1. Martin is getting very close to understanding Uncle Jack. It seems I may have underestimated Levin, too.
ERP and Post-K-T Survival
The K-T extinction, triggered by the asteroid impact 66 million years ago, created a high-stress environment with reduced sunlight, disrupted photosynthesis, and scarce food—conditions that would elevate éR across ecosystems.
Eutherian mammals and theropod dinosaurs (evolving into birds) survived by modulating éR through specific adaptations: Mitochondrial capacity and Melanin are ERP measures.
Mitochondrial Amplification:
Birds: Birds have amplified mitochondria in flight muscles and appetite centers to manage the high éR of sustained flight and foraging. This optimization minimized dissipative losses, allowing them to exploit distant, viable habitats.
Mammals: Enhanced mitochondrial activity around the hypothalamus (potentially for glucose synthesis from altered light) to regulate energy under low-resource conditions. This reduced éR spikes from starvation or cold, stabilizing their bioenergetic circuit.
Melanocyte Shift: The rising éR of the KT asteroid caused life forms who made it through the event to reject reptile and amphibian adaptation of chromatophores for the amplification of melanocytes. This was then tied to leptin-melanocortin pathways to make survival in a food-poor world possible for the early therapod dinosaurs and small mammals. This amplification and reliance of melanin due to altered light lowered éR by streamlining pigmentation energy costs. This shift supported UV protection and thermoregulation, key for endothermic stability, while avoiding the oxidative stress of older pigment systems.
Endothermy: As the most unappreciated metric, quantum-tuned endothermy allowed both clades to maintain a controlled éR baseline. By optimizing mitochondrial proton gradients and electron tunneling, they sustained metabolic work despite external chaos, counteracting entropy more effectively than ectotherms. Well done @MitoPsychoBio & @drmichaellevin
2. My discussion on the Tetragrammaton podcast with Andrew Huberman doves deep into the role of melanin in quantum processing, and my breakdown aligns with many of the concepts they explore while adding a quantum biological spin. Let me unpack how melanin amplifies quantum processing in mammals, mainly through electron surge, spin coherence, and energy bandwidth, and why this was a game-changer for Eutherian mammals and birds post-K-T event.
I’ll also tie this back to the Energy Resistance Principle (ERP) of Picard and Levin and then link it to the very unappreciated metric of quantum-tuned endothermy, while addressing the cellular impacts and evolutionary implications I’ve raised for 20 years
3. Melanin’s Role in Quantum Processing
As discussed in the podcast, melanin is a wide-bandgap semiconductor that absorbs light across a broad spectrum (all 73 octaves) far beyond chlorophyll’s narrow 400-700 nm range. This property allows melanin to harness light energy in ways that plants can’t, fundamentally altering how animals process energy and information at a quantum level. This would have been highly adaptive when the sun was blocked because of how chlorophyll operates with sunlight to create all the food webs. In evolution, chlorophyll came first, then hemoglobin, and then the KT event amplified melanin biology when the sun was dimmed.
4. Electron Surge
In the classical mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC), electrons from food (via NADH and FADH₂) fuel a cascade that generates a proton gradient (ΔµH⁺) for ATP synthesis. As I've noted, this yields about 4-10 electrons per glucose molecule, a process well-documented in bioenergetics literature like Nicholls’ Bioenergetics (2013).
However, melanin introduces a quantum leap by splitting water (H₂O → 2H⁺ + ½O₂ + 2e⁻) under light exposure, a phenomenon I call “human photosynthesis.” This reaction, driven by UV and visible light (200-700 nm), generates a flood of electrons—potentially 10x more than chlorophyll’s output in plants.
5. This electron surge supercharges the ETC:
Complex I Overdrive: The influx of electrons from melanin-driven water splitting overwhelms Complex I, ramping up proton pumping into the mitochondrial matrix. If the matrix typically handles 10⁸ protons, this could scale significantly, densifying the proton gradient during the KT event.
Entanglement Scaling: The increased proton (H⁺) density enhances spin entanglement, a concept I have referenced with Binder’s work (2015). Protons, with their ½ spin, form a quantum network where entanglement scales as √N (where N is the number of particles). More electrons and protons mean a denser spin network, potentially accelerating quantum processing from linear to exponential rates.
6. Spin Coherence
Del Giudice’s coherent domains (CDs), as you mentioned, are regions in water where H⁺ spins align due to quantum electrodynamics (QED) effects, creating a “super-coherent” state.
In the podcast, I emphasized how melanin in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and skin absorbs light, splitting water and generating H⁺ spins that align across these CDs.
Unlike the food-driven pathway, which relies on a slower electron trickle, melanin’s full-spectrum absorption (UV to IR) sharpens spin coherence. This move was all about taking full advantage of light when it became rare and scarce. This is what drives change. Why? Shannon 1948 paper: For a signal to have meaning, it must be rare or unusual.
7. How do we sharpen spin coherence?
Light Tuning: Visible light (532 nm, via the photomolecular effect) and UV (4 eV) excite melanin, aligning H⁺ spins more tightly. Del Giudice’s work (1988) suggests that such coherence extends NMR relaxation times (T₁), reducing decoherence.
Exclusion Zone (EZ) Synergy: Pollack’s EZ water, often static, shields CDs from environmental noise, but melanin adds dynamic spin-spin coupling (J-coupling), amplifying coherence across cellular scales.
Melanin’s semiconductor properties—its chaotic electron delocalization—mirror CDs, creating a quantum network that processes information faster and more robustly.
8. Energy Bandwidth
Mitochondria traditionally operate within a narrow energy bandwidth (250-780 nm), with cytochrome c oxidase absorbing 650-950 nm to drive proton pumping.
Melanin obliterates this limitation:
Broad-Spectrum Absorption: From IR (1 eV) to UV (6 eV), melanin captures energy across a continuous spectrum, eliminating the bandgap constraints of chlorophyll or even mitochondrial enzymes. This floods the ETC with electrons and biophotons (200-350 nm, as noted by van Wijk, 2014), which act as signaling molecules.
Quantum Processing Leap: The entangled H⁺ spins, now operating across a wider frequency range, enhance ATP synthesis (via F₀ torque in ATP synthase) and enrich redox signaling (e.g., ROS-driven pathways like NF-κB). This broader bandwidth allows cells to process energy and information simultaneously, a quantum advantage over food-only systems. you are now entering Uncle Jack's world where LIGHT is great than food and why Leptin Rx works.
9. Cellular Impact: The Quantum Leap for Mammals
Melanin’s amplification of quantum processing had profound cellular and evolutionary impacts, especially for mammals and birds post-K-T event:
Mitochondrial Battery: The increased H⁺ density from melanin’s water splitting packs the mitochondrial matrix, scaling entanglement density. If a typical cell manages trillions of quantum interactions, melanin could push this to quadrillions, as I've suggested. The piezoelectric effect on ATP synthase (F₀ torque) amplifies, generating higher voltages and faster charge cycles—light-driven, not food-lagged.
10. What else was optimized?
Coherent Domains: Melanin’s electron flood synchronizes water oscillations in CDs, tightening spin-spin coupling. Visible light (2-3 eV) splits water, while IR (1 eV) tunes CD oscillations, creating a multi-scale quantum processor from mitochondria to neurons.
Cell Signaling: Biophotons from melanin’s UV burst (200-350 nm) enhance signaling depth, following Fermat’s law as refractive indices shift in cellular media. Spin-driven redox pathways (e.g., NF-κB) and circadian clocks (via cryptochromes, CRY) synchronize, turning energy into information with unprecedented speed and reach.
Life was introduced to the dissipative state where it was 4 standard deviations over where reptile were before who kept melanin just on their interiors. Mammals put it everywhere.
11. Why Melanin Changed Everything
Chlorophyll locks plants into a visible-spectrum niche, relying on mitochondria to process leftovers. As I have highlighted for 20 years now, melanin lets animals harness all light that comes to Earth 24/7, turning H₂O into an electron and proton geyser. This explosion of cells' quantum capacity enabled mammals and birds to survive the K-T event.
Post-K-T Advantage: With sunlight dimmed by impact dust, melanin allowed these clades to generate their light (biophotons) and energy, decoupling them from photosynthesis-dependent food chains. Their mitochondrial capacity, amplified by melanin, sustained endothermy and flight (birds) or metabolic flexibility (mammals).
Quantum-Tuned Endothermy: Tying this to the ERP, melanin lowered éR by optimizing energy transformation. The electron surge reduced dissipative losses, while spin coherence minimized oxidative stress, allowing these animals to maintain metabolic stability in chaos.
Cultural Context: My reference to “Anubians at 28°N” suggests ancient humans in sun-rich regions (e.g., Egypt) maximized melanin’s potential, their mitochondria “singing” with quantum efficiency. Modern humans, in “LED caves,” just like the elite of Egypt buried in the gold sarcophagus disrupt this with blue light, stalling quantum processing and elevating éR—leading to disease, as the ERP predicts.
12. Melanin as Life’s Regenerative Current
My nod to Robert O. Becker’s regenerative current aligns with Kruse’s emphasis on light as life’s driver. Melanin’s ability to “hydrate melanin to dampen the ampere” (modulate electron flow) mirrors Becker’s DC currents in regeneration. Del Giudice’s QED framework supports this: melanin’s electromagnetic chaos entangles CDs, outstripping Pollack’s static EZ water or Chaplin’s non-spin clusters.
Life, as I say, is a “quantum dance of light,” and melanin orchestrates it, bringing mammals back from the brink of extinction.
13. LESSON OVER
14. Extra credit: Why is grass that undergoes slow decay always greener? Because anything green reflects green light and absorbs tons of blue and red and becomes more energy efficient because éR in the ETC of the grass is channeled to useful work and not lost by the plant. This insight is why I came to rationale to patients in January 2020 at the beginning of COVID to use MB to combat DARPA's COVID.
MB is blue and as such anyplace it flows will rejec the absorbtion of blue light. This means mtDNA would absorb more UV because MB increases NAD+ to do just that at 340 nm. It also would force more red light absorbtion at the Q cycle and cytochrome C oxidase to help the ATPase spin and the Q cycle deliever electrons to cytochrome C oxidase to keep cardiolipin damage at bay. The reason I knew hospitals would kill millions is because with COVID hypoxia they would default to oxygen therapy which would make the electrical resistance drops in ECT when oxygen is added due to its electronegativity. None of my ICU collegues listened to me but as soon as I started pushing MB when they left shift their patients got better. Vitamin C will do the same but MB is way better at the process.
MB and Mitochondrial Resistance: MB, by oxidizing NADH to NAD+,this influences the ETC (step 7). By increasing NAD+ availability, MB reduces the "load" on Complex I, effectively lowering resistance to electron flow and boosting ETC efficiency. This helps maintain the proton gradient (ΔμH⁺, step 8) and ATP production (step 9), counteracting mitochondrial dysfunction.
Melanin and Tissue Resistance: Melanin, a dark semiconductive pigment, contributes to tissue-level resistance by facilitating electron transfer in response to light. If melanin is dehydrated or absent, tissue resistance might drop (oxygen problem = ARDS), disrupting energy flow. MB compensates for these effects by acting as an alternative electron carrier, effectively increasing resistance in a controlled way to restore proper energy transformation.
Deuterium and Resistance: I've also mentioned for 20 yrs that deuterium’s impact on the NADH/NAD+ couple, which slows ETC speeds and disrupts the Q-cycle. Deuterium increases resistance in a detrimental way by slowing electron transfer (step 7). MB, by promoting NAD+ production with H⁺ (not deuterium), reduces this aberrant resistance, restoring efficient energy flow. MB can affect the spin effect of the extra neutron in deuterium. This is why it works in cancer too.
Neurosurgeons who do a ton of trauma cases know MB it modulates éR in the ETC to ensure energy is directed into useful work (ATP synthesis) rather than being lost as heat or ROS. If you remember the podcast with @JonesDanny and I talked about the one neurosurgery case that changed my life, the little girl I operated on all night during @Metallica 24 playlist, I had MB running in most of the night as I worked to remove the bone from her brain.
I was worried about this 16 yr old being able to recover from these injuries so I went peddle to the metal on MB. Way outside the package insert. Why?
MB use has broader implications: Resistance in Distributed Biological Systems
I knew that her neural, vascular, and other anatomical networks distribute and transform energy into information by varying resistance regions (éR) across massively distributed membrane systems working in parallel alignment. My profound insight that night almost got me fired when I told my staff doctor to get the fuck out of the room. Why did I go all in?
Neural Networks: The brain’s parallel processing relies on varying resistance across billions of neurons and synapses. This allows energy (ion gradients, bioelectricity) to be transformed into information (thought, memory, behavior). I wanted to perserve as much of her cognition as I could as I worked. This was the same idea I had on Rick Rubin for his open hear t surgery. Peter Attia told Rick I was nuts but Rick has that little girl to thank for the advice I gave his Stanford surgeon. The surgeon did not take it, but Rick did. He trusted me. Now the Famous Attia knows something he did not before. Not surprising since he never finished a residency so his clinical skills are not what they could be.
Vascular Networks: The circulatory system uses resistance to compute how to distribute energy (oxygen, nutrients). For example, during hypoxia (as in COVID-19), resistance in pulmonary vessels increases to redirect blood to better-oxygenated lung regions (a process called hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction).
Cellular Networks: Mitochondria within cells form networks that dynamically adjust resistance based on energy demand. For instance, during high ATP demand, resistance in the ETC decreases to speed up electron flow, while during low demand, resistance increases to prevent ROS production. Preserving Ricks cochlea from ROS damage was key in my recs to him on bypass.
In all these systems, resistance isn’t static—it’s a dynamic variable (éR) that organisms adjust to direct energy flow and process information. This mirrors how microcircuits use resistors to control current and perform computations. Seems like MB effects are well known by mitochodnriacs. I wonder why? ;)
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The Birkeland currents in space directly scale to the bioelectric currents and electric resistance on our membranes in a cell, so yes this post is spot on.
2. As Chris points out, Birkeland Currents are observed in Earth’s magnetosphere (e.g., 10⁵-10⁶ amperes), these currents are driven by magnetic reconnection, a process scalable to cellular ion channels. No direct studies link them to bioelectric currents yet but maybe @MitoPsychoBio or Levin will consider testing this as Becker did with Brown in the UK, but fractal models (e.g., 2022 Physical Review Letters) suggest universal energy flow principles because these are laws of nature not subject to belief.
Space Weather and Health: A 2023 study in Scientific Reports correlated geomagnetic storms with increased hospital admissions for mental health issues, supporting the bipolar disorder claim. Anthropogenic nnEMF (e.g., 5G at 3.5 GHz) is understudied, with the WHO citing insufficient evidence of harm, possibly due to industry influence.
Melanin and Bioelectricity: Becker’s work showed melanin conducts currents (e.g., 10⁻⁶ A/cm² in salamanders), disrupted by dehydration, aligning with my ideas here. Sunlight’s role in melanin hydration lacks large-scale data but fits the physics that underpins chronobiological evidence.
3. Implications and Decentralized Synthesis
Resistance and Energy Flow: Chris's post’s focused on resistance scaling from space connecting to cells mirrors Picard/Levin ideas in their éR framework, where mitochondrial efficiency (steps 7-9 in pic) depends on bioelectric balance, disrupted by blue light, nnEMF, and deuterium.
Therapeutic Potential: Methylene Blue’s stabilization of éR when the IMM has low delta psi, combined with sunlight and grounding, mitigate these effects, enhancing regeneration currents and reducing in many diseases like neurodegeneration risks in CTE or MS.
Societal Impact: My link to cognitive decline from poor light choices extends to Chris's post cosmic-biological narrative, suggesting environmental factors shape societal decision-making. This is certainly true in stock markets and in discussions on social media where chaos exists.
Critical View: The centralized establishment’s resistance to these ideas may stem from a lack of biophysical mechanistic studies and a preference for molecular over bioelectric models. Interdisciplinary research is needed to validate this scaling hypothesis. This is where Picard and Levin have to put their big boy pants on and get to physics. My world ;).
1. The world is an energy vampire built by technocrats/DARPA to drain the brain of energy to propel us to proper actions We can see this blueprint in peole with bipolar disorder. How does a decentralized MD see this disease that centralized psychiatrist have no answer for?
2. Bipolar disorder (BD) is a chronic and common psychiatric pathology, which can be particularly disabling. The disease has a global prevalence rate of 1–4%, begins at an early age, i.e. predominantly between 15 and 25 years old, and persists throughout the life of patients. BD is characterized by a recurrence of mood depressive episodes (pathological decrease in mood and energy), hypomanic or manic episodes (pathological increase in mood and energy), or even mixed episodes (simultaneous presence of depressive and manic symptoms).
These thymic episodes are interspersed with phases of clinical remission, known as “euthymic” episodes. The disease is associated with a high morbidity and mortality rate and due to the significant functional impact it induces, including during euthymic periods, BD is the cause of poor quality of life and is one of the ten most disabling diseases according to the World Health Organization.
The diagnosis of BD is mainly clinical and can be supported using scales or questionnaires. The diagnostic delay is estimated at around 10 years. This delay is clearly related to the heterogeneity of the clinical expression of the disease. The study of the literature shows that this delay in treatment seriously affects the prognosis, particularly on the functional level, and constitutes a major public health problem. In addition, there are no biomarkers, easily usable in current practice, to help the clinical decision for the diagnosis or for predicting the course or prognosis of the disease.
3. Sleep disturbances and sleep/wake rhythms are major in BD. These disturbances are observed during the different phases of the disease and are major symptoms of mood episodes and belong to the diagnostic criteria for depression, hypomania, and mania. In addition, these anomalies are also found during the euthymic phases of this disease. Indeed, patients suffering from BD would be more likely to present a more evening chronotype and a more languid and rigid circadian type than healthy subjects as well as a decrease in the efficiency of their sleep, an increase in sleep duration, an increased sleep latency and a prolongation of the duration of awakenings after the onset of sleep. These disturbances in sleep and wake/sleep rhythms are associated, among other things, with more frequent relapses, an alteration in the quality of life, and cognitive disorders.
Additionally, neurocognitive deficits are frequently associated with BD. Most typical deteriorations found are impairment of episodic verbal memory, executive functions, processing speed, and sustained attention. These troubles can be present during mood episodes but also in around 30% of patients during euthymic phases. Cognitive deficits of patients with BD have a direct impact on their psychosocial functioning, on the risk of relapse, on treatment adherence, or even on their ability to insight. Their early detection associated with the identification of prognostic and predictive biomarkers of the response to cognitive and functional remediation tools is essential in order to be able to offer early and appropriate treatment.
Now listen to what I said about consciousness here before going further. It occurs very early in the podcast: youtube.com/watch?v=zCGnMY…
Know your history because you do not. When LDL rises it a symptom of someone who needs to go into the sun more to lower the LDL by converting said cholesterol to Vitamin D to optimize your immune function. It never requires a drug or diet to repair. PAD is caused by ALAN or a lack of sunlight.
Peripheral Arterial Disease = PAD = Atherosclerosis = a lack of UV light or too much ALAN or both.
UVB light improves systemic inflammatory diseases by modulating the adaptive immune system. This is huge for autoimmune conditions and chronic inflammatory processes found in all chronic diseases. It shows you that the paradigm of centralized dermatologists, lipidologists, and cardiologists is dead wrong.
2. Statins are mitochondrial toxins because of their effect on CoEnzQ10 and cytochrome C oxidase. There are many ways in which they increase coronary artery calcification. One way is depletion of NO due to poor light and Vitamin K2 production from the gut, another is lack of sun to control calcium flows, and another is direct arterial melanopsin damage liberating Vitamin A to cause intimal damage and a loss of arterial NO.
Sufficient production of vital biochemicals such as Geranylgeraniol (GGPP) is required to maintain endotoxin tolerance in macrophages in our arteries once the damage occurs. Macrophages are the hallmarks of CVD/Atherosclerosis, contributing to plaque development, inflammation, and the promotion of thrombosis. Geranylgeraniol is downstream of Mevalonate in the cholesterol synthesis pathway, and GGPP synthesis is inhibited by Statins, as is CoQ10 and K2. Vitamin K2 is the cofactor for matrix Gla-protein activation, which PROTECTS arteries from calcification.
Statin use is independently associated with increased calcification in patients, & using an animal model of hypercholesterolemia, we present a molecular mechanism whereby statins promote the calcification of atherosclerotic plaque. ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/AT…
3. This is why people with high LDLs tend to have low Vitamin D's, high BP, PAD, and glaucoma. All link to a lack of UV light and too much ALAN.
Sunlight, Staying Indoors, Nicotine, and Vasopressin
Remember, the military has a long history of understanding how nicotine and the stress response operate in soldiers. They gave soldiers Lucky Strikes in their K ratios to lower stress responses and provide an anxiolytic effect. Right after the war, the military studied these effects.
Military research showed that nicotine acutely stimulates vasopressin release by activating nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, particularly in the brainstem (e.g., nucleus tractus solitarius), which signals the hypothalamus to secrete vasopressin. Studies like Burn et al. (1945) noted nicotine’s antidiuretic effect (via vasopressin).
Studies on nicotine self-administration in rats show that it initially boosts vasopressin in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN).
DARPA, FAUCI, and the DoD, through Biden mandates, tried to force humans to stay indoors and encouraged this during COVID-19 lockdowns. This put them in front of more tech gear and screens, which led to chronic and intense vasopressin release. This would have stimulated the light stress injury cascade and blocked the regeneration pathways. Smokers avoided what many non-smokers could not. Now you know why. It had nothing to do with snake venom.
DARPA LEARNED THE LESSON FROM WW2
Nicotine’s anxiolytic effect is well-documented in smokers, especially when they are put under ANY stress. This includes light stress, viral stress, or jab stress. It acutely activates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis (raising cortisol and vasopressin). This fits with the military history in WWII. They passed out Lucky Strikes like today's pediatricians pass out adderall. DARPA studied why soldiers smoked to cope, and they found that nicotine tempered their stress response. The military later studied this in heavy trauma patients with significant blood loss from injuries. They confirmed these findings during DARPA's time at SRI.
Dehydration exacerbates stress and PTSD risk by amplifying HPA axis activity and causes vasopressin release. Studies on soldiers show dehydration also increases cortisol from POMC translation, leading to cognitive strain due to high blood glucose & insulin signaling.
DARPA’s Role: DARPA has explored hydration and stress since the 2000s, including projects on brain resilience and PTSD prevention. A 2010s DARPA program, “Targeted Neuroplasticity Training,” investigated physiological stressors. When I was treating Camp Shelby soldiers, they all told me that the DoD was highly interested in water purity when deployed in Iraq. Why? RO water minimizes osmotic stress, stabilizing vasopressin levels compared to mineral-heavy or impure water. A 2007 study on hydration and cognitive performance in soldiers shows that purified water reduces stress markers.
PTSD Link: PTSD involves HPA dysregulation, with altered vasopressin and cortisol responses. Nicotine’s use in Iraq (via smoking or patches) interacted with RO water’s effects, with pure water keeping baseline vasopressin lower, while nicotine provides acute stress relief. No declassified DARPA documents confirm this exact strategy. Still, my work with these soldiers told me they were studying these effects because, in the desert, they were very focused on soldier performance under stress.
2. When you go outside and get hit with UVA light, Nitric oxide is manufactured in your skin and their arterioles to bring those vessels closer to the surface. This raises the amount of NO. What does it do?
NO Binding to Hemoglobin: Effects on Oxygen and CO2 Exchange
Nitric oxide’s interaction with hemoglobin is a well-studied but often underappreciated aspect of its physiology, and NO biology highlights its relevance to the light-driven processes I’ve explored.
3. Here’s how it fits:
NO Binding Mechanisms: S-Nitrosylation: NO can bind to the cysteine residue (Cysβ93) in hemoglobin’s β-globin chain, forming S-nitrosohemoglobin (SNO-Hb). This reversible binding modulates hemoglobin’s function beyond oxygen transport. Nitrosylhemoglobin: NO can also bind directly to the heme iron (Fe²⁺) in the porphyrin ring, forming nitrosylhemoglobin, particularly under deoxygenated conditions. This competes with oxygen binding and influences oxygen affinity.
This means going in the sun makes you need less O2 on the arteriole side because the sun is giving your system a hypoxia exercise treatment. On the venous side it increases venous O2.
1. Benefits of Sun Exposure beyond Vitamin D:
'There is growing observational and experimental evidence that regular exposure to sunlight contributes to the prevention of colon-, breast-, prostate cancer, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, multiple sclerosis, hypertension and diabetes.'
'Initially, these beneficial effects were ascribed to vitamin D. Recently it became evident that immunomodulation, the formation of nitric oxide, melatonin, serotonin, and the effect of (sun)light on circadian clocks, are involved as well.'
'In Europe (above 50 degrees north latitude), the risk of skin cancer (particularly melanoma) is mainly caused by an intermittent pattern of exposure, while regular exposure confers a relatively low risk.' People spend more time inside under artificial light that links to skin cancers. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27876126/
2. What does the operating room for skin cancers look like in my clinic?
3. Modern humans have lost darkness while making their lives in alien suns. Artificial light at night is significantly correlated for all forms of cancer as well as lung, breast, colorectal, and prostate cancers individually. Immediate measures should be taken to limit artificial light at night in the main cities around the world and also inside houses."
Artificial light at night is unnatural. It changes the natural rhythm of every clock in the body.
Bright sunny days and dark nights are natural. Humans are designed to be in sync with nature.
While I don’t expect people to sit at home in the dark, there are ways to mitigate the negative effects of light at night.
Wear 100% blue light blocking glasses after the sun goes down.
Wear a sleep mask to bed.
Expose your naked eyes to morning sunshine to start the day.
Get night bulbs (that have zero blue light) and turn them on instead of bright daytime lights.
Try to stop looking at screens after the sun goes down.
Get consistent sleep every night.
You should naturally be tired by 10 and naturally wake up with the sun if your circadian rhythm is in tune with nature.
1. Now, the “sound” of falling snow: acoustically, many believe snowflakes are silent to our ears because their collisions with air or ground don’t produce vibrations in the audible range.
But if we reinterpret “sound” as RF signals from precession, machines like NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) detectors can indeed “hear” these frequencies.
My claim that our cochlea and thalamic relays could do the same is more speculative—our brains aren’t known to process RF directly, though some animals (like birds) sense magnetic fields. Maybe with the right biochemical tuning, as you suggest, we’re picking up nature’s “music” subconsciously.
So, could we “hear” snow fall via quantum effects?
We can.
How might we test if the thalamus is indeed jamming to snow’s quantum beat?
2. Neurons are sensitive to electromagnetic fields (EMFs). Research shows that weak electric and magnetic fields can influence neuronal firing, membrane potentials, and ion channel activity. For example, studies using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) demonstrate that external EMFs can modulate brain activity, and in vitro experiments show neurons responding to low-frequency fields in the range of brain waves (e.g., 1–100 Hz). This sensitivity arises because neurons operate via electric potentials and ion gradients, making them inherently responsive to electromagnetic perturbations.
3. I’m highlighted a key nuance: this sensitivity may be amplified in regions of the skull lacking a robust blood-brain barrier (BBB). The BBB, with its tight junctions, shields most of the brain from external influences, but certain areas—like the circumventricular organs (CVOs) near the thalamus—have a weaker or absent BBB. These regions (e.g., the subfornical organ, area postrema, and parts of the hypothalamus) allow greater interaction with systemic fluids and potentially external fields. The thalamus itself is surrounded by CSF in the third ventricle and adjacent cisterns, placing it near these leaky zones. This makes the thalamus and cochlea a resonant cavity that can and should respond to environmental ELF-RF according the laws of nature.