The Invisible Soup
Why Modern Electricity is a "Silent Stressor"
Have you ever noticed a tree that grows at a sharp angle for a few feet, then suddenly straightens and continues upward as if nothing happened?
Most people assume trees reach for light. Sometimes that’s true, but often a tree responds to something beneath it, such as an underground water vein or a geological fault that disrupts the Earth’s natural infrared emissions. Trees rely on those emissions to grow and live a healthy life. So when Earth’s core radiation is blocked, the tree searches for it by leaning in another direction, searching for a better energetic environment. Once it finds it, it resumes upright growth.

That image matters because we are not separate from this system. We are electromagnetic beings living inside an invisible soup of natural and artificial fields. The difference is that trees can lean, but most of us cannot.
The Electromagnetic Nature of Life
It’s easy to forget that the human body is electrical. Every heartbeat is controlled by electrical impulses. Every thought results from electrical activity in the brain. An EEG measures brain waves. An ECG tracks heart rhythms. An EMG records muscular electrical activity. Even the surface of our skin carries measurable voltage.
We are not metaphorically electrical; we are literally electrical.
At the same time, the Earth itself is electrical. It generates a direct current field and emits infrared radiation from its core. The space between the Earth and the ionosphere forms a resonant cavity filled with organized electromagnetic activity. Life evolved within this field over millions of years.
This natural field is coherent. It is rhythmic. It has order. Our biology adapted to that order.
The Shift to Alternating Current
When large-scale electrification began, the world faced a choice in how to distribute energy. Nikola Tesla, a brilliant visionary whose work transformed human civilization, developed the system for distribution using alternating current, AC. This was a monumental achievement that enabled electricity to travel long distances and power the modern world.
However, there is a biological trade-off. Unlike Earth’s steady direct current, AC reverses polarity 60 times per second in North America and 50 times per second in many other regions. Instead of a steady flow in one direction, the current switches back and forth quickly. While this is efficient for industry and lighting, it is foreign to our cells. Our biology depends on stable electrical gradients, and when the external environment becomes electrically chaotic, the body must constantly work to compensate.
Layers of Modern Pollution
Modern electricity is seldom clean. Beyond the main alternating current, we have added a complex web of interference that further disturbs the natural plasma in the air. To understand how this impacts us, we need to examine the specific types of pollution we are now immersed in.
Dirty Electricity: High-frequency voltage spikes and “noise” that travel along standard electrical wiring. Power lines carry harmonics, surges, and irregular frequencies superimposed on the base signal. This makes the electricity in your walls chaotic rather than smooth, turning your home’s wiring into an unintended antenna for electrical interference.
Electrosmog: The invisible cloud of chaotic waves from wireless communication. We now live amidst dense layers of signals from Wi-Fi routers, cell towers, satellites, Bluetooth devices, and smart meters. These frequencies are not coherent like the Earth’s natural rhythms; instead, they form a constant, jagged background noise that our cells must navigate every second.
The Three-Foot Rule: Most people do not realize that electricity is not confined to the cables running through their walls. It creates an active field that extends outward for three feet. If you sleep with your headboard against a wall filled with wiring, your brain is resting within this field for six to eight hours. Your brain cells must constantly struggle against rapid changes in polarity all night long, preventing the deep, restorative rest the body needs.
Karl Hecht, in his article Health Implications of Long-Term Exposure to Electrosmog describes this modern environment as a silent stressor. Initially, a person may feel nothing. The body adapts and stabilizes. However, compensation is not the same as resilience.
The Saturation Effect
Studies conducted in Russia between 1960 and 1996 followed workers exposed to strong electromagnetic fields in industrial settings such as radar stations and high-voltage transmission sites. The pattern was not an immediate collapse. Instead, it involved gradual saturation.
During the first year, most workers showed no obvious symptoms. Between three and five years, complaints began to appear, including headaches, fatigue, insomnia, tinnitus, skin irritations, difficulty concentrating, and a persistent flu-like malaise. After a decade or more, rates of chronic disease increased.
This pattern is important. The human body doesn’t fail suddenly. It takes in stress until it reaches its limit. Children, seniors, and those with weakened immune systems often hit this limit more quickly. Their capacity to handle stress is smaller.
The Forgotten Question of Location
In the mid-twentieth century, European researchers such as Dr. Hartmann and Dr. Picard investigated a puzzling phenomenon. Some patients simply would not recover from relatively minor illnesses. Treatment protocols were appropriate, and nutrition was addressed. Yet healing stalled.
Their investigations took them below the surface, literally. They started examining geological faults, underground water veins, and earth radiation patterns beneath homes and beds. They concluded that a significant percentage of chronic illness was connected to where a person spends hours, especially during sleep. When the beds were moved off the water vein or fault, the patient healed.
Ancient civilizations seem to have understood this principle instinctively. The Etruscans and Romans would let sheep graze on land designated for settlement. After a year, they would examine the animals’ organs. If the sheep showed signs of disease, the land was rejected. Whether viewed as a ritual or empirical testing, the core idea was clear: location matters.
Today, we build without considering what lies beneath us. Subterranean water veins serve as pathways of least resistance for electrical currents. High tension wires and power substations can interact with geological features, intensifying irregular fields. In cities, layers of infrastructure stack on top of each other, with cables in walls, transformers nearby, and buried lines under sidewalks.
A Real World Example
Recently, I spoke with a woman who was battling cancer and exploring non-conventional treatment methods. She sensed that her home environment was affecting her health, as she lived near a power transformer. When one of our Certification graduates visited her house, the electrical contamination was so intense that within twenty minutes, the specialist experienced a headache and severe jaw tension, common signs of electrical contamination. It took over a day for her system to detox and recover after leaving.
In this instance of extreme electrical pollution, it is best to leave and detox your body from electricity, as your cells (and body) are exhausted. One solution is to go to the country or up into the mountains, far away from cell towers, power stations, and high-tension wires, where your body can repair itself. This process takes time, and it is not an overnight fix.

Not every home is that extreme, but many people experience chronic headaches, bruxism, TMJ, rashes, sleep issues, anxiety, or a sense of internal agitation without a clear cause. These symptoms are often dismissed as psychological or random. However, when the body constantly encounters chaotic polarity shifts, it’s reasonable to consider that biology might be responding.
Listening to Your Body’s Intelligence
The goal of understanding the invisible soup is not to induce fear. It is to increase awareness. You can’t control every cell tower or power line, but you can assess your immediate environment and turn it from a source of stress into a source of vitality.
Start with where you sleep. Create distance between your head and major wiring. Turn off Wi-Fi at night if possible. Notice how your body feels in different environments. Do you sleep more deeply when camping or visiting the mountains? Do certain rooms in your house feel heavy or agitating?
Your body is not irrational. It is finely tuned to electromagnetic signals because it is composed of them. For most of human history, our electromagnetic environment was coherent and rhythmic. In just a century, we flooded it with artificial frequencies. The long-term effects are still being studied, debated, and sometimes ignored. But one thing remains certain: biology adapts to its environment.
The question is whether the environment is helping adaptation or slowly exhausting it.
Creating a Harmonized Sanctuary
This is exactly why we created the Solar Sacred Geometry Certification. We believe your home should be a sanctuary, a place where your cells can finally stop compensating for chaos and start the deep work of regeneration.
This certification teaches students how to identify these invisible stressors and, more importantly, how to harmonize them. By studying earth energies, geopathic stress, and electromagnetic mitigation, our graduates learn to create living spaces that promote health rather than drain it. Whether you’re aiming to heal your own home or help others find balance in an increasingly “noisy” world, these studies provide the tools to transform a polluted environment into a coherent, life-supporting sanctuary.
We live in the soup. The first step is recognizing that it exists. The second step is learning how to change the recipe.
I would love to hear about your experiences. Have you ever felt noticeably different in certain locations, whether better or worse? Have you tried changing your sleep environment? Let’s explore this together in the comments.





Dear Karen and Dominique - It's good to be connected with you again. I am really enjoying this new series- and noticing how it has evolved over time, like a fine wine. Nice job - and much appreciated !