January 5, 2025
I keep returning to Nikola Tesla's framework: "If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency, and vibration."
This sounds mystical until you watch a Chladni plate experiment.
Take a metal plate. Sprinkle sand on it. Run a violin bow along the edge. The sand arranges itself into geometric patterns. Change the frequency, change the pattern. It's physics, but it looks like sacred geometry.
During COVID, I built 3D simulations of these patterns, trying to understand the mathematics. Different frequencies produce different geometries, predictably. The same frequency always produces the same shape. There's a hidden order underneath what appears chaotic.
Here's what I can't shake:
Everything we perceive as solid matter is actually vibrating at specific frequencies. We can only touch objects because we vibrate at compatible frequencies. Our bodies are frequency systems. Our brains operate on measurable Hz ranges. Sound is frequency. Light is frequency. Radio waves. X-rays. All frequency.
There's scattered research I keep finding: - Sound frequencies affecting cell regeneration - Specific Hz ranges influencing plant growth - Cymatics revealing hidden structure in water - Ancient structures built to specific acoustic resonances
What if there's a unified framework we haven't mapped?
I've also spent years studying religious texts across traditions, looking for patterns. The Bible, the Quran, the Egyptian Book of the Dead. Descriptions of phenomena we'd now call "frequency-based" appear across all of them. The Bible's historical accuracy keeps surprising me. The more I dig, the more I find.
This probably sounds fringe. But radio waves sounded fringe before Marconi. Quantum mechanics sounded fringe until someone built a computer with it.
I'm not sure where this leads. But I can't stop pulling the thread.