SEASON 2 EPISODE 4

In this episode of Land Language, hosts Brit Sastrawidjaya and Bethany Rydmark sit down with Brittney Herrera, CEO of Thunder Egg and GeoTune. Brittney spent 25 years designing high-performance interiors for Fortune 500 tech companies, spaces that make people want to show up, stay, and do their best work. Over time, she found herself drawn to something beneath all of it: the energetic condition of the land. We discuss geopathic stress: what causes it, what it does, and what a one-cubit copper rod buried in the ground can change.

“  Commercial properties were responding, teams were gelling, their landscapes were affected, and their mechanical equipment—because geopathic stress really can wreak havoc on, electrical systems and mechanical systems.”

—Brittney Herrera

We explore:

  • How underground water, ore, minerals, and fault lines create lines of stress that affect the health of everything built above them

  • Brittney’s tuning process and how she remote-views a property

  • A Michelin-key hotel that saw revenue increase the year it was tuned

  • Using plants and dead spots as indicators of a shift in the land’s energy

  • The importance of permission and readiness, especially for skeptical clients

Brittney's entry into this work was skeptical and pragmatic. She tuned her own property first, watching where trees had struggled along stress lines, noticing headaches that disappeared when the geopathic stress running through her pillow was addressed. She moved on to friends, then family, then clients, and began accumulating stories she hadn't predicted.

Her practice at GeoTune sits at the intersection of two disciplines: the built environment she's spent decades working in, and an ancient tradition of working with the earth's energy grid that predates modern design by centuries. It's adjacent to feng shui but older, more physical, more tied to the specific geology underfoot: underground water, fault lines, mineral deposits, and the distortions those create in the space above.

This is a conversation for landscape professionals who've had a client mention the house that wouldn't sell, the tree that kept dying in the same spot, the basement that kept flooding, and wondered if there was a layer they weren't seeing.

Brittney Herrera is CEO of Thunder Egg, her interior architecture practice, and GeoTune, where she applies geopathic stress remediation to homes, commercial properties, and agricultural land. She has spent 25 years designing high-performance environments for Fortune 500 technology companies, and has trained extensively in remote viewing at the Monroe Institute. Her work now takes her from Portland to Bali, Tibet, Nepal, and beyond.

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