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The HEALING WATER INSTITUTE is an international not-for-profit education and research group founded by John Wilkes the Flowform inventor. Iain Trousdell, resident in Sussex, England, is its director. Healing Water Institute is set up a registered charities in the UK, NZ and USA. The HEALING WATER INSTITUTE has four main tasks, which it carries out differently in its three independent institutes:
The planet is apparently dying around us, with nature and humanity as part of it in great peril. Global Warming and Global Thirst are already here. This is the only planet we have. We have to wake up rapidly to help it and all life, including humanity and its culture.
WHAT IS THE HEALING WATER INSTITUTE? In this context the Healing Water endeavour has been working in one form or another since 1960 to help water support life through design, research and education.
While this Flowform eco-technology has numerous practical applications, the Healing Water Institute researches this at arms length as well as considering other methods. Its main research purpose is to understand the rhythmical influences on water and through this, the benefits that flow on into nature and that help communities.
HEALING WATER FOUNDATION in ENGLAND (an Institute in Emerson College) This was founded as the ‘Flow Design Research Institute’ in 1975 by John Wilkes with Nick Thomas and Nigel Wells. The present building was created for it in 2002, through the generous support of a number of private donors and finally the Software Stiftung (Software Foundation) of Darmstadt, Germany. It is situated in the beautiful Sussex Biodynamic grounds of Emerson College, itself a Charitable Trust dedicated to applying and communicating modern methods of thought capable of bringing new approaches to the world's problems. The English Healing Water Foundation is the centre for research into rhythmical influences on water and how these affect nature's processes. Additionally recent projects investigate influences of Path Curve surfaces as well as polyhedral envelops on water's capacity to support life. Under the auspices of the (Institute) Foundation many lectures and seminars have been conducted both in England and overseas. HEALING WATER INSTITUTE in NEW ZEALAND This was founded in 1988 by Iain Trousdell, Rob Dewdney and a supporting team of colleagues and was situated on a Havelock North farm in the Hawkes Bay until 2002 at which point it moved to nearby Napier, overlooking the Pacific Ocean and the 'first sunlight' in the day's round. The Healing Water Institute Trust is a NZ government registered charitable trust, able to provide tax rebates to donors. It has concentrated on agricultural water research, and in particular dairy shed effluent transformation. In addition it has successfully recreated Viktor Schauberger's 'energy bodies' which it has renamed 'RiverFins' as well as prototyping revolutionary fish passes which employ a figure8 action to ease the passage of fish upstream. It also has worked extensively on education programs, employing multi media methods. It has produced the Creative Secrets of Water free email series featured in this website and is working on the DIVINE WATER film project with the USA Healing Water Institute. HEALING WATER INSTITUTE in the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA This entity has recently been incorporated in Idaho by Chris Hecht and Iain Trousdell with the primary purpose of being active in educational work within and beyond the United States of America. The main project presently being progressed is the documentary educational film DIVINE WATER. For information go to www.divinewaterfilm.net or refer to its feature page on this website. It has an interest in researching all eco-technologies' effects on water's capacity to support life but will concentrate on taking the message of Healing Water to as many people in public and professional circles as it can. |


The Healing Water Institute’s primary task is to be an advocate for water, developing insights and eco-technologies to help water support life while also working educationally to raise awareness of the plight of water.