Masters of Health Magazine February 2024 | Page 11

The human voice has the power to fill a concert hall without a microphone; the power to support illness, both in ourselves and in others; and the power to inspire people by transforming thoughts and feelings into words and sounds. The human voice also has the power to leave this Earthly realm and travel to the stars, as you will soon read.

 

When we speak or sing or tone, we are actually generating amplified thoughts: thoughts that originate in our minds and give rise to electromagnetic signals within our brains. Yet those thoughts become hugely amplified and transcribed into sound every time we speak, sing, or tone. In this way, our thoughts can be shared with the world. But what if our words were transformed into light? The light would zip through the atmosphere and carry our amplified thoughts to the stars. Is this some new high-tech science or maybe even science fiction? Actually, it is a scientific fact, although not commonly known.

And you don’t need fancy equipment to convert words or songs to light; your voice is all you need. The basic principles are straightforward, and by the end of this article, you will understand the special relationship between sound and light and how your voice can reach the stars. You will also learn how your voice speaks the language of cells that positively affects every cell in your body and the cells of everyone in your proximity.

While scientists agree that sound and light are different phenomena,  much confusion exists among the general public concerning the relationship between these two forms of energy. For example, online articles often appear in which a particular sound frequency is multiplied   by forty octaves, in an attempt to identify its equivalent light ‘color.’

In the chart below, colors of light are alongside their corresponding Ångström numbers (named after the Swedish physicist Anders Jonas Ångström), and these are compared with frequencies of sound given in Hertz. For example, at 392 Hertz, the musical note ‘G’ is shown as a deep red color. At first glance, this artistic interpretation of sound as color appears valid until we realize that sound and light are different forms of energy. It’s rather like comparing apples with oranges; they are plainly different. This attempt at comparing light colors with sound frequencies is fundamentally flawed. However,  there is indeed an intriguing, almost magical, relationship between sound and light, although not in the way commonly believed.

The Nature of Sound

 

To build a foundation of understanding concerning the physics of sound, let us first define sound. Sound in air is the transfer of periodic vibrations between adjacent colliding atoms or molecules. That might sound rather grand, but it simply means that when atomic particles bump into their neighbors, they pass on their vibrations.