Sound In Motion
The kinetic energy of an object is the energy which it possesses due to its motion. Sometimes the hardest thing in a day is to just get moving. It is said that an object in motion is much easier to redirect than one that is still. Sound in motion is the key to energy.
This makes a lot of sense about the energy that we carry. Sometimes life situations overcome our ability to move and we are stuck in a rut that seems impossible to pull out of. It is in these times where the value of Shift It! shines the brightest.
The Energy of Sound
Sound is energy! Energy creates movement, therefore as we apply sound energy to the situation it begins to move.
If we look at sound in terms of waves of energy, we see there are high points and low points. As frequencies change, the high points get higher and the low points get lower.
This dance of energy creates the energy of movement. This energy, as it impacts a stationary object, imprints on it the vibration of sound. With enough sound, the stationary object will actually begin to move!
Tibetan Temples
It is said that some of the giant stones used to build the temples on the cliff sides in Tibet were actually moved there using sound. The monks made longhorns and special drums that created certain frequencies that were able to actually levitate stones! Although I have not seen this with my own eyes, it is extraordinary:
A Swedish doctor, Dr. Jarl, a friend of Kjelsons, studied at Oxford. During those times he became friends with a young Tibetan student. A couple of years later, it was 1939, Dr. Jarl made a journey to Egypt for the English Scientific Society. There he was seen by a messenger of his Tibetan friend, and urgently requested to come to Tibet to treat a high Lama.
After Dr. Jarl got the leave he followed the messenger and arrived after a long journey by plane and Yak caravans, at the monastery, where the old Lama and his friend who was now holding a high position were now living.
Dr. Jarl stayed there for some time, and because of his friendship with the Tibetans he learned a lot of things that other foreigners had no chance to hear about or observe.
The Day It Changed
One day his friend took him to a place in the neighbourhood of the monastery and showed him a sloping meadow which was surrounded in the north west by high cliffs. In one of the rock walls, at a height of about 250 metres was a big hole which looked like the entrance to a cave.
In front of this hole there was a platform on which the monks were building a rock wall. The only access to this platform was from the top of the cliff and the monks lowered themselves down with the help of ropes.
In the middle of the meadow, about 250 metres from the cliff, was a polished slab of rock with a bowl like cavity in the centre. The bowl had a diameter of one metre and a depth of 15 centimetres. A block of stone was manoeuvred into this cavity by Yak oxen. The block was one metre wide and one and one half metres long. Then 19 musical instruments were set in an arc of 90 degrees at a distance of 63 metres from the stone slab.
The Big Drums
The big drums were made of 1mm thick sheet iron, and had a weight of 150kg. They were built in five sections. All the drums were open at one end, while the other end had a bottom of metal, on which the monks beat with big leather clubs. Behind each instrument was a row of monks.
When the stone was in position the monk behind the small drum gave a signal to start the concert. The small drum had a very sharp sound, and could be heard even with the other instruments making a terrible din. All the monks were singing and chanting a prayer, slowly increasing the tempo of this unbelievable noise. During the first four minutes nothing happened, then as the speed of the drumming, and the noise, increased, the big stone block started to rock and sway, and suddenly it took off into the air with an increasing speed in the direction of the platform in front of the cave hole 250 metres high. After three minutes of ascent it landed on the platform.
More Work
Continuously they brought new blocks to the meadow, and the monks using this method, transported 5 to 6 blocks per hour on a parabolic flight track approximately 500 metres long and 250 metres high. From time to time a stone split, and the monks moved the split stones away. Quite an unbelievable task.
Dr. Jarl knew about the hurling of the stones. Tibetan experts like Linaver, Spalding and Huc had spoken about it, but they had never seen it. So Dr. Jarl was the first foreigner who had the opportunity to see this remarkable spectacle. Because he had the opinion in the beginning that he was the victim of mass-psychosis he made two films of the incident. The films showed exactly the same things that he had witnessed.
The English Society for which Dr. Jarl was working confiscated the two films and declared them classified.
Read more on this here: Tibetan Sound Levitation Of Large Stones Witnessed By Scientist
Sound Into Motion
It may take a while to create the devices necessary for this kind of movement based on the information above.
If you want to create movement in your life, it is very simple: you can use the sound of your own customized Shift It! soundtrack and begin your movement today!
Use the sample below to feel how sound energy affects you!
Remember to get in touch with me so we can create your own personal 30-minute soundtrack to get you moving!
[hr]
Listen here to Shift It! Sound into Motion!
[mp3j track=”http://www.tobychristensen.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Shift-It-Sample-9.mp3″ autoplay=”y” flip=”y” title=”Shift It! Sound into Motion!” vol=”100″]
[hr]