by Jemma Foster
As our solar system moves through space, it spirals, creating a helical pattern like a corkscrew. Moons orbit their celestial bodies and planets swing on their axes and as their dusty skirts twirl like whirling dervishes. They move in eccentric ways, they kiss, they part, this cosmic dance traces complex geometry, recording every proportion and interaction created by these celestial spheres moving in relation to one another.
The Ancient Greeks perceived the harmonics arising in the cosmos as an orchestral dance, calling it musica universalis. Pythagoras theorised that each of the planets had its own frequency or cosmic hum based on its unique orbit, and called this the harmony of the spheres. In recent times, NASA spacecraft have recorded the radio waves emitted by the planets, such as Cassini has done with Saturn.
Frequency Interference Patterns by Ventral is Golden.
“The solar system is a resonant structure – in the orbital and rotational periods of the planets, in their mean distance and rotational speeds, in the perihelion to aphelion ratios of their elliptical orbits, and even in the eight simultaneous quantum mechanics equation of the physicist Molchanov. All these models say the same thing: the planets musically resonate with each other and with their moons in what may be called an extremely low inaudible yet acoustical, wave frequency.” - Robert Lawlor.
If we observe the orbit of Venus around the Sun, from the perspective of the Earth, in every eight Earth years (13 Venutian years) there are five loops – retrograde cycles – when Venus appears to stand still in the sky, ‘kissing Earth’, at each point creating the tip of a petal that makes up a five-petalled rose, the Rose of Venus. In nature, we see this pattern repeated in the pentagonal seed pattern of an apple and the form of a starfish.
Fig. 1. Mercury
Fig. 2. Venus
Fig. 3. Mars
Fig. 4. Jupiter
Fig. 5. Saturn
Fig 6. Uranus
Fig 7. Neptune
Jemma Foster is a multi-disciplinary writer, artist, and practitioner of plant and vibrational medicine. She is the founder of Wild Alchemy Lab and Mama Xanadu, and co-founder of Semantica Productions. Her book Sacred Geometry is published by Octopus, 2020.
As our solar system moves through space, it spirals, creating a helical pattern like a corkscrew. Moons orbit their celestial bodies and planets swing on their axes and as their dusty skirts twirl like whirling dervishes. They move in eccentric ways, they kiss, they part, this cosmic dance traces complex geometry, recording every proportion and interaction created by these celestial spheres moving in relation to one another.
The Ancient Greeks perceived the harmonics arising in the cosmos as an orchestral dance, calling it musica universalis. Pythagoras theorised that each of the planets had its own frequency or cosmic hum based on its unique orbit, and called this the harmony of the spheres. In recent times, NASA spacecraft have recorded the radio waves emitted by the planets, such as Cassini has done with Saturn.
Frequency Interference Patterns by Ventral is Golden.
“The solar system is a resonant structure – in the orbital and rotational periods of the planets, in their mean distance and rotational speeds, in the perihelion to aphelion ratios of their elliptical orbits, and even in the eight simultaneous quantum mechanics equation of the physicist Molchanov. All these models say the same thing: the planets musically resonate with each other and with their moons in what may be called an extremely low inaudible yet acoustical, wave frequency.” - Robert Lawlor.
If we observe the orbit of Venus around the Sun, from the perspective of the Earth, in every eight Earth years (13 Venutian years) there are five loops – retrograde cycles – when Venus appears to stand still in the sky, ‘kissing Earth’, at each point creating the tip of a petal that makes up a five-petalled rose, the Rose of Venus. In nature, we see this pattern repeated in the pentagonal seed pattern of an apple and the form of a starfish.
Fig. 1. Mercury
Fig. 2. Venus
Fig. 3. Mars
Fig. 4. Jupiter
Fig. 5. Saturn
Fig 6. Uranus
Fig 7. Neptune
Jemma Foster is a multi-disciplinary writer, artist, and practitioner of plant and vibrational medicine. She is the founder of Wild Alchemy Lab and Mama Xanadu, and co-founder of Semantica Productions. Her book Sacred Geometry is published by Octopus, 2020.
by Jemma Foster
As our solar system moves through space, it spirals, creating a helical pattern like a corkscrew. Moons orbit their celestial bodies and planets swing on their axes and as their dusty skirts twirl like whirling dervishes. They move in eccentric ways, they kiss, they part, this cosmic dance traces complex geometry, recording every proportion and interaction created by these celestial spheres moving in relation to one another.
The Ancient Greeks perceived the harmonics arising in the cosmos as an orchestral dance, calling it musica universalis. Pythagoras theorised that each of the planets had its own frequency or cosmic hum based on its unique orbit, and called this the harmony of the spheres. In recent times, NASA spacecraft have recorded the radio waves emitted by the planets, such as Cassini has done with Saturn.
Frequency Interference Patterns by Ventral is Golden.
“The solar system is a resonant structure – in the orbital and rotational periods of the planets, in their mean distance and rotational speeds, in the perihelion to aphelion ratios of their elliptical orbits, and even in the eight simultaneous quantum mechanics equation of the physicist Molchanov. All these models say the same thing: the planets musically resonate with each other and with their moons in what may be called an extremely low inaudible yet acoustical, wave frequency.” - Robert Lawlor.
If we observe the orbit of Venus around the Sun, from the perspective of the Earth, in every eight Earth years (13 Venutian years) there are five loops – retrograde cycles – when Venus appears to stand still in the sky, ‘kissing Earth’, at each point creating the tip of a petal that makes up a five-petalled rose, the Rose of Venus. In nature, we see this pattern repeated in the pentagonal seed pattern of an apple and the form of a starfish.
Fig. 1. Mercury
Fig. 2. Venus
Fig. 3. Mars
Fig. 4. Jupiter
Fig. 5. Saturn
Fig 6. Uranus
Fig 7. Neptune
Jemma Foster is a multi-disciplinary writer, artist, and practitioner of plant and vibrational medicine. She is the founder of Wild Alchemy Lab and Mama Xanadu, and co-founder of Semantica Productions. Her book Sacred Geometry is published by Octopus, 2020.
As our solar system moves through space, it spirals, creating a helical pattern like a corkscrew. Moons orbit their celestial bodies and planets swing on their axes and as their dusty skirts twirl like whirling dervishes. They move in eccentric ways, they kiss, they part, this cosmic dance traces complex geometry, recording every proportion and interaction created by these celestial spheres moving in relation to one another.
The Ancient Greeks perceived the harmonics arising in the cosmos as an orchestral dance, calling it musica universalis. Pythagoras theorised that each of the planets had its own frequency or cosmic hum based on its unique orbit, and called this the harmony of the spheres. In recent times, NASA spacecraft have recorded the radio waves emitted by the planets, such as Cassini has done with Saturn.
Frequency Interference Patterns by Ventral is Golden.
“The solar system is a resonant structure – in the orbital and rotational periods of the planets, in their mean distance and rotational speeds, in the perihelion to aphelion ratios of their elliptical orbits, and even in the eight simultaneous quantum mechanics equation of the physicist Molchanov. All these models say the same thing: the planets musically resonate with each other and with their moons in what may be called an extremely low inaudible yet acoustical, wave frequency.” - Robert Lawlor.
If we observe the orbit of Venus around the Sun, from the perspective of the Earth, in every eight Earth years (13 Venutian years) there are five loops – retrograde cycles – when Venus appears to stand still in the sky, ‘kissing Earth’, at each point creating the tip of a petal that makes up a five-petalled rose, the Rose of Venus. In nature, we see this pattern repeated in the pentagonal seed pattern of an apple and the form of a starfish.
Fig. 1. Mercury
Fig. 2. Venus
Fig. 3. Mars
Fig. 4. Jupiter
Fig. 5. Saturn
Fig 6. Uranus
Fig 7. Neptune
Jemma Foster is a multi-disciplinary writer, artist, and practitioner of plant and vibrational medicine. She is the founder of Wild Alchemy Lab and Mama Xanadu, and co-founder of Semantica Productions. Her book Sacred Geometry is published by Octopus, 2020.
by Jemma Foster
As our solar system moves through space, it spirals, creating a helical pattern like a corkscrew. Moons orbit their celestial bodies and planets swing on their axes and as their dusty skirts twirl like whirling dervishes. They move in eccentric ways, they kiss, they part, this cosmic dance traces complex geometry, recording every proportion and interaction created by these celestial spheres moving in relation to one another.
The Ancient Greeks perceived the harmonics arising in the cosmos as an orchestral dance, calling it musica universalis. Pythagoras theorised that each of the planets had its own frequency or cosmic hum based on its unique orbit, and called this the harmony of the spheres. In recent times, NASA spacecraft have recorded the radio waves emitted by the planets, such as Cassini has done with Saturn.
Frequency Interference Patterns by Ventral is Golden.
“The solar system is a resonant structure – in the orbital and rotational periods of the planets, in their mean distance and rotational speeds, in the perihelion to aphelion ratios of their elliptical orbits, and even in the eight simultaneous quantum mechanics equation of the physicist Molchanov. All these models say the same thing: the planets musically resonate with each other and with their moons in what may be called an extremely low inaudible yet acoustical, wave frequency.” - Robert Lawlor.
If we observe the orbit of Venus around the Sun, from the perspective of the Earth, in every eight Earth years (13 Venutian years) there are five loops – retrograde cycles – when Venus appears to stand still in the sky, ‘kissing Earth’, at each point creating the tip of a petal that makes up a five-petalled rose, the Rose of Venus. In nature, we see this pattern repeated in the pentagonal seed pattern of an apple and the form of a starfish.
Fig. 1. Mercury
Fig. 2. Venus
Fig. 3. Mars
Fig. 4. Jupiter
Fig. 5. Saturn
Fig 6. Uranus
Fig 7. Neptune
Jemma Foster is a multi-disciplinary writer, artist, and practitioner of plant and vibrational medicine. She is the founder of Wild Alchemy Lab and Mama Xanadu, and co-founder of Semantica Productions. Her book Sacred Geometry is published by Octopus, 2020.
As our solar system moves through space, it spirals, creating a helical pattern like a corkscrew. Moons orbit their celestial bodies and planets swing on their axes and as their dusty skirts twirl like whirling dervishes. They move in eccentric ways, they kiss, they part, this cosmic dance traces complex geometry, recording every proportion and interaction created by these celestial spheres moving in relation to one another.
The Ancient Greeks perceived the harmonics arising in the cosmos as an orchestral dance, calling it musica universalis. Pythagoras theorised that each of the planets had its own frequency or cosmic hum based on its unique orbit, and called this the harmony of the spheres. In recent times, NASA spacecraft have recorded the radio waves emitted by the planets, such as Cassini has done with Saturn.
Frequency Interference Patterns by Ventral is Golden.
“The solar system is a resonant structure – in the orbital and rotational periods of the planets, in their mean distance and rotational speeds, in the perihelion to aphelion ratios of their elliptical orbits, and even in the eight simultaneous quantum mechanics equation of the physicist Molchanov. All these models say the same thing: the planets musically resonate with each other and with their moons in what may be called an extremely low inaudible yet acoustical, wave frequency.” - Robert Lawlor.
If we observe the orbit of Venus around the Sun, from the perspective of the Earth, in every eight Earth years (13 Venutian years) there are five loops – retrograde cycles – when Venus appears to stand still in the sky, ‘kissing Earth’, at each point creating the tip of a petal that makes up a five-petalled rose, the Rose of Venus. In nature, we see this pattern repeated in the pentagonal seed pattern of an apple and the form of a starfish.
Fig. 1. Mercury
Fig. 2. Venus
Fig. 3. Mars
Fig. 4. Jupiter
Fig. 5. Saturn
Fig 6. Uranus
Fig 7. Neptune
Jemma Foster is a multi-disciplinary writer, artist, and practitioner of plant and vibrational medicine. She is the founder of Wild Alchemy Lab and Mama Xanadu, and co-founder of Semantica Productions. Her book Sacred Geometry is published by Octopus, 2020.
by Jemma Foster
As our solar system moves through space, it spirals, creating a helical pattern like a corkscrew. Moons orbit their celestial bodies and planets swing on their axes and as their dusty skirts twirl like whirling dervishes. They move in eccentric ways, they kiss, they part, this cosmic dance traces complex geometry, recording every proportion and interaction created by these celestial spheres moving in relation to one another.
The Ancient Greeks perceived the harmonics arising in the cosmos as an orchestral dance, calling it musica universalis. Pythagoras theorised that each of the planets had its own frequency or cosmic hum based on its unique orbit, and called this the harmony of the spheres. In recent times, NASA spacecraft have recorded the radio waves emitted by the planets, such as Cassini has done with Saturn.
Frequency Interference Patterns by Ventral is Golden.
“The solar system is a resonant structure – in the orbital and rotational periods of the planets, in their mean distance and rotational speeds, in the perihelion to aphelion ratios of their elliptical orbits, and even in the eight simultaneous quantum mechanics equation of the physicist Molchanov. All these models say the same thing: the planets musically resonate with each other and with their moons in what may be called an extremely low inaudible yet acoustical, wave frequency.” - Robert Lawlor.
If we observe the orbit of Venus around the Sun, from the perspective of the Earth, in every eight Earth years (13 Venutian years) there are five loops – retrograde cycles – when Venus appears to stand still in the sky, ‘kissing Earth’, at each point creating the tip of a petal that makes up a five-petalled rose, the Rose of Venus. In nature, we see this pattern repeated in the pentagonal seed pattern of an apple and the form of a starfish.
Fig. 1. Mercury
Fig. 2. Venus
Fig. 3. Mars
Fig. 4. Jupiter
Fig. 5. Saturn
Fig 6. Uranus
Fig 7. Neptune
Jemma Foster is a multi-disciplinary writer, artist, and practitioner of plant and vibrational medicine. She is the founder of Wild Alchemy Lab and Mama Xanadu, and co-founder of Semantica Productions. Her book Sacred Geometry is published by Octopus, 2020.
As our solar system moves through space, it spirals, creating a helical pattern like a corkscrew. Moons orbit their celestial bodies and planets swing on their axes and as their dusty skirts twirl like whirling dervishes. They move in eccentric ways, they kiss, they part, this cosmic dance traces complex geometry, recording every proportion and interaction created by these celestial spheres moving in relation to one another.
The Ancient Greeks perceived the harmonics arising in the cosmos as an orchestral dance, calling it musica universalis. Pythagoras theorised that each of the planets had its own frequency or cosmic hum based on its unique orbit, and called this the harmony of the spheres. In recent times, NASA spacecraft have recorded the radio waves emitted by the planets, such as Cassini has done with Saturn.
Frequency Interference Patterns by Ventral is Golden.
“The solar system is a resonant structure – in the orbital and rotational periods of the planets, in their mean distance and rotational speeds, in the perihelion to aphelion ratios of their elliptical orbits, and even in the eight simultaneous quantum mechanics equation of the physicist Molchanov. All these models say the same thing: the planets musically resonate with each other and with their moons in what may be called an extremely low inaudible yet acoustical, wave frequency.” - Robert Lawlor.
If we observe the orbit of Venus around the Sun, from the perspective of the Earth, in every eight Earth years (13 Venutian years) there are five loops – retrograde cycles – when Venus appears to stand still in the sky, ‘kissing Earth’, at each point creating the tip of a petal that makes up a five-petalled rose, the Rose of Venus. In nature, we see this pattern repeated in the pentagonal seed pattern of an apple and the form of a starfish.
Fig. 1. Mercury
Fig. 2. Venus
Fig. 3. Mars
Fig. 4. Jupiter
Fig. 5. Saturn
Fig 6. Uranus
Fig 7. Neptune
Jemma Foster is a multi-disciplinary writer, artist, and practitioner of plant and vibrational medicine. She is the founder of Wild Alchemy Lab and Mama Xanadu, and co-founder of Semantica Productions. Her book Sacred Geometry is published by Octopus, 2020.