Artwork for podcast Biohacker's Podcast
Healing with Sound and Frequency with Dr. Steven Schwartz
Episode 6022nd July 2024 • Biohacker's Podcast • Biohacker's Podcast
00:00:00 00:43:34

Share Episode

Shownotes

In this episode, Teemu Arina and Dr. Steven Schwartz discuss the healing properties of various frequencies and their applications.

Dr. Steven Schwartz is the founder and President of Bioharmonic Technologies, which is a human optimization technology and therapeutic music company created to raise the vibration of the planet and harmonize humanity using sound, light, frequency, and vibration.

Since 2000, he has been specializing in the bioenergetic correction of systemic inflammatory conditions, autoimmune diseases, allergies, and chronic pain, as well as the optimization of human performance.

He has been the clinic director and chief over-seeing practitioner of numerous multidisciplinary alternative integrative medicine facilities throughout Colorado.

Dr. Steve studied Sports Medicine and Biology at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts and holds a Doctorate of Chiropractic degree from New York Chiropractic College.

He is an exemplary lecturer and teacher that has educated countless doctors, healthcare practitioners and the general public on integrating a new understanding of human physiology along with new cutting-edge technologies.

Dr. Schwartz’s practice philosophy has always been to access physiology at the point of origination, the level of cellular communication, and the level of bioresonance, which supersedes biochemistry. Bioresonance can correct biochemistry, quickly, naturally and non-invasively.

This conversation was recorded in June 2024.

Visit https://bioharmonictechnologies.com and follow @read_primal_resonance on Instagram to learn more!

Check https://biohackersummit.com for upcoming events & tickets!


Devices, supplements, guides, books & quality online courses for supporting your health & performance: https://biohackercenter.com


Key moments and takeaways:


00:00 Introduction by Teemu Arina

01:35 You're either degenerating or regenerating

02:39 The 7-stage process of cell replication

04:11 Toxic negative information leads to degeneration

05:17 The anabolic and catabolic phase

06:24 Some people are awake but their brains are asleep

08:12 The skin is the largest neurological organ

09:28 Sympathetic and parasympathetic state

10:56 Long-term daily meditation allows for less sleep

12:19 Most people can't sit still for 5 minutes

13:27 Principles of entrainment

14:35 Working with different brainwave states

16:13 Entrainment vs. entertainment

18:22 Sound, light, frequency and vibration

19:04 A lot of things happen below 100Hz

20:51 The bridge between Newtonian and quantum physics

22:10 Talking directly to the cell membrane

23:39 Dr. Schwartz' "quantum vibe chamber"

25:10 Effects of different frequencies on the cell

27:21 More about Dr. Schwartz' background

29:37 Eliminating infectious agents and allergies

31:27 What is pleomorphism?

33:44 Where does biochemistry originate?

35:46 From biohacking to bioharmonizing

36:49 Where to learn more about Dr. Vibe's VIBES

38:52 From indigenous studies to shamanic technology

41:50 The next Biohacker Summit will be in Tokyo, Japan

Transcripts

Speaker:

Music.

Speaker:

Welcome to the Biohackers podcast. My name is Teemu Arina. Today's guest is

Speaker:

Dr. Stephen Schwartz from Bioharmonic Technologies.

Speaker:

He is a regenerative medicine expert. He has written a book called Primal Resonance,

Speaker:

and for the last 20 years, he has dedicated his life to helping humanity to

Speaker:

reverse the effects of inflammation, chronic illness, allergies,

Speaker:

and emotional imbalances.

Speaker:

So there's a psychological component because we are not just physical,

Speaker:

but we are basically psycho-spiritual beings living in physical bodies.

Speaker:

And the connection between all of these are of essence when it comes to longevity and health.

Speaker:

So he's the founder and president of Bioharmonic Technologies,

Speaker:

and he has developed vibrational sound therapy technologies.

Speaker:

And he's specialized on therapeutic music.

Speaker:

And the technology itself is called Vibe. And if you want to experience it at

Speaker:

the Biohacker Summit, you can, which is one of the world's top conferences on

Speaker:

optimal human health and well-being, and I was privileged to have him in Amsterdam.

Speaker:

It was an absolutely amazing event.

Speaker:

And we have our 10th anniversary now in July, second and third.

Speaker:

At biohackersummit.com, you can find more information.

Speaker:

But without further ado, welcome to the show, Dr.

Speaker:

Schwartz. Thank you, Teemu. I'm excited to be on this podcast with you.

Speaker:

I've seen so many other amazing people on your podcast, which I've watched.

Speaker:

So I'm excited to share with you and your community.

Speaker:

Yeah. So explain us what is regenerative medicine.

Speaker:

So there's two cards. You're either degenerating or regenerating.

Speaker:

And it's an interesting concept because really from the moment the sperm fertilizes

Speaker:

the egg, you really begin to proliferate cells.

Speaker:

But then almost immediately because of your environment, you also begin to degenerate

Speaker:

because really from the moment you're born, which is kind of amazing.

Speaker:

You're ticking away technically at the days before you...

Speaker:

Die, which is a very interesting concept. So the idea is, even though you might

Speaker:

be rotating 365 days a year on a daily basis, and you're going through cellular

Speaker:

turnover, and you're being exposed to degenerative aspects of your environment,

Speaker:

how do you put in information to allow your cells to do the opposite,

Speaker:

to actually proliferate into a space of optimal well-being?

Speaker:

This is actually one of my core statements, I say, that were physical manifestations

Speaker:

of our own energetic expressions.

Speaker:

So when we're really looking at the origination of, let's just go to what's

Speaker:

degeneration versus regeneration, mitosis.

Speaker:

Mitosis, that's how our cells replicate. We got to look at that.

Speaker:

There's a seven stage process that goes through with every time your cell replicates.

Speaker:

And at the very beginning, there's anaphase. It's where you have the metabolism

Speaker:

of the cell is interpreted.

Speaker:

And it's interesting about that interpreted because it can be interpreted as

Speaker:

a regenerative process, or depending on the environment, it can be interpreted

Speaker:

as a degenerative process.

Speaker:

And this is where we start seeing

Speaker:

things like cancer, which is obviously a degenerative kind of process.

Speaker:

Actually, it's kind of like a proliferation of an altered communication state that occurs.

Speaker:

And really, it originates through these epigenetic processes,

Speaker:

our environment, the air that we breathe, the food that we eat,

Speaker:

the thoughts that we think, everything else that feeds into our environment.

Speaker:

And this is actually where my work really focuses at that receptor site,

Speaker:

that original receptor site, because what creates biochemistry,

Speaker:

and there's something happening at that receptor site.

Speaker:

And through my research, what I talk about in my book, Primal Resonance,

Speaker:

it's all about the living connective tissue matrix, the microfilaments,

Speaker:

microtubules, and intermediate tubules that respond to our environment through

Speaker:

vibrational resonance.

Speaker:

Resonance and so based off of that interaction at

Speaker:

the original space interaction of mitosis the

Speaker:

anaphase at that receptor site is what dictates the metabolism of how our cells

Speaker:

are going to either degenerate or regenerate and now we're showing that as you

Speaker:

can put in because think about if you're putting in toxic negative information

Speaker:

into the cell you're getting this degenerative process.

Speaker:

So really, as a scientist, I think, well, what if we just put positive information

Speaker:

into the cells, into that receptor site, it creates the opposite effect, a regenerative state.

Speaker:

And what research shows is that as you're putting in, whether it's going to

Speaker:

be, you know, nutrition or water or thoughts or emotions or whatever that stimulus

Speaker:

is going to be, that signal is going to be,

Speaker:

we now begin to see an interaction directly into the cellular expression.

Speaker:

And this is where we even see in doubt into the DNA, they say you could see

Speaker:

like an unwinding of the double helix spiral.

Speaker:

And they say that that is correlated to.

Speaker:

Regeneration. Right. I guess this is connected to the idea of anabolism and catabolism.

Speaker:

So we live between birth, growth, and death on a cellular level,

Speaker:

and also as individuals and as, you know, species even, hopefully we'll live forever, right?

Speaker:

But like, so far we go through cycles and our body is recycling damaged cells

Speaker:

through autophagy and other mechanisms.

Speaker:

And then we have basically the anabolic phase and the catabolic phase.

Speaker:

When you're awake, That's more of the catabolic.

Speaker:

And then you have the sleep, which is more of an anabolic that builds and grows the body.

Speaker:

And funnily enough, if you spend too much in the anabolic state, you risk cancer.

Speaker:

And if you live too much in a catabolic state, you get things like muscle loss

Speaker:

and all that starvation that goes beyond repair.

Speaker:

So can you dive deeper a little bit into that and how you reflect on these terms

Speaker:

that are maybe more familiar to people than mitosis? Yeah, well,

Speaker:

the words really are not what's important.

Speaker:

Like think about my mitosis. It's a fundamental aspect, but really it's about

Speaker:

how our cells replicate. We can all think about how that's going to occur.

Speaker:

But the main area that I'm focusing on in terms of what the vibe system is working

Speaker:

with sound and vibration and the process of regenerating of in training,

Speaker:

not just the brain, but the entire nervous system.

Speaker:

And why is that fundamental from what you just said is we go into this when

Speaker:

we're sleeping, we're regenerating.

Speaker:

And when we are awake and active, we're kind of degenerating if we're going

Speaker:

to play that tug of war process.

Speaker:

However, as you are probably aware, if you're doing EEG studies,

Speaker:

there's a lot of people that are awake, but yet their brain waves are showing

Speaker:

that they're actually asleep.

Speaker:

They have very high delta. They don't really have any beta.

Speaker:

And so now people are having processes like cancer develop because they're basically

Speaker:

awake, yet they're asleep.

Speaker:

And then when they try to go to sleep, they really can't sleep either. So that's a problem.

Speaker:

That's just a problem. So now what research also shows is that if you can put

Speaker:

spending simple as 30 minutes in theta, it's equivalent to eight hours of sleep,

Speaker:

the same physiological effects of that and instead of just entraining the brain,

Speaker:

because we know that the power of the brain.

Speaker:

But when we're looking at the nervous system, the brain is just one part of

Speaker:

the entire collective nervous system.

Speaker:

And from an embryological perspective, when we're developing inside of our mother's

Speaker:

womb, there's a piece of material called the ectoderm that forms the entire nervous system.

Speaker:

And what we could see is instead of just working on binaural beats that's in

Speaker:

training with our brain or any kinds of other brainwave states for brain entrainment or hypnosis,

Speaker:

we can actually put the body into a full body entrainment state and addressing

Speaker:

not just the brain, but the spinal cord and the peripheral nerves,

Speaker:

the cranial nerves, the dorsal vagal response is a big thing nowadays,

Speaker:

especially in the biohacking space.

Speaker:

But really, my principle is we're talking about, I believe that it's more of

Speaker:

a systemic process through something called the living connective tissue matrix,

Speaker:

which surrounds every tissue system and cell of the the body and plugs into

Speaker:

the nervous system and isn't part of the nervous system.

Speaker:

Also, I think a major component that people don't realize is that the skin is

Speaker:

also forms from this ectodermal tissue and is an extension.

Speaker:

People think of the skin as a

Speaker:

detox organ, but it's actually the largest neurological organ in the body.

Speaker:

So being able to pull all of these resources together and and entrain the entire

Speaker:

nervous system, we can begin to change biochemistry.

Speaker:

Well, let's put it this way. Based off your testing, Timu, I'm sure people can

Speaker:

see are they spending more time in a catabolic space or an anabolic space.

Speaker:

So once you can kind of determine where that is, either through assessment testing

Speaker:

or even just basic symptoms, can you not sleep? Do you have fatigue?

Speaker:

Do you have restlessness, ADD? Are you hyperactive? These are all different

Speaker:

sides, sluggish digestive processes, muscle pain and soreness, chronic inflammation.

Speaker:

These are all signs and symptoms of the body not being able to really function

Speaker:

at its most ideal optimal space.

Speaker:

So being able to shift the nervous system into a more of a.

Speaker:

Homeostatic and more of a balanced neurological experience.

Speaker:

Yeah, it makes a lot of sense. Heart rate variability testing is quite popular

Speaker:

among biohackers. And I've used this continuous HRV monitors.

Speaker:

And what I learned is even the same situations, you can have a very different

Speaker:

reaction depending on your breathing patterns in those moments and also your thought patterns.

Speaker:

And the ideal thing is that you have enough sympathetic stimulation throughout

Speaker:

the day and enough parasympathetic rest and recovery throughout the day.

Speaker:

But most people go through their day feeling every single minute with some kind

Speaker:

of stimulatory activity, checking mesoterious notes.

Speaker:

And it's very, very hard to just be and observe and be present.

Speaker:

And in the end, I've had days, I basically track this.

Speaker:

And on similar days, if I really focus on it, I can change the state of my nervous

Speaker:

system into a more balanced state without reducing the work,

Speaker:

without doing anything else differently,

Speaker:

but the way how I observe my nervous system input and how I kind of serve on it.

Speaker:

And this reminds me of, you mentioned sleep, and I want to bring up a practice

Speaker:

that is not discussed a lot, but that's a Zen monk practice,

Speaker:

and it's called the sitting practice or the sitters practice.

Speaker:

And And in this practice, not lying down. So you're basically like sitting.

Speaker:

And there's different levels to it. And in the beginning, you can use a backrest

Speaker:

or you can use like some kind of band that like holds you like in a seated position.

Speaker:

But the ultimate sophistication is where you are sitting and sleeping basically

Speaker:

in a meditative state all the time.

Speaker:

And I've seen some old documentaries of this Shaolin monks who like an older

Speaker:

man, he's sleeping on one leg and he mastered not being like fully asleep.

Speaker:

And it's crazy how some of these long-term meditators can get away with less sleep.

Speaker:

We have all these studies that show how important sleep is, but you can actually

Speaker:

practice meditation throughout the day and get that rest.

Speaker:

You spoke about theta brainwaves and all that.

Speaker:

I believe on a general population level, it's true. We need seven to eight hours.

Speaker:

If you are more sick, you maybe need more sleep than others if your body needs recovery.

Speaker:

But in the end, you can also probably modulate this through meditation.

Speaker:

Can you maybe speak about this

Speaker:

a little bit and how are you inducing those brain states or body states?

Speaker:

You spoke also about the skin in a wakeful state.

Speaker:

Yeah. You know, what you just talked about, this is it.

Speaker:

These are like the monks, the ninjas, the Jedis, you know, these advanced practices

Speaker:

of people that, and what I think is so interesting about the biohacking space

Speaker:

is it went from a place of like healthcare and doctors,

Speaker:

you know, chiropractors and acupuncturists to self-care.

Speaker:

You're putting this out to, we're exposing these practices to the world.

Speaker:

So we think about things like meditation.

Speaker:

The people that need to meditate the most are the ones that can't meditate.

Speaker:

Hey, I want you to go, Teemu, I want you to go sit in the corner and meditate

Speaker:

for, what, eight hours or 15 minutes. Can you sit still for five minutes?

Speaker:

Most people, their phones are ringing or whatever. There's all kinds of stuff

Speaker:

going on. People can't even sit for five minutes.

Speaker:

And I think that's a very interesting piece because as

Speaker:

we're opening up this biohacking space for

Speaker:

the masses the masses they all

Speaker:

have the capability of having these master-like experiences but in the earliest

Speaker:

stages they just can't get there they don't even know how to get there and it's

Speaker:

super frustrating it's like learning a language or learning to cook or learning

Speaker:

to dance play guitar first time you you try to do any of those things you're

Speaker:

embarrassed and you you know your body is sore and you just don't do it anymore.

Speaker:

So what we've worked with is creating a technology that if you can just lay

Speaker:

down and put headphones on, we've built the technology into it to just breathe.

Speaker:

And you can meditate. This is the interesting thing about meditation is you're

Speaker:

sitting there, you have your eyes closed, you're breathing, you're whatever,

Speaker:

you're counting down from 10 to one or you're doing whatever practices you might

Speaker:

be doing to entrain, to do some kind of hypnotic practices.

Speaker:

And then next thing you know, you get counted 10 to one at three or eight.

Speaker:

Your mind goes off, starts thinking about your cat, you know, something like that.

Speaker:

When you begin to bring in these principles of entrainment, and entrainment

Speaker:

can be like rhythm, it can be beat, it can be tempo.

Speaker:

There's a lot of different things that can be brought in rhythmically into your

Speaker:

nervous system systemically that pulls your body into entrainment.

Speaker:

You can't even not do it it has to happen so there's some basics to that concept

Speaker:

of full body neurological entrainment which is a term that i coined however

Speaker:

on top of that premise because here's what i know the most important thing for

Speaker:

healing that needs to be established first.

Speaker:

Is your body needs to be able to be able to get into parasympathetic.

Speaker:

And this is really what happens if you go into deep delta, your body is allowed

Speaker:

to go into parasympathetic.

Speaker:

This is where your biochemistry becomes optimized for healing.

Speaker:

And so once you're in that space, what we've created at BioHarmony Technologies

Speaker:

and with our sonic pseudocall programs is I've been able to to create ingredients

Speaker:

of different mathematical ratios that target the connective tissue.

Speaker:

You know, obviously working with different brainwave states,

Speaker:

sometimes we want to be in beta, sometimes we want to be in theta,

Speaker:

sometimes we want to be in delta, sometimes we want to do a sweep.

Speaker:

So we pick and choose based off of the physiological effect that we're really going for.

Speaker:

Then there's other aspects. Think about like neurolinguistic programming or

Speaker:

psychological aspect of your mind.

Speaker:

But really, instead of working with, we can do applied neurolinguistic programming

Speaker:

technology into rhythmic musical programs embedded.

Speaker:

So now we're targeting very specific conditions.

Speaker:

I call that sonic sacred geometry that we're using.

Speaker:

And then also other frequencies that we've been researching.

Speaker:

So there's a layered process along with musical theory that we encompass into

Speaker:

these programs that can target inflammation, attention deficit of disorder, anxiety, depression,

Speaker:

bone and tissue regeneration, visceral healing, emotional balancing,

Speaker:

PTSD reversal, a variety of different aspects.

Speaker:

And this is where I think is because there's another term I want to share with

Speaker:

your community that I feel is really important, the term a delivery system.

Speaker:

What's the most effective delivery system to human physiology to create the

Speaker:

most profound immediate change?

Speaker:

And we all know about oral, we think about convection, you have that infrared stuff.

Speaker:

Supplements. I personally believe that we can get 100% information delivered through the skin.

Speaker:

So that's been my principle that we've been working on for really almost a quarter of a century.

Speaker:

So let's wind back a little bit. So you mentioned the term entrainment.

Speaker:

So that's not entertainment.

Speaker:

You didn't say entertainment, you said entrainment. Now there's technologies

Speaker:

on the market that have existed a long time that are based on binaural beats

Speaker:

that supposedly do brain entrainment.

Speaker:

And maybe if you can like describe a little

Speaker:

bit what what you mean by this kind of body-based entrainment

Speaker:

how is light and sound connected to it you mentioned like

Speaker:

using headphones and all that I assume your technology is not just listening

Speaker:

to music and entertainment but it's something deeper you mentioned sacred geometry

Speaker:

why are these things connected and why is it important yeah that's a great that's

Speaker:

a great question so I think another term that you can

Speaker:

use for entrainment and not entertainment it's

Speaker:

actually funny we actually talk about inter if you break down the etymology

Speaker:

inter is inside entrainment so

Speaker:

we think about like the movies like when you're watching

Speaker:

movies it's entertainment they're entraining

Speaker:

our brains as we're watching this story to take us into whatever is happening

Speaker:

and think about even watching like horror movies we're entraining our bodies

Speaker:

into that as well creating that same biochemistry so that's why I personally

Speaker:

don't choose to watch those kinds of films but we can apply that same principle

Speaker:

because another term of entrainment.

Speaker:

In my opinion, is hypnosis, is being able to bring our bodies into a collective

Speaker:

unison of understanding around a specific topic of change or something that

Speaker:

we're wanting to create in our bodies. That's really what's happening with hypnosis.

Speaker:

Now, what I find to be fascinating about biochemistry is

Speaker:

we're creating patterns since really the

Speaker:

moment that we're born and they they form really easy just just

Speaker:

by observing our parents or our environment that

Speaker:

we live in or seeing our friends next thing we're smoking or next

Speaker:

thing we're drinking or next thing we know we're who knows what we're doing

Speaker:

and you're like oh it's just a habit it's been something I've been doing forever

Speaker:

well if you can form a negative habit that quickly why can't we form a positive

Speaker:

habit just as easily we just need to put in a different stimulus with information

Speaker:

so we're talking about sound,

Speaker:

light, frequency, and vibration. That's what you talked about.

Speaker:

The reason why I'm using sound is when we look at the electromagnetic field

Speaker:

spectrum, really at the slowest level, we're looking at radio waves.

Speaker:

And as we begin to move along the electromagnetic field spectrum,

Speaker:

we get into visible and invisible light.

Speaker:

And then we move into what I'd be like, oh, it's electromagnetic field.

Speaker:

They get into microwaves and things like that that are way quicker,

Speaker:

even cell phone radiation.

Speaker:

So everybody has talked to me, they're like, oh, are you talking about megahertz?

Speaker:

Everybody said that to me. Dr. Schwartz, you're working with like ultrasound.

Speaker:

And I'm like, no, I'm actually working with, I just made this word up, piposound.

Speaker:

I'm going for something like a hundred hertz and lower.

Speaker:

And the reason why I'm specifically wanting to work with that range,

Speaker:

because when I'm looking, and just think about some of the fundamental frequencies

Speaker:

that we know in the body, the Schumann frequency is like eight hertz.

Speaker:

And now some people say that that's gone up to 25 hertz and 48 hertz.

Speaker:

Still, it's under 100 hertz.

Speaker:

Think about like the phi ratio, 1.68 hertz under two hertz.

Speaker:

We're looking at all the brainwave states, even if we're looking at gamma that

Speaker:

goes up to 60 hertz, it's still under 100 hertz.

Speaker:

When we're studying vibroacoustic research, which actually all comes out of

Speaker:

Norway and Finland and all those Scandinavian countries,

Speaker:

Ulaf Skille and things back in the 90s, all those early frequencies were being

Speaker:

researched were all under 100 hertz.

Speaker:

And these are things for pain reduction and autism and muscle regeneration,

Speaker:

all kinds of things like that.

Speaker:

So what I see is there's a deep connection.

Speaker:

And also when we're looking at the auditory sound spectrum, audible sound is

Speaker:

between 20 hertz and 20,000 hertz.

Speaker:

And when we're looking at the receptors of our skin through perception of sound,

Speaker:

we can perceive sound, the research shows, between 0.5 hertz and 100 hertz of the skin.

Speaker:

I believe it can go lower than that, but that's kind of the delta brainwave state range.

Speaker:

So now there's an interesting interplay between 20 hertz and 100 hertz,

Speaker:

where we can hear and feel.

Speaker:

Also, to take it to another level, I think it's important to discuss the bridge

Speaker:

between quantum physics,

Speaker:

which is the study of potentiality and different dimensional realities and basically

Speaker:

quantum energetics of energy versus Newtonian physics,

Speaker:

which is what operates on velocity and acceleration and mass and really governs

Speaker:

this three-dimensional space suit for which we operate.

Speaker:

This three-dimensional plane that we exist.

Speaker:

But there has to be a bridge between this quantum energy potentiality,

Speaker:

infinite dimensional space, and where it grounds into the three-dimensional Newtonian world.

Speaker:

And really the difference between sound and light is speed.

Speaker:

So if we take light and we begin to slow it down, now why I like working with

Speaker:

light, and I'm a laser expert, I've been working with infrared lasers in the

Speaker:

808 range, 810 range for many, many years clinically,

Speaker:

as well as, you know, red infrared and different color LED diodes for red light

Speaker:

therapy, like obviously that we're familiar with.

Speaker:

That works deep penetration into like the DNA of the cells.

Speaker:

But I want to actually kind of back it up where we can have a direct communication

Speaker:

with the living connective tissue matrix.

Speaker:

And I want to talk directly to the receptors of the cell membrane that creates,

Speaker:

that initiates biochemistry.

Speaker:

So I think if you look in all the pictures of all these crazy reactions and

Speaker:

errors and abbreviations of numbers and letters, you know, people look at it

Speaker:

to get their mind, but like, what does this mean?

Speaker:

But if you ever asked yourself the question, where does biochemistry come from?

Speaker:

Like we're not born with a biochemistry box in our liver.

Speaker:

Well, we are technically, I guess we really are. But really,

Speaker:

it's a dynamic system of ever-changing biochemistry that's influenced through our environment.

Speaker:

You know, Bruce Lipton talks about this, about epigenetics and how you can put

Speaker:

information into a receptor site,

Speaker:

and based off of that information, whether it's toxic or negative versus if

Speaker:

it's self-life enhancing or positive,

Speaker:

it will create a different biochemical cascade for creating a different physiological effect.

Speaker:

One can take you into anxiety and sympathetic nervous system.

Speaker:

Others will pull you into parasympathetic nervous system.

Speaker:

And once again, easily monitored through heart rate variability,

Speaker:

which is part of the testing that we do.

Speaker:

So really, as we're formulating these sonic pseudocalls, I'm wanting to use sound.

Speaker:

And I'd love to show you a picture of my biohacking space I have just upstairs.

Speaker:

I did an hour session in the chamber, quantum vibe chamber is what I call it.

Speaker:

It's an eye pyramid from Jason Stiles, eye pyramids plugged into my vibe system.

Speaker:

Plus I have a seven color facial light system. Plus I have read an infrared pulsed red light.

Speaker:

And then what I did is I asked myself the question, what's my intention for

Speaker:

the day? And I knew I was coming on your podcast.

Speaker:

Well, I actually listened to two tracks, two 20 minute tracks.

Speaker:

One was called, one's called Transformation and it's a sonic vision board.

Speaker:

And I set an intention on how I want to have this experience today and how I

Speaker:

want to feel and how I want to have this experience with Teemu,

Speaker:

who I've never really had a good conversation with until right now.

Speaker:

And then the other one is called Who Am I?

Speaker:

And it's a journey of self-actualization. And I just really spend in a field of harmonic resonance.

Speaker:

I'm setting my intention and bringing my body and cells into it.

Speaker:

Harmonic resonance with my intentions. And in that space, we create transformation.

Speaker:

And really, this is how the effects of using sound,

Speaker:

light, frequency, and vibration collectively can all be used harmonically into

Speaker:

this human organism to optimize our chemistry.

Speaker:

I love the term sonic theoretical.

Speaker:

That's amazing. And we are kind of like bioelectric beings, biochemical beings.

Speaker:

And the combination of these two is fascinating.

Speaker:

I speak about frequency. Now, if we look at the effects of different frequencies

Speaker:

on the cell, the extremely low frequency sounds like 3 to 30 hertz.

Speaker:

Those do affect the ion channels in the cell membranes, and that can alter the

Speaker:

transportation of ions such as calcium, which is crucial for cell functioning

Speaker:

across the cell membrane.

Speaker:

Now, these frequencies are used in certain technologies like transcranial magnetic

Speaker:

stimulation, which is a medical device for treating depression,

Speaker:

for example. And then if we move higher, we go to low frequency, 30 to 300 hertz.

Speaker:

That's when we are affecting the permeability of the cell membrane itself by

Speaker:

influencing the voltage gates on those channels.

Speaker:

That's super interesting because that affects the nutrient uptake and waste

Speaker:

elimination of the cells.

Speaker:

And there are technologies that stimulate bone growth, for example.

Speaker:

Affects specifically these areas, and also some technologies that treat pain.

Speaker:

Now, if we go higher, we've got 300 to 10,000 kilohertz, from 300 hertz to 10,000 kilohertz.

Speaker:

These are affecting the cellular metabolism and movement of the ions across

Speaker:

the cell membranes, and they really do modulate the cellular activity,

Speaker:

such as synthesis of proteins and functions of enzymes.

Speaker:

And when you have an electrical muscle stimulator, that's when you are using

Speaker:

those kind of frequencies.

Speaker:

And that is a form of a therapeutic ultrasound.

Speaker:

Now, I just want to give this context so that people can kind of visualize what's

Speaker:

happening on a cellular level.

Speaker:

So the higher you go, the more noticeable the effect is, right?

Speaker:

And the more deeper we go, the more deep down, almost subconscious on the cellular

Speaker:

level, like going down to the electric communication, which really happens through

Speaker:

chemistry and through ions.

Speaker:

So this is a fascinating topic. Sonic cell recalls. And you're also combining that with light.

Speaker:

Is there some kind of resonance that you're looking by combining these both?

Speaker:

That's a great question. So if I really wanted to give you the vision,

Speaker:

okay, because I'm going for something just a little background about myself.

Speaker:

I'm a chiropractor by license, but over since 2000 to 2015.

Speaker:

I was in clinical practice specifically reversing chronic degenerative conditions

Speaker:

and allergies and autoimmune diseases exclusively with subtle energy vibrational

Speaker:

techniques and technologies.

Speaker:

I actually was working with radionics technologies for a while.

Speaker:

I started developing biofeedback systems for a while.

Speaker:

So I'm actually a biofeedback expert as well, working with lasers.

Speaker:

So these were things clinically I was working with really reversing and I used

Speaker:

very little supplements.

Speaker:

The only thing that I was using was probiotics, lymphatic drainage and minerals and structured water.

Speaker:

These were like the foundations and everything else I was really working with

Speaker:

reprogramming the nervous system because I really asked myself,

Speaker:

what's the language of human physiology?

Speaker:

And it's that of vibrational resonance.

Speaker:

And so being able to work in that space, and I've seen, I don't know,

Speaker:

thousands of cases with conditions that are not supposed to get better using

Speaker:

little like energy vials and biofeedback systems and lasers,

Speaker:

you know, and like things Things like that.

Speaker:

So there's been this journey of working.

Speaker:

At first, I was working with lasers. And once again, for tissue regeneration and pain recovery.

Speaker:

Couple of minutes. I mean, are you kidding me? It's a miracle.

Speaker:

I have some great videos on my YouTube channel. It was a woman that had like

Speaker:

three degree burns on her hands.

Speaker:

Amazing. But then when we started getting into how do you reprogram the nervous

Speaker:

system for quote unquote autoimmunity, when you'd look up the definition,

Speaker:

when you Google it, it would say for some unknown reason, the immune system

Speaker:

become hypersensitive and begin attacking itself.

Speaker:

But really that that unknown reason is a very known reason.

Speaker:

It's actually due to pathogens, bacteria, viruses, parasites,

Speaker:

things like that, toxins, even allergies, endogenous allergies.

Speaker:

And there's a big topic that we don't have enough time to get into.

Speaker:

But that process is what opens up the immune system to actually function actually very normal.

Speaker:

It's trying to deal, it's trying to handle it. So I used to say to myself, how do I get there?

Speaker:

How do I get to that pathogen? And when I started studying pathogen,

Speaker:

I talk about this extensively in my book, Primal Resonance.

Speaker:

I have a whole chapter on eliminating infectious agents and allergies.

Speaker:

When you look at the size of a bacteria or even a mycoplasma or a virus,

Speaker:

and the bacteria are the biggest of the three, these are like 0.0057 nanometers.

Speaker:

I think everybody on this podcast can visualize that a cell is very small.

Speaker:

If you took one cell and put it on a petri dish, that's tiny.

Speaker:

It's hard to see. So a 0.0025 nanometer speck inside of that cell,

Speaker:

it's a speck inside of a speck.

Speaker:

If you really look at the physics, okay, now we're going back to physics.

Speaker:

These are not operating in Newtonian physics.

Speaker:

When you're inside of that cell, they talk about quantum physics is how they

Speaker:

explain the galaxies and the universe.

Speaker:

And then they talk about infinite smallness. This is the same physics that's

Speaker:

governing inside of a cell.

Speaker:

So now we're looking at that mycoplasma, that virus is more of an energetic

Speaker:

disturbance than a physical thing.

Speaker:

So if that's the case then let's

Speaker:

not use a physical thing to heal it

Speaker:

and even if you're using like ayurvedic herbs which we know are so effective

Speaker:

and or even like acupuncture which i'm a huge component of that homeopathy it's

Speaker:

really the medicine is really energetic than physical and it's creating an environment

Speaker:

of homeostasis inside the cells that essentially takes away the power,

Speaker:

and it either targets the immune system to improve,

Speaker:

to do its job, and or it weakens the pathogen to where it changes,

Speaker:

or actually, there's another term that I love talking about, pleomorphism.

Speaker:

Are you familiar with pleomorphism, Teemu? No, that's a new one. What is it?

Speaker:

So this is so fascinating.

Speaker:

A normal healthy life cycle is basically a three-stage life cycle.

Speaker:

And when everything when the environment is great

Speaker:

this goes back to degeneration versus regeneration

Speaker:

your cells are regenerating everything's happy you

Speaker:

got your gut flora no dysbiosis the enzymes chemistry everything's working great

Speaker:

but when you alter that life cycle and what alters it the environment that life

Speaker:

cycle turns into a 16 stage complex degenerative,

Speaker:

life cycle and so what we see are these you

Speaker:

know they say there's more germs in your bodies than our cells yeah like

Speaker:

10 times more is is the most common

Speaker:

estimate but like there is different estimates how how many there is but they're

Speaker:

definitely more than your own cells exactly so through this process of pleomorphism

Speaker:

these happy healthy regenerative cells,

Speaker:

go into an altered pleomorphic 16 stage life cycle shift.

Speaker:

And they literally, this is, dude, this is, I always think of that movie predator,

Speaker:

you know, like where we see something, it literally morphs into this cell wall deficient.

Speaker:

Pathogen where something's going from a happy healthy

Speaker:

germ into something that can cause ongoing

Speaker:

so it's like a almost like a shape-shifting cell because my understanding is

Speaker:

based on your description is that it's the microorganism or cells ability to

Speaker:

change form now i do remember that this is a one of the ways how they detect

Speaker:

potentially malignant cancer cells is this capability,

Speaker:

adaptability of cells and bacteria, organisms to change form and they shapeshift

Speaker:

into something completely different.

Speaker:

Exactly. And so once you start kind of piecing this, this at least in my mind,

Speaker:

okay, when I started kind of piecing this all together,

Speaker:

and remember I said the question I asked a couple of questions ago is,

Speaker:

where does biochemistry originate to what's the most effective delivery system

Speaker:

for influencing biochemistry in the body?

Speaker:

And then really, if I'm addressing what I know about chronic degenerative conditions,

Speaker:

the number one core factor is chronic infection and toxicity.

Speaker:

You know, it's anchored by emotional trauma. So we don't have time on this podcast,

Speaker:

but that'll be for another conversation.

Speaker:

But ultimately that mixture, and what's so interesting about trauma,

Speaker:

Okay, but there might be physical trauma, like an auto accident or something like that.

Speaker:

Most of us are having emotional trauma.

Speaker:

You know, our parents didn't love us or something. We got a girl that we love

Speaker:

broke up with us or something.

Speaker:

Who knows? Whatever that weird thing is.

Speaker:

Trauma happened at a young age, and it alters our belief system,

Speaker:

and it alters the epigenetic imprint into our body, and it literally begins

Speaker:

to alter the way that our mitotic seven-stage process begins,

Speaker:

where it all starts in the beginning.

Speaker:

And so we're once again wanting to get an influence that initial receptor at

Speaker:

that anaphase phase one of mitosis.

Speaker:

And it's all quantum. So then the other question I had to ask myself is,

Speaker:

how do I clear cellular memory?

Speaker:

Because cellular memory is ultimately what's feeding into this altered pleomorphic

Speaker:

life cycle from chronic infection.

Speaker:

You think about Lyme disease, that's a big topic. You got a bit by a deer tick

Speaker:

that related a spirochete in the body.

Speaker:

But now we know that there's many co-infections that are really creating this ongoing process.

Speaker:

And really the research from back in the 80s showed that as long as you have

Speaker:

a strong host and a weak spirochete, probably nothing's going to happen.

Speaker:

So now it comes down to how do you maintain and optimize your host? We're the host.

Speaker:

And how do we shift this pleomorphic timeline from this complex degenerative

Speaker:

16 phase cycle back? Because the arrows move in both directions.

Speaker:

That's what's so amazing, Teemu, is anything that is degenerative can become

Speaker:

regenerative with the right set and settings.

Speaker:

And that's where I think biohacking, this is what's so amazing about the biohacking

Speaker:

industry and being able to, I'm going to make a slight alteration, if I may.

Speaker:

Sure. From biohacking to bioharmonizing.

Speaker:

Bioharmonizing. I love that because what in the end people seek is.

Speaker:

It's nothing to violently crack into systems and all that, but what they want

Speaker:

to have is more resonance and harmony in their lives.

Speaker:

And I'm on the same page with you. Most of the biohacks that are maybe even

Speaker:

better, faster, stronger, living forever, kind of like over the board,

Speaker:

those are not in resonance with life in general around you.

Speaker:

It's like hacking or trying to get shortcuts.

Speaker:

But in the end, where people are happiest in my mind are when they live in harmony

Speaker:

and with resonance with all life.

Speaker:

Now, you're also known as Dr. Vibe. You have this technology that supposedly

Speaker:

stimulates these kind of experiences.

Speaker:

And can you describe that shortly? And you can then share where people can learn

Speaker:

more if they want to get your books and get their hands on this technology or try it out.

Speaker:

What is it that enables them to take advantage of these discoveries in bioharmonic technologies.

Speaker:

Exactly. Thank you, Teemu. Appreciate that. So they're called VIBES, and it's an acronym.

Speaker:

It stands for, Teemu, repeat after me, vibrational, individualized,

Speaker:

body, enhancement, system. It's a vibe.

Speaker:

It's a full-body music-activated vibrational sound technology designed with

Speaker:

one real intention is how do you clear cellular memory?

Speaker:

How do you bring the body into parasympathetic? And then once you accomplish

Speaker:

those two things, how can we begin to change biochemical cascades through specialized

Speaker:

sonic-ceutical programs that I've been creating since 2007?

Speaker:

And our website is bioharmonic technologies

Speaker:

and you can go visit

Speaker:

us online we're very active on our instagram so

Speaker:

bioharmonic_technologies you'll find us my personal website

Speaker:

dr vibe will get you uh to me and also i have an instagram for my book it's

Speaker:

@read_primal_resonance so you can go to there you can go to amazon

Speaker:

Primal Resonance you can put in my My name, Dr.

Speaker:

Stephen Schwartz with a V, S-T-E-V-E-N, Schwartz, S-C-H-W-A-R-T-Z.

Speaker:

And we also have a really active YouTube channel. I invite you,

Speaker:

Teemu, actually, I'd invite you to go check out some of my vintage Dr. Schwartz videos.

Speaker:

And one thing I really wanted to connect with you more on, I know you have a

Speaker:

lot of stories about like the indigenous studies and plant medicines and things.

Speaker:

A lot of these discoveries that came for this work came out of early ayahuasca

Speaker:

sessions I had in 2004 in Peru.

Speaker:

That's early. Super early. Yeah. I know we're about...

Speaker:

You were before me. Like I think for me, it was 2007.

Speaker:

So here we go. But that's also early, like super early, like considering it

Speaker:

was not public information in the way it's nowadays.

Speaker:

Like it was not trendy. There was no podcasters talking about it.

Speaker:

There was no YouTube channels. Like there was nothing.

Speaker:

It was a matter of early pioneering discovery.

Speaker:

Of course, has been going on for decades. You know, what's interesting about

Speaker:

that, Teemu, is what brought me to Peru was from a workshop that I did in Santa

Speaker:

Fe, New Mexico in 2004, where Bruce Lipton, Greg Braden, and this other wizard, Dr.

Speaker:

Todd Okaitis, I'm not sure if you're familiar with him, he works with these

Speaker:

cells, some cells, but I met them in 2004.

Speaker:

And I learned about the didgeridoo and all these other sacred indigenous

Speaker:

instruments and it really shifted something inside of me said that I needed

Speaker:

to learn to play the didgeridoo and next thing you know I found just a few weeks

Speaker:

later a Peruvian shaman came to my town in Denver Colorado that played the didgeridoo.

Speaker:

Activated my nervous system and invited me to come with him on this shamanic

Speaker:

journey to Peru, you'll love this. I never even heard of ayahuasca.

Speaker:

And next thing you know, we did the diet, leading into it, but not knowing what it was all about.

Speaker:

And next thing I know, I find myself in the deepest, darkest jungles,

Speaker:

experiencing this very powerful transformational medicine that changed my life forever.

Speaker:

And it's been a crazy journey ever since. But you know what?

Speaker:

In that moment, I said, would my mother come and sit in the jungle and vomit for like all night long?

Speaker:

And so from that, this technology, I call it shamanic technology.

Speaker:

It's like, how can we bring the same principles that are so cleansing to connect

Speaker:

at that deepest soul level and clear past generational traumas into something

Speaker:

that's palatable for the masses?

Speaker:

And really through that, that's been the journey.

Speaker:

And my book talks about this in detail, Primal Resonance.

Speaker:

And really, it's amazing. And I invite you, we're in Europe.

Speaker:

A really thank you to allowing us to come to your, it opened up Europe for us,

Speaker:

Teemu, coming to Amsterdam two years ago and then being there last year.

Speaker:

So we have a couple, Slovenia, we have one. I think we have one actually in Finland.

Speaker:

I have to find out. I know in Sweden we do. So they're getting speckled throughout

Speaker:

Europe and around the world.

Speaker:

Really, you're our access point to the world. And that was my intention when

Speaker:

I signed on to aligning with you guys.

Speaker:

And I just really want to thank you for allowing me to be a guest on your podcast.

Speaker:

And I look forward to eventually finding my way out to Helsinki.

Speaker:

For this year, we're going to be in Japan.

Speaker:

I've never been there before. So another adventure awaits. Yeah.

Speaker:

So thank you for sharing that story, going from the deepest jungles through

Speaker:

Dijeridus to resonating with

Speaker:

the cosmos, the shaman's drum, all the way to bioharmonic technologies.

Speaker:

And fascinating to hear that background story and also the fact that you were

Speaker:

not primed in the wrong possible way to these journeys, but you kind of almost

Speaker:

like accidentally tripped on it. And I feel like the divine is calling, you know, people.

Speaker:

It's not the other way around that you go seeking it. It calls you in and happy to hear that.

Speaker:

And that you got, you know, a new direction for your life in a sense of combination

Speaker:

of all of these different aspects as a scientist and technologist, doctor,

Speaker:

like discovering how these frequencies can be used to heal and restore the balance.

Speaker:

So thank you very much. So I recommend

Speaker:

people to check out bioharmonictechnologies.com and Dr. Vibe or Dr.

Speaker:

Steven Schwartz, thank you so much for coming to the podcast.

Speaker:

I would love to hear more of your stories and hope maybe we do that soon enough

Speaker:

and can't wait to see you again, maybe in Tokyo, 11th and 12th of October in Tokyo, Japan.

Speaker:

So that's our first event and can't wait to see you there.

Speaker:

Thank you. Thank you. Sushi in Japan. All right. Wonderful. So thank you so

Speaker:

much and have a wonderful, resonating, harmonic day.

Speaker:

Music.

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube