The Meridian began as a personal project.
For several years, I intentionally stripped down and rebuilt my own belief system. During that time, I explored many traditions and ideas — religious practices, meditation systems, early scientific theories, and concepts from physics. This included studying the ideas, inventions, and writings of Nikola Tesla, along with the scientists who influenced him and those who helped shape early electromagnetic theory.
While reading texts from different periods of history, I became fascinated by the rhythm of language — noticing how word choice, tone, and structure shifted across centuries.
Over time, my research weaved through many disciplines.
Beginning in January 2025, I started a long-term listening experiment.
During my commute — Monday through Thursday — I listen only to instrumental music with no lyrics. Sound that has never carried language.
Eventually, I removed social media, app by app, from my daily life.
Stepping away from algorithm-driven attention systems created an unexpected sense of clarity. Because of that experience, it would feel dishonest to rely on those same systems to promote this work.
You got here how you got here, now didn't ya.
Eventually, I noticed something curious.
That realization became The Meridian.
A meeting place between disciplines.
A practical tool for exploring consciousness through sound.
Most of life happens automatically.
Attention is the doorway to experiencing it more clearly.
The Meridian does not claim answers —
it simply invites attention.