Institute of HeartMath
The scientific community is just beginning to appreciate how the fields generated by living systems and the ionosphere interact with one another. For instance, the earth and the ionosphere generate a symphony of frequencies and some of the large resonances occurring in the earth’s field are in the same frequency range as those of the human heart and brain. Although researchers have looked at some of the possible interactions between the earth’s field and human, animal and plant activity, they have barely scratched the surface of what may be achieved with long-term global monitoring of resonances and changes in the earth and ionospheric fields.
Previous research already has found that changes in the earth’s magnetic field are associated with changes in nervous system and brain activity, including memory, athletic performance and other tasks; sensitivity in a wide range of extrasensory perception experiments; synthesis of nutrients in plants and algae; the number of reported traffic violations and accidents; mortality from heart attacks and strokes; and incidence of depression and suicide. It’s interesting to note that changes in geomagnetic conditions appear to affect the rhythms of the heart more strongly than other physiological functions.
There is evidence in some cases that people’s brainwaves can synchronize with the rhythm of the electromagnetic waves generated in the earth’s ionosphere. When people say they "feel" an impending earthquake or other planetary events such as weather changes, it is possible that they are reacting to the actual physical signals that occur in the earth’s field before the events.
While it is not difficult to conceive that life-forms embedded in the earth’s magnetic field could be affected by modulations in the field, it is a more far-reaching proposition to suggest that the earth’s field can be influenced or modulated by human emotions.
Nevertheless, GCI researchers theorize that when large numbers of humans respond to a global event with a common emotional feeling, the collective response can modulate the activity in the earth’s field. Cases in which the event evokes negative responses can be thought of as a planetary stress wave, and cases in which a positive wave is created could create a global coherence wave.
This perspective is supported by research at the Institute of HeartMath, which has shown that emotions not only create coherence or incoherence in our bodies, but, like radio waves, also radiate outward and are detected by the nervous systems of others in our environment.
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