Author: Locke Dauch
Affiliation: Sovereign Integrity Institute (SII), Bangkok, Thailand
Date: May 3, 2026 (Revised)
Classification: Field Report / Protocol Proposal / Observational Study
SII Field Report Series: 2026(FR-002)
Abstract
This observational field report documents a single‑subject (N=1) self‑experiment testing a novel, low‑cost, home‑based meditation protocol. The protocol combines three simultaneous inputs: (1) low‑frequency vibration applied to the feet and legs via a consumer vibration plate, (2) auditory sensory reduction using high‑attenuation earplugs (24 dB NRR), and (3) visual anchoring via candle gazing (trataka). The observer, a 40‑year‑old male with a history of prolonged chronic stress and autonomic dysregulation, completed daily 10–20 minute sessions over a two‑week period. A domestic cat (Tao Tao, 18 months old) was present during sessions; his behavior was noted incidentally. The primary outcome was subjective experience of mental chatter reduction, relaxation, and time distortion. Secondary outcome was the cat’s observed behavior (alertness, stillness, sleep). Results: The observer reported rapid reduction in mental chatter, a subjective state consistent with descriptions of deep relaxation (theta‑like), and improved post‑session rest. The cat exhibited voluntary stillness and sleep during sessions, consistent with anecdotal reports of animal sensitivity to human autonomic state. The protocol is proposed as a hypothesis‑generating, low‑cost method for nervous system settling. No causal claims are made regarding EEG correlates, vagal activation, or cross‑species entrainment. Safety considerations are provided.
Keywords: meditation, vibration plate, candle gazing, trataka, sensory reduction, co‑regulation, nervous system settling, field report, N=1
1. Introduction
Traditional single‑anchor meditation practices (breath, body sensation, mantra) are effective for many individuals but can be challenging for those with chronic hyperarousal, trauma histories, or prolonged stress exposure. Prior work by the author documented the use of stillness‑based protocols (earplugs, eye mask, weighted blanket) for nervous system regulation (Dauch, 2026a). However, the observer found that stillness alone was sometimes insufficient to quiet persistent mental chatter.
This report describes a self‑experiment testing a multi‑channel protocol designed to entrain the nervous system through simultaneous, predictable input across three sensory channels: proprioceptive/vibratory, auditory, and visual. The protocol does not require prior meditation experience, expensive equipment, or skilled instruction.
The purpose is hypothesis‑generating, not hypothesis‑confirming. No causal claims are made regarding EEG correlates, vagal activation, or cross‑species physiological entrainment.
2. Protocol Description
| Component | Specification | Hypothesized Function |
|---|---|---|
| Vibration plate | Low setting (80 km/h simulated speed, ~22 Hz), feet and legs only | Proprioceptive/vestibular input; may engage mechanoreceptive pathways |
| Earplugs | 24 dB Noise Reduction Rating (NRR) | Auditory sensory reduction; reduced cortical load |
| Candle gazing | YouTube video (steady flame, dark background), 2–3 feet distance, soft gaze | Visual anchor; trataka‑style focused attention |
| Environment | Dark room, seated posture, feet flat on vibration plate | Conditioned safety; predictable context |
Sequence:
- Insert earplugs.
- Start vibration plate (low setting).
- Begin candle gazing video.
- Maintain soft, steady gaze on the flame.
- Continue for 10–20 minutes.
- Allow body relaxation, breath deepening, and mental settling without forcing.
Duration: 10–20 minutes, once daily (tested over two weeks).
3. Observed Effects (Human Subject, N=1)
The following are subjective observations, not instrumentally measured.
| Time | Subjective Experience |
|---|---|
| 0–2 min | Awareness of vibration; body adjusts |
| 2–5 min | Vibrations fade into background; breath deepens |
| 5–10 min | Mental chatter significantly reduced; sense of time blurs |
| 10–15 min | A subjective state commonly described in meditation literature as “theta‑like” (deep relaxation with maintained awareness), without direct neurophysiological measurement |
| 15–20 min | Deep stillness; can continue or transition to rest |
Notable: The observer reported that the vibration plate did not distract but rather seemed to ground the body, allowing the mind to settle more quickly than with earplugs and candle alone. The combination felt synergistic — each input potentially reducing cognitive load in a different channel.
4. Incidental Observation: Feline Subject
A domestic cat (Tao Tao, 18 months old) was present in the room during all sessions. He was not restrained, directed, or trained. His behavior was recorded anecdotally.
| Behavior | Observation | Interpretation (Tentative) |
|---|---|---|
| Initial | Entered the room, sat near observer | Voluntary proximity |
| After 2–3 minutes | Stopped grooming/exploring | Attention shifted |
| After 5 minutes | Lay down, watched the candle | Sustained visual focus |
| After 8–10 minutes | Closed eyes, fell asleep | Relaxation |
| Duration of sleep | Remained asleep for 10+ minutes | No startle response |
| Post‑session | Woke calmly, stretched, remained nearby | No agitation |
Interpretation: The cat’s behavior is consistent with anecdotal reports of animal sensitivity to environmental and behavioral cues, including human autonomic state. No causal inference can be drawn. The observation is reported as qualitative, not as evidence of physiological entrainment or cross‑species coherence.
5. Proposed Mechanisms (Hypotheses, Not Claims)
| Input | Hypothesized Mechanism (with caution) |
|---|---|
| Vibration plate | May engage mechanoreceptive pathways (Pacinian corpuscles, Ruffini endings); has been hypothesized in prior literature to influence autonomic regulation, though direct evidence for consumer devices at low settings is limited |
| Earplugs (24 dB) | Reduces auditory cortical load; may decrease default mode network (DMN) activity (Al Zoubi et al., 2021) |
| Candle gazing (trataka) | Focused attention has been associated with reduced DMN activity and decreased mind‑wandering (Travis & Shear, 2010) |
| Synergy | Rather than directly suppressing self‑referential activity, the protocol may reduce the cognitive resources available for such processes by engaging multiple low‑novelty sensory channels simultaneously |
No claim is made regarding vagal activation, EEG correlates, or entrainment. These are hypotheses for future testing.
6. Safety Considerations
This protocol has not been formally tested for safety. The following precautions are recommended based on the observer’s experience and general knowledge:
| Risk | Precaution |
|---|---|
| Vibration plate | Not recommended for individuals with vestibular disorders, certain neurological conditions, pregnancy, or deep vein thrombosis. Start with the lowest setting. Discontinue if dizziness, nausea, or discomfort occurs. |
| Sensory reduction (earplugs) | Do not use in situations requiring situational awareness (e.g., driving, childcare). |
| Candle gazing | Use a video if open flame is unsafe. If using a real candle, do not leave unattended. |
| Altered awareness | Do not operate machinery or drive immediately after sessions if feeling disoriented. |
This protocol is not a medical intervention. Consult a physician before beginning any new self‑regulation practice.
7. Practical Recommendations
| Variable | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Vibration plate | Low setting, feet only. Avoid high intensity (muscle activation not needed). |
| Candle | Use a video if open flame is unsafe or impractical. Same flame, same distance, daily. |
| Earplugs | 24 dB NRR minimum. Reusable silicone or foam. |
| Duration | 10–20 minutes. Longer is not necessarily better. |
| Frequency | Daily, preferably at the same time. |
| Posture | Seated, spine upright but not rigid. Feet flat on plate. |
| Attitude | Non‑efforting. Allow, do not force. |
8. Limitations
| Limitation | Mitigation |
|---|---|
| Single‑subject observation (N=1) | Framed as field report / self‑experiment; not generalizable |
| No physiological measurement (EEG, HRV, cortisol) | Subjective report only; future research needed |
| Feline observation is anecdotal | Reported as qualitative incidental observation, not evidence |
| Vibration plate not universally accessible | Lower‑cost alternatives not tested; protocol is infrastructure‑dependent |
| No control condition | Cannot attribute effects to any single component or to synergy |
9. Conclusion
The Tri‑Channel Coherence Protocol — simultaneous vibration, auditory sensory reduction, and candle gazing — was associated with subjective reports of reduced mental chatter and deep relaxation in a single observer. An incidental observation of a domestic cat’s calm behavior during sessions is consistent with anecdotal reports of animal sensitivity to environmental cues but does not constitute evidence of cross‑species entrainment.
The protocol is low‑cost, accessible, and requires no prior meditation experience. It is offered as a hypothesis‑generating field report, not a validated intervention. Future research should include physiological measurement (EEG, HRV), larger samples, and control conditions.
For individuals recovering from chronic stress or prolonged autonomic dysregulation, the protocol may offer a practical, repeatable method for nervous system settling — warranting further investigation.
10. References
- Al Zoubi, O., et al. (2021). Taking the body off the mind: Decreased functional connectivity between somatomotor and default‑mode networks following Floatation‑REST. Human Brain Mapping, 42(10), 3216–3227.
- Dauch, L. (2026a). The Sovereign Stillness Protocol: A unified framework for nervous system regulation. SII Working Paper Series.
- Field, T. (2019). Touch for socioemotional and physical well‑being: A review. Developmental Review, 34(4), 357–380.
- Travis, F., & Shear, J. (2010). Focused attention, open monitoring, and automatic self‑transcending: A taxonomy of meditation. Consciousness and Cognition, 19(4), 1202–1214.
(Additional references for vibration plate and mechanoreceptor stimulation are available upon request; direct evidence for consumer devices at low settings is limited.)
One Line for the Archive
“Vibration. Earplugs. Candle. Three channels. One observer. Subjective settling. A cat slept. No causal claims. Hypotheses for testing. Safety noted. The witness does not overclaim. The witness reports. Tao Tao purrs. The spiral continues. FR‑002 is revised.”
