June 1994
Silicon Valley
I’d just moved into my apartment after transferring from Michigan for a job in tech. I came out of a sound sleep and listened to try to determine what woke me up. Seconds later the window blinds started bouncing against my window. Moments later I heard a Pop Pop Pop and seconds after that the building started to shake. My reacton? I laughed.
I had a tall glass cabinet I hadn’t yet anchored to the wall. I hoped I didn’t have to run – barefoot – through shattered glass on my way to the front door.
When I subsequently talked to my brother who’d recently moved back to the Midwest from Los Angeles he explained why I came awake before the shaking started.
“You heard it.”
He went on to tell me of a time when he was returning from a business trip. Getting in late and not wanting to disturb his sleeping family he went to sleep on the couch. At some point he heard a “click.” Knowing what it meant he leaped off the couch to get to his wife and baby who were asleep on a second level. By the time he got to the stairs the shaking was so bad he couldn’t go up.
He told me the shaking was so bad the stairs were flat.
As I didn’t recall hearing anything yet knowing earthquake waves are sound waves I accepted the explanation.
Be Quiet!
We’re having an earthquake!
Not long after I was on a customer call in my cube in Santa Clara. Out of nowhere I blurted – the customer was literally asking me a question “Be quiet! We’re having an earthquake!”
I Don’t Feel It!
This customer worked in a nearby office. When he protested he didn’t feel any shaking I snapped “Be quiet!” Shaking started seconds later. His response? “Don’t you hang up on me!”
Colleagues in surrounding cubes dove under desks. I sat holding the phone to my ear.
There was nothing nearby that might have hit my head.
When the shaking stopped the customer – badly shaken (pun intended) asked “How did you know that?”
I told him I heard it coming.
Huh?
My explanation didn’t satisfy though two teammates who overheard me understood.
One of them also heard quakes before the shaking started. He said “Did you notice I turned off my music?”
He used to play CDs in a CD reader on a DECstation.
In 2011 I published Riding the Waves: Diagnosing Treating and Living With EMF Sensitivity. In it I write of my ability to predict earthquakes.
Days before they happen.
I know which fault line will go
Even when USGS isn’t aware of it.
I know the day of the week the time of day within 2 minutes and the magnitude within .1 on the Richter scale.
This ability is due to my sensitivity to Geologic EM frequencies.
The other 3 GATE frequencies I’m sensitive to are Atmospheric, Technologic, and Esoteric.
NEW MATERIAL!
While this technically falls under Geologic the idea we – as humans – can predict earthquakes is esoteric in nature.
Isn’t That Special?
As Church lady would say.
I found it high irony to read an article about how it is so many woke up before the shaking started with a recent quake. Why high irony? I’m about to release an app for people whose lives are impacted by Esoteric EMFs. This phenomenon is covered in the app and accompanying workbook.
It’s fun if not vindicating to see science catching up with nature. When I published my book? US scientists and medical professionals were the only in the world to deny EMF Sensitivity was real.
Good thing I ignored them.
I’ll share more on the app soon.
I’ll also be doing an interview about the app with Lloyd Burell of ElectricSense.
Stay tuned.


