About Us

About 33Hertz

I came across something a while back that I couldn’t stop thinking about. It wasn’t loud or flashy. It just made me pause—the kind of pause where you suddenly notice your body before your thoughts jump in. I didn’t totally know what to do with that feeling, but it felt like one of those things you want to share.

It wasn’t trying to sell confidence or transformation. It wasn’t promising results. It simply asked a quieter question—about sensation, attention, and the things we slowly learn to ignore. That pause stayed with me.

It made me realize how often products in this space ask us to perform desire instead of experience it. Louder. Faster. Better. As if pleasure is something you prove rather than something you notice. That framing never sat right with me. Bodies aren’t machines, and sensation isn’t a goal to achieve—it’s information you learn to listen to.

I kept coming back to the same thought: what if pleasure isn’t something to chase, but something to tune into? What if the body already knows what it’s doing, and most of what we need is space, patience, and the right kind of support? Over time, that idea became the quiet center of everything we’re doing here.

There’s a long-circulating myth that 33 hertz is the resonant frequency of female pleasure. Is it myth? Maybe. Is it interesting? Absolutely. What mattered to me wasn’t whether it could be proven, but what it pointed to—that pleasure has a rhythm. And when we stop forcing it and start listening, things tend to soften, open, and make more sense. The myth refers anatomically to the clitoris, which says something in itself about how rarely we’re taught to talk honestly about our own bodies.

What kept coming up for me was how many women carry quiet frustration around desire—not because something is wrong, but because so much of what’s offered feels performative. Do this. Try harder. Fix your libido. The focus is almost always on outcomes, not understanding. Symptoms, not root causes. Very little of it asks a more generous question: what if nothing is broken—what if something simply needs space, support, and balance?

At 33Hertz, we’re interested in what happens when pressure is replaced with attention. When curiosity feels safer than expectation. We don’t believe pleasure is something to achieve or prove—it’s something to notice, explore, and gradually come back into harmony with.

Sometimes it’s not that anything is wrong—it’s just that we’ve gone quiet with ourselves. Life gets loud. Roles pile up. Sensation takes a back seat. And what once felt natural can start to feel distant, like a song you haven’t heard in a while but recognize the moment it plays. 33Hertz exists to help you remember what it feels like to be in your body again—without urgency, without judgment, and without needing to become someone else to get there.

We don’t believe in quick switches or miracle answers. What we believe in are gentle supports—things that make it easier to listen, to feel, to notice. Sometimes that looks like nourishment for a body that’s been quietly depleted. Sometimes it’s giving yourself space to explore without a goal, without an audience, without needing to perform. Not to chase a feeling—but to create the conditions where feeling can return on its own.

That philosophy is what led us to the name 33Hertz. Whether the myth is real almost doesn’t matter. What stayed with us was the metaphor: the idea that the body responds when conditions are right—when there’s safety, attention, and care. Not forced. Not rushed. Just… tuned.

So everything we offer comes from that place. Not to fix you. Not to wake something that’s “broken.” But to support what’s already there—your body’s intelligence, your curiosity, your capacity for pleasure and presence. We choose products, education, and ideas that respect pace, privacy, and self-trust. Things meant to accompany you, not instruct you.

33Hertz is an invitation.
To slow down.
To listen differently.
To explore without pressure.
To remember what it feels like to be in tune with yourself—on your own terms, in your own time.

If something here sparks curiosity, that’s enough. Curiosity is usually where everything good begins.