Nutritional Awareness Scientific User Guide
Explore the examples below to familiarize yourself with the power and depth of the Nutritional Awareness Scientific program.
Disclaimer
Important: please read This data system
is not intended for treatment or prevention of disease, nor as a substitute for
medical treatment, nor as an alternative to medical advice. It is a review of scientific
evidence presented for information purposes. Any application of the advice
herein is at the viewer’s discretion and sole risk and should not be adopted
without a full review of the scientific references given and consultation with your
health professional.
Features
To obtain the maximum benefit and understanding from the database, first review
how the Nutritional Awareness database is structured and what it can do, then look
over the search illustrations. This will give you an understanding of the basic
functions of the software and make you ready to move forward with putting to use
the wealth of information available to you.
To make comparisons easy and thorough, there are over 100 nutrient/substance item lists.
These lists include heavy metals, excitotoxins, amino acids, elements, muscles, vertebra, teeth,
radiopharmaceuticals, household dangers, food molds, fatty acids —the list goes on and on. In the Nutrients/Substances field, these lists are found by typing “List of”
and this will give you the complete ‘list of items’ found under this heading.
Functions
- The search function is very powerful and can be applied from any text screen.
- Every page can be expanded to a full page by double-clicking any place in a blank gray area on the page.
- Return to a reduced-size page by double-clicking again any place in a blank gray area.
- Increase or decrease font size with the
on every page. - Double-click almost any word or number to display related results.
- Press the Back button to go to the previous page or press the
Home button to return to the home page. (Both the Nutritional Awareness and Nutritional Awareness Scientific programs have the same home page.)
- Each substance has a chemical make-up, molecular weight, mass-to-frequency (MTF) weight conversion, as well as a brain-wave-multiple (BWM) based on the molecular weight and/or MTF conversion.
The BWM is also known as the Octave Identifier (OI) and Beta Wave (brainwave frequency).
- Beta Wave: the Beta brainwave state is associated with a heightened state of alertness and focused concentration. When your mind is actively engaged in mental activities, the dominant brainwave state will be Beta. A person in active conversation, playing sports or making a presentation would be in a Beta state. The Beta brainwave state corresponds to frequencies ranging from 13Hz to 40Hz and the BWM ID used in our program is 15.8828 to 31.7655 Hz.
| C + |
C# – |
D – |
D# – |
E + |
F – |
F# – |
G + |
G# + |
A – |
A# – |
B + |
| 15.8828 |
16.8375 |
17.8406 |
18.9 |
20.0217 |
21.2125 |
22.475 |
23.8125 |
25.2281 |
26.7281 |
29.9844 |
29.9844 |
| 16.8374 |
17.8405 |
18.8999 |
20.0216 |
21.2124 |
22.4749 |
23.8124 |
25.228 |
26.728 |
28.3186 |
31.7655 |
31.7655 |
Sample Searches
Explore the examples below to familiarize yourself with the power and depth of the NA and NAS programs.
Mass-to-Frequency and BWM searches
- A substance with a MTF conversion number of 200 can be recognized as a musical note. How? Divide the number by two until you reach the BWM range (C-4 hertz), which is between 15 and 32 hertz. Then locate the number in the table above: the 200 hertz number is associated to 25 hertz or the note of G.
- Type 200 into the Search box and press the Search button (or just hit Enter).
- An option display box then allows you to choose the frequency association you wish to use:
Mass to Frequency (MTF) or MTF-BWM or molecular weight (MolWt) or MolWt-BWM
- In the Select a Reference choices box that displays, choose Mass to Frequency and press OK (or just hit Enter).

- A list of MTF numbers in the 200 range displays.
Notice that the list includes the BWM for MTF & Molecular Weight plus the BWM for Molecular Weight for each item.
Note: you can 'double click' any field (MTF - BWM (MTF) - Mol Weight - BWM (Mol Wt)) and the frequencies will align smallest to largest or largest to smallest in sequence. This is a valuable tool if you are researching by means of the BWM, as the same frequency with 25 Hz may have a MTF of 25, 50, 100, 200, 400, etc.
Muscle searches
- Return to the Home page and type 25 in the Find It box.
- Choose MTF - Brain Wave Multiple in the displayed options.
Notice how short this list is. When we search by BWM, we pull up items within a +/- 0.015 hertz range.
- Highlight the Adductor brevis muscle (an agonist muscle) and press Enter.
Muscles have only the frequency and BWM listed. The program also lists the same frequency as molecular weight and MTF to ensure it is retrieved from the database for comparison.
- Notice that the data retrieved also tells you what the muscle does and the organ that relates to that muscle.

Amino acid searches
- To review information about the amino acid Homocysteine, return to the Home page.
- In the Nutrients/Substances text box, type Homocysteine and press Enter.

- Notice the Chemical Formula, Mol. Wt., Mass-to-Frequency, and BWM at the top of the resulting text box. Double-click any of these weight/frequency numbers and the program opens a list of associated substances.

- To further search, double-click the MTF number 201.2669. The display below shows a list of substances with an MTF around 201.2669. This allows you to compare other substances with similar energy readings.
Notice you can also type in the chemical formula into the Find It box and the program will locate that substance for you.

Color and musical note searches
- In the Nutrient/Substance text box: type Note and press Enter and all notes display. (You can do this in the Symptoms/Effects text box also.) The various lists of note references result, such as effects in relationship to notes as well as how to muscle test for each note.
- Now pick a note, such as the Note G. Notice that the Note G information…
- includes the color association as well as the frequency range
- shows the association of nutrients found within the note of G based on their MTF conversion
- shows associations to symptoms/effects often found in relationship to dysfunctional note G energy in the body.
- offers muscle testing for weak or strong note G energy within the body
- To see which symptoms/effects relate to the note G, choose the Note G effects from the bottom left text box.
Chemical Formula information
In the Find It box you can enter any chemical formula and the program will convert that formula into four options: MTF, MTF-BWM, MolWT, and MolWt-BWM.
Below we have entered the chemical formula: Ca(HCO3)2 into the Find It box and touch the
'chemical formula information button' -

The following response occurs after hitting the Chemical Formula button:

Notice the four options of research display plus you are given the MTF and MolWt conversions plus their BWM information.
We touch the Mass to Frequency button to obtain the following comparison chart.


Use the back button to return to previous screens.