Most of us know about binaural beats, rife frequencies, rhythmic auditory stimulation, multiple wave oscillation etc and may even find them beneficial. I thought this YT video was interesting though, not least because some years ago I experimented with subharmonic vibration to stress relieve high alloy carbon steel. It worked. If a 500 kg section of very high strength drill pipe can succumb to gentle vibration, then how much more so might a human body that is ~60% water!
I would appreciate other's personal experiences or opinions as to the veracity of the claims made.
Thanks
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PDKiwi
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Hi, sorry for the delay in replying. The link is missing for me too, however I think the video was similar to this. BTW I have cookies activated so not sure why the Health Unlocked link is getting corrupted.
Hello everyone, I want to share with you the platform volumo.com/ because I have been looking for something similar for a very long time. There you can find a wide variety of music from different genres, including electronic music, and you can download music in MP3, WAV, AIFF, and FLAC formats.
Just be careful folks, that you don't play the same tracks too often or some songs will get stuck in your brain and drive you nuts. I find Andrew Lloyd Webber's music particularly challenging in this regard. Conversely if you're doing rapid John Pepper style walking, a sped up walking on gravel sound track will make a difference without driving you berserk when you're done.
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