University of Texas at Austin
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Cool stuff....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6sonpvUxGL8
I might delve into my theories if this thread gets popular. Popular meaning more than 3 replies :o
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Texas State University-San Marcos
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Posted on
Oct 29, 2008 at 9:22am by
Bolix
kind of unrelated but I would always giggle in my old Miata when the motor speed would hit just the right spot and hit resonance with the chassis and vibrate the entire car :o
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University of Texas at Austin
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I've always had some issue where if i hear a specific tone at a concert or something i get really dizzy and my eyes feel like the roll into the back of my head. I found out what it is called last year, but can't find the link now. Weird shit
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Texas State University-San Marcos
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Posted on
Oct 29, 2008 at 10:22am by
Bolix
Quoted Text I've always had some issue where if i hear a specific tone at a concert or something i get really dizzy and my eyes feel like the roll into the back of my head. I found out what it is called last year, but can't find the link now. Weird shit
:eek3:
sounds like the Brown Note from South Park rofl
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University of Texas at Austin
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never saw that one lol
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Carnegie Mellon University
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Posted on
Oct 29, 2008 at 1:54pm by
julian
Once, when I was standing near a speaker at a hardcore punk show, some liquid came out of my ears. After determining that said liquid was not in fact blood, I decided I was fine and watched the rest of the concert from the same position.
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University of Texas at Austin
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i'm too lazy to find the pics again, but the idea that the universe abounds with fractals and cymatics to me is amazing. There is a constellation that looks like a strand of DNA, the top pole of saturn has an unknown cymatic design to it, etc etc etc
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University of Texas at Austin
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There's also a theory that a small percentage of crop circles aren't man made. You can't dispute the fact that some cymatics look close to crop circle designs...
Nebula looking like DNA
Nebula looking like a salt crystal
The crop circle stuff is out there, but ever since i read that string theory explains the various quantum particle as nothing more than vibrating strings i've been obsessed with sound and harmonics. The more i read, the deeper it goes :o
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Posted on
Oct 31, 2008 at 1:34pm by
Chelsea
So what would be making sounds in the middle of a field loud enough for it to affect stalks of wheat/corn/whatever? And why don't we ever see patterns like that in sand on beaches, for example, or bodies of water?
On a similar note, I will always remember something my biology teacher during my freshman year of high school said. We were discussing molecules and atoms and she said that music is just vibrations, and we are just made up of vibrating particles, so we are music.
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University of Texas at Austin
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i can't find the link, but circles are found all over the place. i think <5% are unexplainable due to witnesses not seeing people in the field at all, strange electromagnetic readings, laid down crops (not broken), intertwined crops, crystaline coating . They have been reported for hundreds of years if not thousands. Where do you think the ancient druid/celtic glyph symbols came from? Coincidence that they are also cymatic? Who knows.
One of the things that irritates me is the mainstream media penchant to write everything off as "tinfoil hat", then the general public knows no better. Last year a few circles had RAF helicopters buzzing people trying to look at it..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrL0y1Xkst8
There's probably 100 of videos like that and pics of them hovering over certain circles.
Just don't believe everything you hear on tv because when it comes to stuff like this there's always another side to the story. Anyway, enough of that rant :o
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Texas State University-San Marcos
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Posted on
Nov 2, 2008 at 11:05am by
Westside
you're so damn weird..............and thexy :naughty:
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University of Texas at Austin
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i like thinking outside of the box. There's truth to conspiracies sometimes
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