After you’ve enjoyed your first Optimum Focus
ion foot bath detox
for the prescribed 35 minutes, you may notice something interesting. If you are using the product correctly, the water should change color, from the clear color you traditionally expect from water to an orange or brown color. You should not panic if you witness this, in fact, this is a natural and expected product of the detoxifying process.
What Do the Colors from the Foot Bath Detox Mean?
So what does it mean? Theories vary. One of the goals of a foot bath detox is to force impurities, toxins and heavy metals out of the body, so it is only natural that the water might take on a rust-colored appearance, but this is not necessarily what is responsible for the color change. However,
Optimum Focus has done tests that reveal that heavy metals are present in the water after a 35 minute ionic
foot bath detox and the scientific explanation seems to be that oxidation is largely responsible for the color change.
There is no reason to believe that there is any more danger from the water after it takes on an orange hue than there was from the water when it was clear. In fact, some people find watching the water change to be an indicator that the
ionic foot bath detox is doing its work, and find it to be a soothing part of the process.
Is There Anything in the Water to Be Concerned About?
The only thing that is ever in the tub is the water you put into it, Himalayan salt crystals, the Optimizer Module, energy from the power unit, any oxidation that may occur, and cellular waste, dirt and oils from your feet.
What If There Is no Change in Water Color?
People usually see a change in water color by the time the process is finished. If you do not, make sure you have been using the
foot bath detox for the full 35 minutes and that the unit is functioning properly, with energy consistently flowing from the
foot bath detox power unit to the Optimizer Water Module and into the water.
How Do I Dispose of the Discolored Water?
It’s perfectly safe to flush the water from the tub down the toilet, just as you would with regular tap water that you might be trying to dispose of.