Hello and welcome back to the Gubba Podcast. I’m Gubba, a first-time homesteader following in the footsteps of my homesteading forebears. Here on the show we talk about homesteading, prepping, and everything in between, but today we’re stepping outside the homestead and into a fascinating corner of history and conspiracy that continues to intrigue researchers around the world.
The subject is bells. Massive bronze bells that once hung in cathedrals, churches, and towers across the world. Official history tells us they were used to mark time, summon villagers to worship, or announce important events. But an alternative theory suggests they played a much deeper role. These bells may have been part of an ancient technology built not just for ceremony but for healing, using specific frequencies to resonate with the human body and even the Earth itself.
This theory expands further when you consider cathedrals as potential healing centers, organs as precision frequency machines, and the curious destruction of bells, often melted down during wars, at the exact time society was industrializing. Today, we’ll unpack how all of this ties into broader theories of the Great Reset and the rewriting of history.
Bells and Healing Frequencies
Bells are some of the oldest sound-making devices in human culture, but their construction was far from simple. They were cast using specific metal ratios, mostly copper and tin, and tuned meticulously. Many historical bells ring at frequencies very close to 432 Hz, a tone believed by alternative researchers to be aligned with the Schumann resonance, the natural vibration of the Earth’s electromagnetic field.
Modern tuning standards shifted music and sound to 440 Hz in the 20th century, and while the difference is only 8 cycles per second, researchers argue that it is enough to create a subtle disharmony. Supporters of the 432 Hz theory claim that this tuning harmonizes with the body’s cells, water molecules, and even plant life. Bees, for instance, hum at approximately this same frequency, and beekeepers have historically been observed to live longer, healthier lives—perhaps due to their constant exposure to these vibrations.
Imagine a medieval village when the cathedral bell rang out across the countryside. The sound was not merely a call to worship but a vibrational bath that spread through the air, soil, and even the human nervous system. The deep tones could slow the heart rate, calm anxiety, and promote balance within the body. In modern medicine, tuning forks, gongs, and singing bowls are used for sound therapy to reduce inflammation, relieve stress, and improve circulation. The principle is the same, only on a much smaller scale. Bells provided this therapy to entire communities at once.
Cathedrals as Healing Centers
The architecture of cathedrals further supports the idea that these structures were not only religious but also resonant healing chambers. Gothic cathedrals, with their vaulted ceilings, rose windows, and precise geometric proportions, amplified sound in remarkable ways. The layout of the nave, the soaring arches, and the use of specific materials such as limestone and granite created a natural echo chamber that enhanced vibration.
When the bells rang or the organ played, the entire building became a tuning device. The vibrations moved through the walls, resonated in the stained-glass windows, and reverberated within the vaulted ceilings. People standing inside were literally enveloped in sound waves that could stimulate different parts of the body.
The rose windows themselves often resembled mandalas, geometric forms long associated with meditation and consciousness. The combination of sound and sacred geometry may have created an environment designed for healing as much as worship. These details suggest that cathedrals functioned as public health centers, with architecture and acoustics working together to support human well-being.
The Organ as a Medical Device
Inside these cathedrals stood some of the largest and most powerful instruments ever built: the pipe organ. These organs were not delicate household instruments but massive machines with pipes stretching 30 feet tall. When played, they could shake the entire structure.
Each pipe of an organ produces a specific frequency. In conspiracy research, these instruments are described as frequency machines, deliberately designed to produce tones that interact with the human body’s natural energy centers. In modern holistic language, these would be called chakras. Each tone corresponds to different physical and emotional states, meaning an organist could theoretically “play” the human body the same way they played the building.
The walls of cathedrals often contained stone with high quartz content, a material known to amplify and store vibrations. Combined with stained glass filtering colored light, which itself has therapeutic properties—the effect may have been a full-spectrum healing environment. Parishioners did not simply attend sermons; they may have participated in frequency-based therapy sessions, their bodies harmonized by sound and light.
Even world fairs showcased these instruments. At the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition, the largest pipe organ in the world was displayed. Strangely, like many structures and devices from the fairs, it was destroyed or dismantled shortly afterward. If these organs were part of a healing technology, their removal fits into a broader pattern of erasing evidence of such systems.
The Silencing of the Bells
By the 20th century, bells began disappearing on a massive scale. During both World War I and World War II, governments confiscated bells across Europe, claiming they were needed for ammunition. Officially, the bronze was melted down to produce weaponry.
Yet historians note that bronze was not the most efficient wartime material compared to steel or iron. The sheer effort to dismantle and melt thousands of bells suggests there may have been more at stake than raw material. By removing bells, entire populations lost access to their local frequency therapy. Communities that once lived under the constant rhythm of resonant sound were suddenly silenced.
This timing coincided with the rise of industrial society and the pharmaceutical industry. If bells and organs provided a form of public health, their destruction cleared the way for new systems of medicine that relied on chemicals rather than frequencies. The silencing of bells could be seen as part of a broader effort to sever humanity from natural resonance and replace it with industrial noise and chemical intervention.
Bells and the Great Reset
This brings us to the theory of the Great Reset, the idea that history was deliberately rewritten between the 1800s and early 1900s. Evidence of advanced civilizations, often labeled under the umbrella term Tartaria, was erased through wars, fires, floods, and other catastrophes. The world fairs played a central role in this reset, presenting architectural marvels and technologies as “temporary exhibits” only to have them demolished soon after.
The fate of bells fits neatly into this narrative. Bells, cathedrals, and organs were not simply destroyed by accident—they were systematically removed as part of this reset. Their ability to demonstrate a different understanding of energy and healing made them dangerous to the new narrative.

World fairs often showcased giant bells, luminous replicas, and powerful sound demonstrations. For instance, the Pittsburgh Exposition featured the “Luminous Liberty Bell,” a massive illuminated structure that raised questions about whether it was truly made of plaster or whether it was the real Liberty Bell. Like so many fair structures, it was temporary, destroyed, and forgotten. This repeated pattern of display and destruction suggests an effort to control public memory and remove traces of older knowledge.
Healing Frequencies and the Human Body
Modern science supports many of the claims made in these theories, even if it doesn’t frame them as conspiracies. Studies show that sound frequencies can stimulate tissue regeneration, accelerate wound healing, reduce stress hormones, and balance brainwave states. Ultrasound machines use frequencies to break up kidney stones. Certain tones are known to induce relaxation and reduce blood pressure.
If small devices in laboratories can achieve these effects, the immense resonance of bells and organs would have been even more powerful. Imagine entire towns and villages being bathed in frequencies designed to heal and harmonize. People may have lived healthier lives not only due to diet and lifestyle but also because of the sound environment created by these instruments.
With the removal of bells and the destruction of resonant architecture, this vibrational medicine was lost. In its place came industrial noise, sirens, and mechanized sounds—frequencies that do not heal but instead create stress and disharmony.
Why This Story Matters Today
Understanding the potential role of bells and cathedrals as healing technologies changes the way we look at history. It suggests that our ancestors were not merely building monuments to God but constructing systems of energy and resonance that supported entire communities.
It also reframes the narrative of destruction during wars and resets. The loss of bells and organs may not have been collateral damage but a targeted removal of technologies that could keep populations healthy and self-sufficient without reliance on modern pharmaceuticals.
Today, as interest in sound therapy, frequency healing, and vibrational medicine grows, people are rediscovering what may have once been common knowledge. Bells, cathedrals, and organs were not just cultural artifacts—they were tools of resonance, evidence of a deeper understanding of the relationship between sound and the human body.
Closing Thoughts
History tells us bells were melted for ammo, cathedrals were built for worship, and organs were instruments of music. But viewed through another lens, they were part of a vast system of frequency healing—a system silenced during a global reset of society.
Their removal left us dependent on industrial medicine, disconnected from natural resonance, and cut off from technologies that may have once been freely available to everyone.
Perhaps bells were the tuning forks of civilization, harmonizing communities until their silence forced humanity into a new song—one of dissonance, control, and profit. Understanding this story today gives us the chance to reconnect with resonance and begin to rediscover what was lost.