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Light Biology, nnEMF, Mitochondria, and the Brain: Frequency, Energy, and Protecting Independence on the Regenerative Homestead – Part 2: Frequencies, Schumann Resonance, and Biological Disruption

Hey Y’all, it’s Kara from Lange Girl Farms here in Southeast Michigan.

I’ve been out at dawn these past days, standing in the pasture as the first light breaks and feeling the quiet hum of the land waking up. There’s a rhythm to it — the birds, the horses shifting, the way the dew sits on the clover. It feels like the Earth itself has a pulse. That pulse is real. It’s the Schumann resonance, around 7.83 Hz, often called Earth’s natural heartbeat. Nikola Tesla told us that if we want to understand the secrets of the universe, we should think in terms of energy, frequency, and vibration. Einstein’s work on energy-matter equivalence and the wave nature of reality points to the same truth. Frequency and energy truly are everything — and when we disrupt Earth’s natural frequencies with artificial pulsed signals, the effects ripple through biology in ways we’re only beginning to understand.

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In Part 1 we laid the foundation with light as quantum information, mitochondria as the energy hubs, and the mismatch created by artificial blue light and nnEMF. Today we go deeper into frequencies themselves — the Schumann resonance, how artificial pulsed fields interfere, specific examples, converging research, and what this means for our brains, animals, and homestead resilience.

Schumann Resonance: Earth’s Natural Frequency

The Schumann resonance is a set of extremely low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic resonances in the cavity between Earth’s surface and the ionosphere, excited by lightning strikes worldwide. The fundamental frequency sits around 7.83 Hz, with harmonics above it. This is not some esoteric idea — it’s measurable, documented atmospheric physics.

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This frequency range overlaps with human and animal brainwaves (alpha waves around 8–12 Hz are associated with calm, relaxed alertness). Many researchers propose that life on Earth evolved in tune with these natural rhythms. They help regulate circadian processes, cellular communication, and even magnetoreception in birds, bees, and other animals that navigate using Earth’s magnetic field.

When we are regularly exposed to this natural background, our biology stays coherent. Mitochondria function better, stress responses stay balanced, and the brain’s master clock (suprachiasmatic nucleus) stays synchronized with the day-night cycle.

Artificial Pulsed Frequencies and the Disruption

Modern technology introduces pulsed electromagnetic fields that are very different from the natural continuous Schumann signal:

•  WiFi, smart meters, and routers often pulse in the 2.4–5 GHz range, with modulation that can include lower-frequency components.

•  5G millimeter waves (high absorption in small bodies like insects) and power-line ELF fields add additional layers.

•  Specific examples like 14 Hz pulses have been linked in some research to heightened amygdala activity — the brain’s fear/anxiety center — potentially contributing to chronic low-level stress, sleep issues, and irritability.

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These pulsed, artificial frequencies can interfere with natural Schumann resonance and magnetoreception systems. The result is desynchronization at the cellular level: oxidative stress, disrupted calcium signaling, altered gene expression, and mitochondrial inefficiency. Dr. Jack Kruse and converging voices in bioelectromagnetics emphasize that this mismatch — artificial light timing plus pulsed nnEMF — compounds the stress on the same mitochondrial machinery we saw affecting plants and bees in the earlier series.

Neurobiology Connections

The brain is particularly sensitive because it operates on electrical and electrochemical signals. When external frequencies interfere:

•  Circadian rhythms get disrupted (melatonin suppression, dopamine imbalance).

•  Blood-brain barrier permeability can increase (Frey effect and follow-up research), allowing easier passage of inflammatory signals.

•  Chronic low-level stress responses stay activated, affecting mood, focus, and cognitive clarity.

This isn’t just human. Birds lose navigation accuracy, bees show reduced foraging, and livestock may exhibit subtle behavioral or metabolic shifts — all pointing back to the same frequency-sensitive biology. The research gaps on large-scale cascading effects don’t disprove the plausibility; they reflect where funding and priorities have been focused.

On our homestead, the difference is noticeable when we step away from constant wireless signals and prioritize natural rhythms. The tree windbreaks and wooded borders don’t just buffer wind and provide habitat — they increase distance from artificial sources and help maintain alignment with Earth’s frequencies. Morning sunlight, reduced smart tech in barns and living areas, and preserving off-grid options all support this natural coherence.

Practical Homestead Awareness

We don’t need to wait for perfect studies. Observing our own land gives real feedback:

•  Bee and bird activity.

•  Pasture growth and animal behavior.

•  Our own energy, sleep, and focus.

Small choices — turning WiFi off at night, hardwiring where practical, spending time in natural light — help restore alignment with Earth’s frequencies and reduce the total artificial load.

This frequency disruption is one of the hidden costs of grid centralization and the always-connected push. By understanding it, we can make more informed choices that protect our brains, animals, and regenerative systems.

I’d love to hear from all of you. Have you noticed differences in energy, sleep, or animal behavior when you reduce wireless exposure or spend more time in natural rhythms? What small changes have you tried with lighting or buffering? Drop your thoughts and experiences below — I really do read every single comment. Let’s keep learning together and aligning with the natural frequencies that support our homesteads.

With love and dirt under my nails,

Kara

Lange Girl Farms

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