If the background is highly magnetic (high iron), I have to vasodilate. If I do not vasodilate and “smear out” my blood when the background is high iron, my blood will be too magnetic. I can mimic the feeling of a high-iron background by being dehydrated.
But this combination can leave me feeling “off the grid.” When my body is too dense (below the electromagnetic grid), and my blood is too vasodilated / smeared out (above the grid), they cannot speak to each other efficiently.
On the other hand, if the background is insufficiently magnetic (high manganese), I have to vasoconstrict. If I do not vasoconstrict when the background is insufficiently magnetic, my blood will not be magnetic enough and will not be able to hold itself together. I can mimic the feeling of a low-magnetism, high-manganese background by being hyper-hydrated (too watery).
But this combination, too, can leave me feeling “off the grid.” It is as if my body is too diffuse (above the grid), and my blood is too dense (below the grid).
And, worse, once I am both things at once, both too diffuse (too watery) and too vasoconstricted, I cannot correct myself. (Parkinson’s?) I cannot condense when I am already too vasoconstricted. The vasocontricted state—the size of the RBC, and the fact that I am already hugging the RBC in the capillaries—prevents me from condensing further. When I am both too diffuse and too vasoconstricted, and I try to condense, I get a tremor.
Alternately, when I am too condensed (too dehydrated) and too vasodilated, if I try to expand, I get fasciculations. (ALS?) I cannot expand when I am already too vasodilated. The vasodilated state—the fact that my blood is already as “smeared out” as it can be, and remain whole—prevents me from expanding.