08/11/2025
Terrence Howard blew everyone’s minds when he said that all the elements in the world are really just different versions of the same thing, each with its own “musical note,” and that playing the right note — like the one for beryllium — could magically split water into hydrogen and oxygen, but that this secret has been hidden from people.
Howard suggested that elements possess a "tone" or a specific frequency. He claims, for instance, that hydrogen has the same musical key, the key of E, as carbon. He provides specific frequencies, stating hydrogen is at 40.5 Hertz, and as you move to related elements, this frequency doubles.
For example, he says the next element would be 81 Hertz, silicon would be 162 Hertz, and cobalt would be 324 Hertz. He connects this idea of tone to color, explaining that light and sound are related through wavelengths.
By repeatedly dividing the wavelength of light, one can arrive at its audible sound frequency. Howard mentions that these ideas are based on a fundamental relationship between light and color, sound and tone, and matter and shape.
He contrasts the standard periodic table with one created by Walter Russell, which he describes as "unwinding" like a vortex.
Howard says he envisioned this concept at a young age, seeing the elements arranged in a circle, expanding outwards like a rag being wrapped around a hand.
In this model, elements such as hydrogen, carbon, silicon, and cobalt are all connected because they sit at a midpoint between two noble gases. He posits that these elements are not distinct but are all manifestations of a single substance.
Howard explains that hydrogen is the first element humans can perceive because anything before it is too dense.
He describes carbon as having a "bisexual tone" because it has a balanced positive and negative side.
He elaborates that elements before carbon in its series, like lithium, beryllium, and boron, are contractive. Carbon, however, achieves a perfect balance. Following carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and fluorine have negative properties.
He claims that fluorine and lithium have a natural attraction so strong that if fluorine is introduced to a compound containing lithium, the lithium will violently break its existing bonds to bond with the fluorine.
Similarly, he states that beryllium and oxygen share this powerful attraction.
Howard concludes by saying that a secret has been kept from us: to separate water into hydrogen and oxygen, one simply needs to introduce beryllium, or even just the sound frequency of beryllium. This would cause the oxygen to violently break its bond with hydrogen to bond with the beryllium instead.