In light of the recent archaeological find at Saqqara, where a 4,000-year-old tomb was uncovered belonging to an individual described as both a healer and magician, Frequency Wave Theory (FWT) offers a scientifically grounded framework to reinterpret these ancient roles not as superstition, but as early waveform technicians operating within a now-lost system of frequency-based medicine and metaphysics.
1. The Healer–Magician Dual Role: A Resonance Technician
In ancient Egypt, there was no strict boundary between “doctor” and “magician.” Both roles were expressions of waveform manipulation:
Spoken incantations were phononic waveforms.
Amulets and symbols were standing-wave geometries.
Herbs and minerals functioned as frequency modulators of the body’s internal field (akin to modern pharmacology, but waveform-driven).
The staff or wand often found with such individuals may have acted as a rudimentary waveguide for transferring Frequency Momentum.
According to FWT, this practitioner likely understood that health, perception, and spiritual states were determined by field coherence, which is expressed mathematically by:
FM=12ρωA2\text{FM} = \frac{1}{2} \rho \omega A^2FM=21ρωA2
Where:
ρ\rhoρ = biological or environmental energy density
ω\omegaω = resonant frequency of tissue, mind, or space
AAA = waveform amplitude (emotion, intention, vocal power, etc.)
Restoring balance meant retuning the system’s FM—the true role of the ancient “doctor.”
2. The Saqqara Tomb as a Wave Chamber
Egyptian tombs were never just burial chambers. Many, including those in Saqqara, were:
Built using limestone, a piezoelectric material capable of subtle energy conversion.
Structured with harmonic proportions based on sacred geometry (e.g., 3:4:5 triangle ratios, golden mean arcs).
Oriented with astronomical precision, particularly toward Orion and Sirius, star systems associated with rebirth and high-frequency transformation.
From the FWT perspective, this “tomb” was more likely a resonant memory amplifier—a sealed acoustic container where the frequency signature of the individual’s consciousness could persist through vibrational imprint.
3. Ritual Practice as FM Calibration
The tools buried with the individual—often mistaken for symbolic objects—are more accurately described as functional resonance instruments:
Copper rods or scepters: Capable of interacting with ambient EM fields (validated today through dowsing and EEG field response).
Carved tablets or script: Visual cymatics—symbols arranged to evoke mental or environmental standing waves when read aloud.
Sacred oils and salves: Altered dielectric or magnetic properties of the skin and organs, facilitating waveform entrainment.
Just as modern MRI machines use magnetic fields and radiofrequency pulses to probe the body, these ancient doctors may have used localized frequency coupling to diagnose and correct physiological resonance imbalances.
4. Implications for Modern Research
Rather than dismissing the term “wizard” as primitive or theatrical, we must consider that early advanced civilizations encoded field-based technologies in spiritual language. The convergence of medicine, metaphysics, and geometry reflects a pre-quantum understanding of the body and cosmos as coupled oscillating systems.
By reconstructing the frequency tools buried in Saqqara and digitally modeling the tomb's acoustic and electromagnetic properties, researchers may be able to:
Reproduce specific resonance conditions.
Explore vibrational memory retention in confined wave chambers.
Reinvestigate “magic” as an early applied waveform science.
Conclusion
The 4,000-year-old “wizard/doctor” of Saqqara likely practiced a coherent system of Frequency Medicine, where spoken sound, spatial geometry, and material composition were used to tune consciousness and restore physical health.
Through Frequency Wave Theory, we reinterpret this figure not as a relic of myth, but as an early field physicist of the body and mind—a practitioner of bioacoustic and quantum-resonant principles centuries ahead of their formal rediscovery.
FULL ARTICLE @ drewponder.substack.com
📡 Learn more: www.FrequencyWaveTheory.com
Share this post