Little known facts about your body

400,000 humans are born every day. The one thing we all have in common is the amazing machine we all inhabit.

98% of the atoms in your body were not there a year ago. 99.999% of your body is composed of empty space used to absorb photons (light energy deposits). Your body is riddled with holes, yet contains 15 gallons of water and a pint of hydrochloric acid. In the course of its life it will breathe 10,000,000 balloons worth of air. It will process 30 tons of food. And it will secrete 17 gallons of tears.

It has more protein than 70 pounds of peanuts.

It has enough carbon to fill 1,000 pencils.

And enough phosphorus for 3,000 match heads.

Those strong hard bones that make up your skeleton were not there 3 months ago. The skeleton is made up of 206 rigid bones. We take around 5,000,000 steps a year and each one does its share to shape our bones. Bone cells work so hard that every person gets a completely overhauled skeleton every 10 years. Your skeleton can never be more than 10 years old.

The brain is shielded by 22 bones fused together to form a natural crash helmet.

Your blood vessels cover some 65,000 miles of your body's terrain.

You have a new stomach lining every 4 days and the cells that come in contact with food are renewed every 5 minutes.

The liver becomes a new liver every 6 weeks.

Your skin is a new skin every 30 days.

The skin is the body’s biggest organ and weighs in at about 9 pounds, and covers an area of about 20 square feet. But skin is not just an inert coating. It is an active organ with many vital functions. Skin keeps the body cool. During heavy exercise muscles generate enough heat to boil several cups of coffee. This heat would easily damage internal organs unless the body did something about it.

Just below the skin's surface are 3,000,000 temperature control units. These are the sweat glands. Each a coiled tube, 4 feet long and loaded with liquid. A body working flat out can expel 2 pints of sweat per hour. Woven beneath the surface of skin is a mesh of tough collagen fibers. A strand of collagen is stronger than a steel wire of the same dimensions.

Atom Molecules Make Up Your Cells and Cells Make Up Your Body

Cells are constantly dying and dividing in the body. It is important to keep cells as healthy as possible so that as they divide into new cells they will be balanced, healthy and energized.

If any of the old cells are damaged or corrupted from imbalances or toxicity, the new cells may demonstrate the same qualities as the old cells, or even be less vital than the prior cells.

All DNR, Inc. light-energized products deal with countering toxicity, restoring cellular balance and/or revitalizing cells. In order to best reproduce healthy cells, cells should maintain a state of balance and enjoy normal levels of energy prior to new cellular progression.

Little known facts about your body