Scientists, doctors, Reiki practitioners, and healers take the changes in the magnetosphere seriously because the levels are controlled by the sun. Reiki practitioners have paid attention to it for ten years because our intuition and body can feel the earth’s energy changes as well as citizens on the street.
QUESTION-Does the magnetosphere cause the changes in our brainwaves, or is there just a correlation that would mean it’s more complicated?
We already know that sunlight is needed in our eyes, which are our brains. For good health, we need Vit.D assimilation and manufacture of happy hormones like dopamine and serotonin from sunlight. Exercise does the same thing. It ramps up our brains, and there is no discussion on that. It’s fact.
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Static magnetic fields have been shown to induce effects on the human brain. Different experiments seem to support the idea that moderate static magnetic field can exert some influence on the gating processes of the membrane channels.
May 19, 2020
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnins.2020.00419/full
“Gating processes.” Yes, time gates. How synchronistic that they use the same word as we do.
The brain cells have electric properties, and the connections between brain cells are largely due to an electric coupling. The link between magnetic fields and electricity is well-known. Despite a number of reports about the possibility that static magnetic fields might interfere with the physiological brain functions, a mechanistic explanation of these effects is lacking.
The link
Our brains might sense Earth’s magnetic field just like birds do
By Donna Lu
18 March 2019

Can you feel that?
SOPA Images Limited / Alamy Stock Photo
What do birds and bees, worms and wolves, fruit flies and fish all have in common? The answer: a magnetic sense that helps them navigate. Now it seems we might do as well.
Joseph Kirschvink at the California Institute of Technology in the US and colleagues found that altering the directions of nearby magnetic fields caused temporary changes in human brain activity.
While sitting still in a dark room, participants’ brain activity was recorded using electroencephalography (EEG), while electromagnetic coils were used to create magnetic fields.
The experiment mimicked the magnetic field changes we are subject to when we move about in the real world, says Kirschvink.
The direction and intensity of Earth’s magnetic field varies by geographical location. For example, at the magnetic north pole, one of two poles where the magnetic field is the strongest, the direction of the field points vertically downwards, into the ground.
In the wider northern hemisphere, this vertical angle changes but the magnetic field is always skewed downwards – meaning that when you hold a compass horizontally, the end pointing north is slightly pulled down. The south-pointing end of some compasses in the northern hemisphere are weighted to compensate for the pull.
Brain change
When the team exposed people to a downward-pointing magnetic field, they saw changes in brain wave patterns when they rotated the field horizontally in a counterclockwise direction.
People can sense Earth’s magnetic field, brain waves suggest
