It was the sonified pulse of a pulsar
The collapsed core of a massive star — spinning hundreds of times per second, somewhere deep in our galaxy. Astronomers had converted its electromagnetic pulses into sound.
And when I heard it, I had a strange thought: What would happen if the human brain could actually meditate with these cosmic rhythms?
That question stayed with me for years. Eventually, it led me to create something I had never attempted before.
The Emotion Astronomers Talk About Most
Astronomers often say something interesting happens when people first see the universe through a powerful telescope. They experience awe. Not just admiration — but a deep sense of vastness and perspective.
Time slows down. The mind becomes quiet. Everyday worries suddenly feel much smaller.
Researchers studying awe have found something fascinating: when people experience awe, the brain naturally shifts into states very similar to deep meditation. Stress circuits quiet down. Curiosity increases. Perspective expands.
That raised an intriguing question: Could sound create that same experience of awe inside the mind itself?
After years of research — and with specific cosmic data I'd been collecting — I finally had the tools to find out.





