Infinity Health & Wellness Magazine October / November 2016 | Page 8
Secrets of Sonic Levitation
by Jill Mattson
Ancient manuscript describe sound levitating
heavy, perhaps aiding in the building of huge
pyramids and monuments. Ancient texts, all over
the globe, describe sound as an effective method to
move and alter dense physical matter.
According to ancient wisdom, the power of sound
increased with large numbers of participants singing
or playing musical instruments. Each individual
accessed energy that originated from the heavens.
Two singers together created more energy than
each singing separately, as if their combined voices
increased energy logarithmically. Heavenly energy
from large choirs constantly sang to make a country
potent, almost invincible.
their sound to go underneath a huge rock and up it
went. Details are given in Bruce Cathie’s free book,
Acoustic Levitation of Stones.5
In another example, Edward Leedskalnin, a man
with humble financial resources and a fourth
grade education, built a monument to his lost love
who canceled their wedding one day before the
ceremony. In this area of Homestead Florida the
coral can be up to 4,000 feet thick. Leedskalnin cut
and moved huge blocks of coral himself with only
hand tools, yet each section weighed more than 58
tons.6 Leedskalnin left the castle as proof that he
could move large stones without equipment.
Author Bruce Cathie described an eye witness
account of many Tibetan monks moving huge
boulders with their voices and musical instruments.
The exact location of the singers and musicians was
crucial for the “anti-gravity sonic effects” to work.1
Various ancient writing describe directional sounds
as a source of mechanical power, as if sound was
squirted out of a water pistol: aim was important.2
Leedskalnin claimed he knew how the Egyptians
built their pyramids. He built Coral Castle by
reportedly “singing” to large stones to lift them.
Leedskalin placed his hands over a stone to be
levitated. He sung a scale until his hands felt a
response from the stone. (Each tone was sustained
to detect a subtle vibratory response.) The sound
that produced the strongest vibration was sustained
for quite some time to give the rock a powerful
dosage and the rock levitated.
A German article, by Swedish engineer Olaf
Alexanderson3 described sonic levitation: ‘We
know from the priests of the far east that they
were able to lift heavy boulders up high mountains
with the help of groups of various sounds... the
knowledge of the various vibrations in the audio
range demonstrates to a scientist of physics that a
vibrating and condensed sound field can nullify the
power of gravitation.”
In a high tech example, high powered sound can
suspend and move objects in air. Yoshili Hashimoto
of Tokyo’s Kaijo Corporation developed an acoustic
levitation machine. The sound vibrates 20,000
times per second to keep a small silicon wafer
hovering on millimeter above a surface. Acoustic
levitation experiments have been conducted
in space as the absence of gravity make better
conditions to observe just the impact of sound.
Observations4 only 20 years ago in Tibet from a
civil engineer, Henry Kjelson, reported that a
Swedish doctor, Dr Jarl, made a journey to Tibet
in 1939 to visit a high Lama. This lama let him
observe sonic levitation of huge rocks up a cliff of
about 250 meters.
The wonders of sound… we have not scratched
the surface of what this energy source can do – if
properly harnessed. The future science of sound
and vibrational energy will “rock” our world!
The task was accomplished by mapping out exactly
where singers and musicians stood. They angled
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About the Author: Jill Mattson is a prolific Artist,
Musician and Author. Jill is a four - time author
and widely recognized expert and composer in the
Oct / Nov 2016