Frequency Ranges

A cautious term for the ranges of rhythm, vibration, and repetition used in Netist writing when discussing cycles, sound, breath, resonance, and symbolic correspondence.

Literal meaning

Hertz means cycles per second. A tuning note, an electrical signal, a brain rhythm, a heartbeat pattern, and a standing wave can all be measured or discussed in frequency language when the phenomenon actually repeats in time.

Esoteric meaning

Netist sources use frequency language to remind the reader that different levels of life move at different tempos. Breath, chant, attention, seasons, planetary rhythms, and cosmic cycles do not operate on one clock. The language is useful, but it should not become a pretend measurement chart for every spiritual idea.

Allegorical meaning

A drum, a bell, a voice, and a heartbeat can belong in the same ceremony without sharing the same pitch. Each has its own range. The work is to bring them into relationship, not to force them into one number.

Extended meaning

The old entry assigned exact hertz ranges to the Cycle Ladder, including very large numbers for subatomic and Planck-scale material and lower bands for human life. That table should not be presented as settled public teaching. The Book of Foundations supports broad frequency language, the String Cycle as vibration imagery, the Schumann resonance at about 7.83 Hz as one planetary reference, and a general frequency band for the Anthropogenic Cycle. It does not provide a complete verified table of hertz values for every cycle. Public language should therefore stay modest: some values are measurable, some are symbolic, and some belong to cosmological imagination rather than laboratory measurement.

*Frequency Ranges* replaces the old hard-number chart with a safer public framing. Use measured values where they are real, symbolic values where they are symbolic, and clear caveats where Netist cosmology goes beyond standard science.

Use this term when explaining why Netist writing speaks about sound, resonance, cycles, chant, planetary rhythm, 432 Hz, Schumann resonance, or the different tempos of life without treating every correspondence as a fixed scientific fact.

Ritual usage

In practice, frequency ranges appear through chant, music, breath pacing, drumming, silence, and repeated vows. A practitioner may choose a tone or rhythm for its symbolic and felt quality, but no public rite should promise a guaranteed result from a number alone.

Related ideas appear in music of the spheres traditions, mantra and chant practice, sacred-number systems, and contemplative uses of breath or rhythm.

Frequency is a standard unit for periodic events. Sound waves, electromagnetic waves, neural rhythms, mechanical vibration, and standing resonances can be measured in hertz when the phenomenon is defined clearly. Mapping spiritual cycles to exact hertz bands is not established science and should be presented as symbolic or internal cosmology unless a specific measurable phenomenon is being named.