TrueLife - Visualizing the Sound of Language: When Words Become Light, Color, and Consciousness
Episode Date: November 7, 2020One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US🚨🚨Curious about the future of psych...edelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/Language isn’t just communication — it’s vibration crystallized into form. Every word carries frequency, intention, and unseen structure. In this episode, George Monty explores the synesthetic frontier where sound meets sight — from cymatics and sacred geometry to the neuroscience of linguistic resonance. What if words don’t just describe reality, but build it?In this episode:How sound frequencies shape matter and perceptionThe visual geometry of language through cymaticsThe intersection of neuroscience, spirituality, and linguisticsWhy language might be humanity’s oldest technologyThe future of expression in a multisensory worldTranscript:https://app.podscribe.ai/episode/55810427So she was like, what's that, babe, I love you. And it comes out like a pink purple and then I would wrap it with like, Oh, you know what I mean? Gorgeous. I was just thinking about you, how beautiful you are. And that's kind of like a baby blue turning into like a dark blue. And it just wraps around her words. And if you could think about conversations like that, if you can think about decorating someone else's language, if you can think about using your words as a way to decorate the Language of other people, I believe you could have a better conversation with people. If you can use the color coding scheme to talk about things in your day, I believe your conversation would be more interesting. I believe you can get to a point where the color of your words that you speak will tell you the mood in which you are in, but not just you, it can tell you the mood of the conversation that you're in. It can tell you the actual words, The color of the words of your language can tell you the state of the emotion, your conversation's in, what state is going to be in and what state it was previously in. You can also tell if you have chemistry with someone, if you can, the color of their words, in your words, you can also have someone find you more attractive. If you are able to decorate their words with the right color of words coming out of your mouth. Speaker 1 (6m 13s): I think the same Speaker 0 (6m 15s): Type of color coded system could be used for all. Language. I think you could apply a color to the sounds coming out of a barking dog. I don't think you can apply a color to a bird chirping and that you can decode that color. The colors. I don't know if the colors are the same for everybody. However, I think that everybody has a different type of code code, a color and Ora. That would be different to them. I think the color of the words you use can be seen. That might be the more perfect logo's that was the phylo today is talked about a logos that can be seen and you can see it. If you're listening to this, if for some reason you're listening to the TrueLife podcast right now, I'm telling you, you have the ability to see not only the words physically come out of your mouth, see the color of them. There it is. Again, it's Brown. Speaker 1 (7m 20s): Try it. Speaker 0 (7m 22s): I am going to try it right now and use a set of words that I think best fit. Like some are colors like the light for sea foam green and a blue. So here we go. Let me try this. The that's a Brown Can I'm not, I'm not getting it right now. It's almost like you have this weird writer's block. It's just let it flow or just let it flow. Maybe poetry is color-coded Maybe maybe when you speak in verse, it could be the same for you. Maybe it's frequency, maybe the words you use when you speak to people, you care about the cadence that you use to communicate the way you feel at a certain time. Maybe it is the pattern in which you use a certain type of descriptive flowing. Language maybe when you decide to slow down the frequency, when you decide to lather the language, do you use with softer baritone? Maybe in fact, when you can use this burgundy breath, when you can use the purple sails to float a word over to someone, when you can fly a kite Speaker 1 (9m 9s): Kind of works, right? Speaker 0 (9m 11s): What kind of works? You have to work on that. I mean, I think it might be frequency, right? Because color's have frequency. Light has a frequency and sound has a frequency. So of all of those match, theoretically, you should be able to match up the tone of your voice, the frequency you use to get your point across to somebody. If you want to get your point across to somebody, then you must navigate the distance. You must navigate the pathway to get your point across to. Sometimes you can sail your point on a sea foam, green solid, beautiful sunlit DEI. You can just say, get your point on your catamaran with your Stripe blue shirt, that cold, cool brisk wind with soft little dollops of water.dot, dot. That's your point? It's a little dollops as your point. I was like a light blue, right? Maybe a sea foam green. I want to do the color of a range right now, but I don't want to get into that emotion. Speaker 1 (10m 24s): The rage, Speaker 0 (10m 28s): If I say to you, rage, rage into the dying of the light. See, I'm not giving it the right frequency. I bet you, I bet you, there is a chemistry between tone, frequency and color. Well, clearly there's tone and color, right? What is the similarity between tone and voice and tone and color? How can we see? I can see the Language. I am spitting out. Now. I can see, I can't envision the words coming outta my mouth. If you think about it, it's nothing new. That person has a silver tone. Speaker 1 (11m 15s): I think we lost it somewhere. Okay. Speaker 0 (11m 17s): Are you still with me? Did I lose you? Hope I didn't lose you because if I can have you, I don't want nobody, babe. If you can have you, ah, what color was that? Color me. Badd what am I? The candy man. You see what I did there? That's good. I know gaming and happy. That's like a way that sounds like a white word, huh? Maybe different cultures have different frequencies in which they speak. The words are tone's in which they use have a different being, have a different message. How about tonal languages? What colors would those be? How is my idea of Language skewed while the colors of my language would be different than someone who speaks a tonal link Speaker 1 (12m 9s): Language Speaker 0 (12m 13s): Can I use the different colors of tonal language to enhance my relationship with a person from another culture? Speaker 1 (12m 21s): Sure. I think you can Speaker 0 (12m 29s): Maybe if we could figure out the right tone, the right color of words, the right path, Speaker 1 (12m 37s): The pattern, the right set of tones, Speaker 0 (12m 45s): Pattern and frequency, maybe that would alleviate the chaos and which we find ourselves today, perhaps that would allow us to trul...
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Discussion (0)
Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, Sun ripped away, her health bereft.
I roar at the void.
This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate.
The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel.
Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights.
The scars my key, hermetic and stark.
To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark, fumbling, fear.
Fearist through ruins maze lights my war cry born from the blaze.
The poem is Angels with Rifles.
The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Codex Seraphini.
Check out the entire song at the end of the cast.
Well, here we go.
This is a special evening edition.
Well, special for me.
Special in a lot of ways.
One, because I get to come on the podcast and chit chat,
chat. Two, someone might actually listen to it. Three, I normally do this in the morning.
This is 10.30 at night. It's so amazing our language. And I had a thought. I know, I know what
you're thinking. You had a thought, George? Take it easy. I have a lot of them, all right?
Well, the one I was thinking about is specifically about language.
And let me know what you think about this.
This is an exercise you can do for yourself if you want to.
Don't be afraid.
Whenever you say something, imagine as you say the word,
imagine seeing the word come out of your mouth.
It could be the actual letters, like the outline of the letters.
And as you say the word, all of a sudden you see the word.
mine this particular one was brown outline and it said the and then all the letters fell off after they got to where my steering wheel is because i'm sitting in my car so they only lasted a little bit a little bit that was actually blue outlines in lowercase the reason you do that is so you can see how the words look and it's good to practice that one was yellow it's good to practice that
And I don't know why those words had that color in my mind, but they did.
And now that I think about it, the words that came out, the words that don't have emotion,
the word, that one was brown.
I think because it didn't have a lot of emotion behind it.
If I say something like excited, that one was like an orange color to me.
There was a little more passion behind her, yellow, fading to purple.
That's odd.
if you think about your language like that
think was in blue if you think in blue
if you think language think language that was in blue
think if you think like that
I think
you can better communicate
maybe that's the next dimension of language
try it
say a word that was brown
think blue
maybe you could ascribe the colors to them
maybe action words are
I don't know
For me, I just, I say whatever color the word is.
I bet you can do it.
Just try it. Come on, man.
Don't make me do this alone.
Don't make me do this alone.
Okay, let me tell you why it's important.
Important was black right there.
Ooh.
Okay.
I'm not even on drugs right now.
I'm not even tripping my balls off.
I can do this.
Interesting.
Okay, so the colors of the words you use
are like a color-coded system.
representing passion, representing emotion,
representing different feelings.
That same color could also be for intent.
Now let me tell you why this is another part of this.
Another part of this would be do the same thing
for other people's words when they come at you.
What are the color of the words coming out of their mouth?
And if you want to have a good conversation,
then you would use a color word that goes well with that color word that came out of their mouth.
Does that make sense?
So if I'm having a nice conversation with my wife and she's like, what's that, babe, I love you?
Like that would, it's almost like a pink purple that came out that I saw.
So then I would wrap that, I would wrap that with like a blue, maybe like a couple shades of blue.
So she's like, what's that, babe, I love you?
And it comes out like a pink purple.
and then I would wrap it with like, oh, you know me, gorgeous, I was just thinking about you,
how beautiful you are.
And that's kind of like a baby blue turning into like a dark blue and it just wraps around
her words.
And if you can think about conversations like that, if you can think about decorating someone
else's language, if you can think about using your words as a way to decorate the language
of other people, I believe you can have a better conversation with people.
people. If you can use the color coding scheme to talk about things in your day, I believe your
conversation will be more interesting. I believe you can get to a point where the color
of your words that you speak will tell you the mood in which you are in. But not just you.
It can tell you the mood of the conversation that you're in. It can tell you the action that you're in.
It can tell you the actual, the color of the words of your language can tell you the state of the emotion your conversations in, what state it's going to be in, and what state it was previously in.
You can also tell if you have chemistry with someone, if you can envision the color of their words and your words.
You could also have someone find you more attractive if you were able to decorate their words with the right color of words coming out of your mouth.
I think the same type of color coded system could be used for all language.
I think you could apply a color to the sounds coming out of a barking dog.
I think you could apply a color to a bird chirping and that you can decode that color.
The colors, I don't know if the colors are the same for everybody.
everybody. However, I think that everybody has a different type of code, a color, an aura that would be different to them.
I think the color of the words you use can be seen. That might be the more perfect logos that was, the philo-Judeus talked about, a logos that can be seen. And you can see it. If you're listening to this, if for some
reason you're listening to the true life podcast right now. I'm telling you, you have the ability
to see not only the words physically come out of your mouth, but see the color of them.
There it is again. It's brown. Try it. I am going to try it right now and use a set of words
that I think best fit like summer colors, like the light seafone green and a blue.
So here we go. Let me try this.
That's brown. Okay, I'm not getting it right.
Now, it's almost like I have this weird writer's block.
I just let it flow.
Just let it flow out.
Maybe poetry is color-coded.
Maybe when you speak in verse, it could be the same free.
Maybe it's frequency.
Maybe the words you use when you speak to people you care about.
cadence that you use to communicate the way you feel at a certain time. Maybe it is the pattern
in which you use a certain type of descriptive flowing language. Maybe when you decide to slow down
the frequency, when you decide to
Lather the language you use with a softer baritone.
Maybe in fact when you can use this burgundy breath, when you can use the purple sails to float a word over to someone.
When you can fly a kite, it kind of works.
It kind of works. I have to work on it. I think it might be frequency, right? Because colors have
frequency, light has frequency, and sound has frequency. So if all of those match, theoretically, you should be able to match up the tone of your voice, the frequency you use to get your point across to somebody. If you want to get your point across to somebody, then you must navigate the distance. You must navigate the distance. You must navigate the,
the pathway to get your point across.
Sometimes you can sail your point on a seafoam green, solid, beautiful sunlit day.
You can just set your point on your catamaran with your striped blue shirt,
a cold, cool, brisk wind with soft little dollops of water.
That's your point.
the little dollops that's your point that's like a light blue right maybe a seafone green i want to do
the color of rage right now but i don't want to get into that emotion rage
if i say to you rage rage into the dying of the light see i'm not giving it the right frequency
i bet you i bet you there is a chemistry between tone frequency and color well clearly there's tone
in color, right? What is the similarity between tone and voice and tone in color? How can we see?
I can see the language I am spitting out now. I can see. I can envision the words coming out of my
mouth. If you think about it, it's nothing new. That person has a silver tongue. I think we
lost it somewhere. Are you still with me? Did I lose you?
I hope I didn't lose you.
Because if I can't have you, I don't want nobody, baby.
If I can't have you.
Ha ha.
What color was that?
Color me bad?
What am I the Candyman?
Ha ha!
You see what I did there?
Ah, that's gay.
I know.
Gay meaning happy.
That sounds like a white word, huh?
Maybe different cultures have different frequencies in which they speak.
in the words or tones in which they use have a different being, have a different message.
How about tonal languages? What colors would those be? How is my idea of language skewed?
The colors of my language would be different than someone who speaks a tonal language.
Can I use the different colors of tonal language to enhance my relationship with a person from another
culture? I think you can.
Maybe if we could figure out the right tone, the right color of words, the right pattern, the right set of tone, pattern, and frequency.
Maybe that would alleviate the chaos in which we find ourselves today.
Perhaps that would allow us to truly communicate with one another.
Beyond words. Beyond good and evil.
I love you.
Law.
