstable.
Written for readers who already understand biology, thermodynamics, and systems theory, Internal Waters does not argue for a philosophy or a lifestyle. It maps the operating physics of living matter — revealing how the body maintains itself, not by instruction, but by the geometry of energy in water.