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Last updated Wednesday, June 24, 2009 10:28 PM |
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| Everything we experience in
our society and our personal lives happens in cycles - the birth cycle
of nine months, the seasonal cycles, the cycles of planets' rotations
about the sun and the rotation of moons around the planets, the cycles
of the stock market and of wars and the rise and fall of nations, our
breathing, our heartbeats, even the cycles of life and death itself.
These "cycles" are called frequencies, and can vary from species to species. For example, the gestation cycle of an elephant is much longer than that of a housefly, whose entire life cycle is about 21 days. The electromagnetic spectrum, shown at the right, actually covers only a small part of the spectrum it should show. The chart below (click on it to see a bigger copy) is better, but still not complete:
Because, historically, the spectrum charts have been used by industry, radio/TV broadcasters, the military, etc. there has been little interest in the Extremely Low Frequency (ELF) bands. They are subsonic - too low for human hearing. It wasn't until the medical field began using x-rays, CT scans, etc. that the field became of interest to those dealing with the human body and its many components - chemical and electromagnetic. |
We probably remember in a high school chemistry class being told that our body was a bag of chemicals worth X dollars. What we weren't told was that the human body, indeed all matter, is also a transmitter and receiver of electromagnetic frequencies - like a two-way radio ... ... and this is where it begins to get really interesting, as we get down to the real purpose of this journey into unknown worlds, going boldly where no humans have ever gone before - or have they? These frequencies are measured in Hertz (Hz after the name of the person who established them) - also known as cycles per second. In America, your house current is 60 Hertz or 60 cycles per second (cps). Europe uses a 50-Hertz power grid. |
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Frequency wavelength tells us how long the frequency is,
while amplitude (the height of those curves you see above) tells
how loud (or intense) it is.
Take another look at the charts above and you can see how wavelength relates to color, sound, and all the other frequency bands listed. It's like standing in the water looking out across the pond sideways as the waves go by. You have big tall waves and little short waves (amplitude). |
You have long waves that seem to have more space between them,
and short waves that come close together (wavelength).
Everything has it's own frequency, called a resonant frequency - and I do mean everything! We'll get into this in this section because it is the key to understanding it all ... but first we'll zero in on the brain itself and take a look at its frequencies and how they affect us. Then we'll start applying what we've learned to (hopefully) actually improve your health and defeat disease! |
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Page 1 - The Story of 100 Monkeys - Inside Your Brain Page 2 - The Electromagnetic Spectrum Page 3 - The Brain and the Electromagnetic Spectrum Page 4 - The Brainwave Frequencies & What They Do Part 5 - The Magic of Brain Entrainment |
Part 7a - Why This Technology Can Be Dangerous Part 8 - How to Protect Yourself From These Natural and Manmade Threats |
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Last updated Wednesday, June 24, 2009 10:28 PM
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