Every so often, someone sends me a scientific breadcrumb that stops me in my tracks. Recently, it was an article about a laboratory called CureLight and their use of blue-violet and near-infrared frequencies to treat acne without pharmaceuticals, without harsh UV, and without the usual side effects we’ve come to accept as “normal.”
At first glance, it looks like skincare. But look deeper and it’s something more: another example of the same quiet revolution that inspired The Human Trial.
Blue-violet light that kills bacteria.
Red light that reduces inflammation and restores tissue.
Combined wavelengths that can shift biological processes in measurable ways.
UV-free, drug-free, and designed to work with the body, not against it.
What fascinates me most is not the device itself, but the pattern. Over and over, we encounter scientific discoveries rooted in frequency, vibration, and the electromagnetic nature of our bodies that show enormous promise. Yet they often live in the shadows of mainstream medicine, dismissed as fringe or “not enough data,” even when people are experiencing real improvements.
It reminds me of the early scientists whose work inspired my novels. Their findings were astonishing, elegant, and consistent with physics from Einstein and Bohr – yet their research disappeared into silence, overshadowed by political and financial pressures that shaped the medical system we now take for granted.
The CureLight story is not a medical miracle. It’s not a cure. But it is a clue.
A clue that frequency-based healing continues to surface.
A clue that people are searching for gentler, more intuitive approaches.
A clue that the conversation my books explore, the tension between discovery and suppression, is not fiction alone.
And it makes me wonder:
If blue-violet light can calm inflammation…
and red light can accelerate healing…
then what else are we not examining carefully enough?
What else sits in plain sight, overlooked because it challenges a system that prefers treatments over cures?
As I research the sequel to The Human Trial, I keep returning to this thought:
Science evolves. Curiosity moves us forward. And sometimes the smallest discoveries are signposts pointing toward a much bigger truth.
We just have to be willing to follow them.
