NEO Magazine Issue 1 | Page 15

So emotion is really energy, it is energy in motion, e-motion. Emotion is like a roller coaster conveying the emotional energy from the heart to every cell in our body into our very own DNA. The energy of our emotions moves between these Golden Mean scales of long waves to short waves and is finally delivered to our DNA. When the heart expresses the emotion of love it creates a cascade of Golden Mean electromagnetic waves, in fact it creates gravity just like the atom does when it attracts by Golden Mean braiding electromagnetic waves into the zero still point. Why have we always associated love with gravity? Why do we use words like I’m attracted to you, like the moon is to the Earth, when we are in love with someone? Why has our emotion always been associated with weight and gravity? Emotions are reflected in the waves of the ECG. Also our thoughts leave a fingerprint in the electromagnetic field of the brain, our brainwaves recorded in the EEG. The Heart Tuner developed by Dan’s team picks up the signals of the heart and the brain and is able to detect phase locks between the waves of the ECG and the EEG. More specifically, we have found that sustained positive emotions appear to give rise to a distinct mode of functioning, which we call psychophysiological coherence. During this mode, heart rhythms exhibit a sine wave-like pattern and the heart’s electromagnetic field becomes correspondingly more organized. At the physiological level, this mode is characterized by increased efficiency and harmony in the activity and interactions of the body’s systems. Psychologically, this mode is linked with a notable reduction in internal mental dialogue, reduced perceptions of stress, increased emotional balance and enhanced mental clarity, intuitive discernment, and cognitive performance. In sum, our research suggests that psychophysiological coherence is important in enhancing new earth designs by juan schlosser ate corresponding changes in the structure of the electromagnetic field radiated by the heart, measurable by a technique called spectral analysis.