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Phoenix1304
21st August 2024, 20:12
On a visit to Valencia a few years back, I rented a lovely old apartment very near to the cathedral. (The cathedral that houses the holy grail allegedly).

What I didn’t know was that the bells of the cathedral rang out every hour, on the hour and every 15 minutes as well. As a light sleeper I thought there was no hope of a restful vacay. But as it happened, I found it incredibly soothing. I grew to love the sound of those mellow, sonorous, beautiful, magnificent bells! I found it strangely reassuring, for example, when I’d hear two peals and know it was 2am and so on. I barely stirred and always went straight back to sleep and actually felt well rested throughout my 7 day stay despite the early clamour of the city street below. I could have lived in that apartment no problem, although I’m normally extremely sensitive to noise.

This visit occurred during some difficult years when I was living in a ground floor flat, tormented by noise, I used to frequently escape to a Yogananda retreat in Dorset that had a village church with bells. I loved that too. One New Year’s Eve was quite extraordinary with the bells ringing for hours. I made a recording on my phone, but not tech savvy enough to upload a few mins of it here, sorry to say.

Meanwhile, I’ve manifested an almost perfect retirement situation for myself, where there are also campanologists at the nearby village church, I hear them practising occasionally, but they only really ring out on high days and holidays. But honestly I wouldn’t mind if it was on the hour.

So. I came across this curious tweet today which prompted this post. I’m not sure how the poster knows this about Reptilians, I’ve not heard of it before, but the subsequent thread has some interesting tweets and I learnt that thousands of bells were melted down before and after WW2. The world has a whole lot less big bells than it used to…

Frequencies obviously have a lot to do with this, the pitch, the tone. I have Tibetan tingshas that I regularly ‘clear corners’ with, it’s a high and pleasant pitch, I’ve no idea what frequency though and now I’m thinking it’s a good time to do a deeper dive into the subject of bells. I wonder if any members have knowledge/thoughts on the matter that you’d care to share.

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“The reptilian despises the sound of bells. The moment the ringing begins, it reacts instinctively, running from the source as fast as it can. The sound is more than just a painful noise to its sensitive ears; it's a torment that cuts deep, each bell's unique frequency gnawing at its mind. The variations in pitch and tone drive the reptilian to the brink of insanity, triggering an obsessive response that it cannot control.

In the presence of bells, the creature becomes powerless, unable to maintain its human disguise. The energy required to shape-shift slips away with every chime, leaving it vulnerable and exposed. The ringing not only strips away its power but also its sanity, reducing the once formidable being to a state of helplessness. The bells, harmless to others, are a devastating weapon against the reptilian, rendering it unable to function or maintain its facade in the world of humans.”

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“Noble - of 'high moral character.
Nobel - PRIZES awarded to those who conferred the 'greatest benefit to mankind'
NOBEL - NO BELL - Removal of the bells.

The greatest evils perpetrated against humanity is having us make and accept that which destroys us....”

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Phoenix1304
21st August 2024, 20:22
Another interesting little vid…

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Michel Leclerc
21st August 2024, 20:59
Thank you Phoenix.

In Bruges, the Belfry (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belfry_of_Bruges) carries, as the name Belfry says, a carillon. Stairs bring the visitor up to the rooftop behind the parapet and just before reaching this, his steps actually allow him to walk around the bells. As soon as the carillon starts playing the visitor is flooded with sound, penetrated by the endless reverberations of the harmonics. Most visitors climb on to the roof because they want to see – and the sight is magnificent! And/or most try to escape the experience of what they find deafening sound but would of course run to any heavy metal concert as soon as. I sit down on the floor and let the highly complex and saturated harmonies bring me in tune – golden music of the spheres.

(As a child I used to sit under the Bechstein grand my mother (a concert pianist) was playing the classics on – golden music enveloping me. The Bruges bells remind me of that and re-ignite the feeling thousandfold.

(To be in a golden womb fractal made of golden wombs.))

Phoenix1304
22nd August 2024, 07:07
Thank you Phoenix.

In Bruges, the Belfry (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belfry_of_Bruges) carries, as the name Belfry says, a carillon. Stairs bring the visitor up to the rooftop behind the parapet and just before reaching this, his steps actually allow him to walk around the bells. As soon as the carillon starts playing the visitor is flooded with sound, penetrated by the endless reverberations of the harmonics. Most visitors climb on to the roof because they want to see – and the sight is magnificent! And/or most try to escape the experience of what they find deafening sound but would of course run to any heavy metal concert as soon as. I sit down on the floor and let the highly complex and saturated harmonies bring me in tune – golden music of the spheres.

(As a child I used to sit under the Bechstein grand my mother (a concert pianist) was playing the classics on – golden music enveloping me. The Bruges bells remind me of that and re-ignite the feeling thousandfold.

(To be in a golden womb fractal made of golden wombs.))

Thank you Michel,

What an extraordinary childhood you must have had! I love the expression and idea of being ‘in a golden womb fractal made of golden wombs’.

Music is so powerful (for good or ill…)..and I am certain that if humanity survives the AI takeover the future of medicine will be entirely through sound and light frequencies.

We’re getting there, I’m just off to do some yoga on my red light therapy mat while listening to some 432hz music!

All blessings to you.

Helen

Michel Leclerc
23rd August 2024, 14:09
Thank you Helen.

“Music is so powerful (for good or ill…)”..

If we want to be good (I believe one will become good if one desires to be good) we should listen to good music, not to music that is ill.

Mechanics and music:

The Belfry carillon at Bruges (Brugge), Belgium. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8N837vuICk)

Michel Leclerc
23rd August 2024, 14:24
If I may indulge... just this, for the carillon lovers:

the carillon of Venlo, a town in the South East of the Netherlands (and about 200 kms North East of Bruges ;-) ), exquisitely played by Peer Günther (with quite instructive images of the carillon and its playing interface):

Londonderry Air (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rR_iWTqFutY)

Russian Bear
13th April 2025, 20:58
Orthodox bells of Russia

Bell ringing is one of the essential accessories of Christian church worship. It is used:

1) to call Christians to worship and to announce the time of its beginning;
2) to announce to those not present in the church the moment of the most important prayers and sacred rites during the liturgy and other services;
3) to express the festive celebration and spiritual joy of Christians, on the greatest holidays - in addition to the service.

Each holiday has its own bell melody
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A Soviet scientist has proven that the sounds of church bells heal, and even viruses die under the influence of this sound: https://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?129492-Soviet-scientists-have-proven-the-existence-of-spirits-and-the-afterlife (Read the article)