Masters of Health Magazine October 2025 | Page 95

Health & Healing Vibrations

Sharry Edwards, MEd

Color association: Green Blue

Musical note association: G

Astrology Association: Scorpio

This column strives to bring you the latest in innovative ideas from the emerging field of human BioAcoustics in support of SELF-HEALTH.

For her musical composition, Sequentia, Susan Alexjander created music based on the mathematical composition of human DNA.  The music is haunting yet familiar to almost anyone who listens to it. 

In this article, I would like to share how the math created by the movements of the planets created the vibrations that became music, that became matter that became us; emotionally and physically.

But let’s start at the beginning with the concepts of Pythagoras and Johannes Kepler – two ancient visionaries who proposed that the movements of the planets in our solar system created vibrations that could be measured as music that we could not hear, but vibrations that our soul recognized.  Both considered that the vibrations of the planets created our physical reality.

Hence, everything we experience and conceive is made up of vibrations that are measurable frequencies.  In modern times, this was a concept embraced by brilliant luminaries such as Einstein and Tesla. 

Both believed to understand anything, we must first consider that everything is energy measured as frequency. How can we use this information to explain that we and our physical universe actually exists?

The Center for BioAcoustic Biology & Sound Health has been pondering this question for the last forty years.  

The Institute has amassed enough data to confirm that living beings possess a Mathematical Constitution and that our research and data can substantiate that there is a Mathematical Rosetta Stone of being; of health and healing.

My ears and vocal cords are mutated so that I can hear and duplicate the otoacoustic emissions – aka Signature Sounds in ancient times - that are emitted by most living beings. 

I’ve used that talent through the years to create protocols and computer applications to measure frequency signatures, via vocal analysis that have proven frequency and vibration of our cells can be detected, quantified, and used to verify and manage our emotional and physical selves.

James Gimzewski, a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at UCLA, confirms that living cells make distinct sounds, which might someday help doctors “hear” diseases.  He reasoned that although a noise generated by a cell would not be audible, it might be detected by an especially sensitive instrument.