
Science is always learning and expanding. Before microscopes, we couldn’t see the microscopic life that was always there, we simply didn’t have the tools yet.
In many ways, we’re still in that same process of discovery. We are a work in progress, collectively exploring how life and consciousness truly function. What follows isn’t a proven model, it’s my understanding, shaped by observation, intuition, and an ongoing curiosity about how consciousness, energy, and matter interact.
I believe we are living information processors, not only through our brains but through the collective intelligence of the entire body. Every cell participates in sensing, signaling, and responding to its environment.
Within each cell are structures called microtubules, tiny filament networks that help organize the cell and move information and materials throughout it. Some researchers have proposed that these structures may also play a role in complex cellular signaling and information processing, suggesting that the body’s intelligence may operate at many levels simultaneously.
Living cells also emit extremely faint light known as biophotons. This ultraweak light is produced during metabolic activity and may contribute to cellular communication and coordination. While the full role of biophotons is still being explored, their presence suggests that biological systems may use subtle forms of light as part of their internal signaling processes.
Geometry appears throughout nature as a fundamental organizing principle. From spirals and branching patterns to crystalline lattices and cellular structures, geometric relationships provide the architecture that allows energy, matter, and information to organize into stable forms.
In my work, I experience geometry as a bridge between the energetic and the physical, a way that pattern becomes structure and structure becomes experience. When energy moves through ordered geometry, it often appears to stabilize and harmonize, much like sound organizing itself into musical intervals.
Crystalline minerals offer a clear example of this principle. Their atoms arrange themselves into highly ordered lattice structures that create stable physical forms. Because of this order, crystals can interact with electromagnetic energy in precise ways, which is why they are widely used in technologies such as watches, sensors, and electronics.
When we encounter crystalline forms or geometric patterns, we may be responding to the same fundamental principle of order and resonance that exists throughout nature. Our nervous systems are highly sensitive to pattern, rhythm, and symmetry, and these forms can influence how we perceive balance and coherence in our surroundings.
Some researchers describe deeper layers of the universe in terms of underlying fields of energy and information that exist throughout space. In physics, plasma — an ionized state of matter that makes up most of the visible universe — demonstrates how energy and matter can organize into complex dynamic structures.
In philosophical and spiritual traditions, similar ideas have sometimes been described using terms such as the ether or the Akashic field, concepts that attempt to describe an underlying layer of reality that stores pattern, memory, and potential.
While science is still exploring how these phenomena relate to one another, I sense that our bodies, the Earth, and the broader environment are continuously interacting through subtle electromagnetic and energetic relationships.
Through attention, intention, and interaction with natural materials and geometry, we may be able to influence the patterns that shape both our internal experience and the spaces we inhabit.
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