The honest guide
Brainwave Frequencies Explained
"Brainwaves" are the rhythms of electrical activity that show up when you measure the brain with an EEG. They're grouped into five bands by frequency.
The five bands
- Delta — ~0.5 to 4 Hz. The slowest. Dominant in deep, dreamless sleep.
- Theta — ~4 to 8 Hz. Drowsiness, deep meditation, REM, and the drifting edge between waking and sleep. This is the band most associated with the threshold state.
- Alpha — ~8 to 13 Hz. Relaxed, calm wakefulness — eyes closed, settled but awake.
- Beta — ~13 to 30 Hz. Ordinary alert, engaged, problem-solving consciousness.
- Gamma — ~30 Hz and up. Associated with high-level processing and focused attention.
The entrainment idea — and the honest caveat
The premise behind entrainment audio is the "frequency-following response": play a steady beat at, say, 5 Hz and the brain's rhythms will tend to fall in step with it. It's a plausible mechanism, and it's the basis for most binaural and isochronic products. But the evidence that audio reliably pulls your EEG into a target band — and that doing so produces the named experience — is the contested, mixed part. The bands are well-defined; the claim that you can dial yourself into one with sound is not settled science.
"Which frequency for what?"
This is the question everyone actually arrives with. The common associations — read as "commonly used for," never "guaranteed to cause":
- Delta → deep sleep.
- Theta → meditation, the threshold, drifting inward.
- Alpha → relaxed focus, winding down.
- Beta → alertness, active work.
Where Awakeningup sits
Our sessions live in theta — the threshold band — because that's the territory for the kind of awake-but-inward work they're built for. If you want to understand that state itself, read mind awake, body asleep.
Sessions you can play tonight
Lossless, one-time purchase, no subscription. Instrument-grade theta sessions tuned for exactly this kind of work.
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