Masters of Health Magazine March 2024 | Page 111

The Language of the Body

Jill Mattson

An entirely new perspective on health will yield countless breakthroughs in medical treatment because the body is a “sonic wave pool.” Many visionaries, such as Edgar Cayce, have predicted that sound will be the future of medicine. That prediction is coming to life. 

 

Currently, sound is used for sonograms and tens units, blasting kidney stones and healing broken bones faster.

 

Science confirms that sound goes out of the ears like a radio signal, broadcasting to the rest of the body. The body interprets the sound waves quickly and repairs begin immediately. When waves interact within the body, they combine or cancel each other. Further, body processes like food digestion, interact with the sound waves of harmonic cycles.

 

Sound is invasive, and we have all experienced this. Music makes us feel – it interacts with our emotions. We snap our fingers to a lively beat and relax to the soothing sounds. Sound waves interact with our emotions, which is a subtle energy that is comprised of minuscule waves. Sound doesn’t isolate our emotions and ignore the rest of our bodies. Sound waves interact with all waves nearby. That is simply science!

 

Researcher Sharry Edwards demonstrated that if she plays the frequency associated with the supplement, niacin, the listener’s face flushes as if he took a pill – but he only “listened” to the pill. Sounds correlate to biochemicals and biological formulas. With this perspective, researcher Edwards concluded that the body's language is numbers (of cycles of sound waves) expressed as frequencies or sounds.

 

Nerves communicate information to the far reaches of the body through electrical impulses. Thomas Heimburg, a Copenhagen University biology and physics researcher said, “The physical laws of thermodynamics tell us that electrical impulses must produce heat along the nerve, but experiments find no heat.”  Heimburg questioned standard thinking about inter-body communications through the nervous system.

 

Heimburg proposes that the nerves communicate information through sound waves. This would explain how anesthesiology works – a mystery that has baffled scientists for years. Anesthetics change the melting point of nerve membranes so they can’t propagate sound. Nerves are put on “stand by” and can’t report messages the brain interprets as pain.

Sound entrains our brain waves into alpha, beta, theta, and delta ranges. At specific brainwaves, our bodies produce healthy chemicals and repair our bodies. At other brain waves, one can quit smoking with greater ease. And sound can control the brain waves!

 

Pieces of the sonic body puzzle are constantly unraveling. In 1999, a professor at the University of Miami found that Alzheimer’s patients who listened to music increased their activities and levels of melatonin. (Melatonin regulates sleep, increases immune function, and creates a calm mood.)

Music increases endorphin release, decreasing the need for medication, according to the Austin Medical Center & Harvard University Medical School. Japanese researchers added to this idea. “Music played before anesthesia caused higher production of alpha waves (indicating deeper relaxation), decreases in the stress hormones cortisol. This boosted the immune system, reducing recovery time.”