Ondas
The irony is that while these ondas connect us globally, they can disconnect us locally. We scroll through ondas of information (viral trends, news cycles, social media feeds) but forget to listen to the simple sound wave of a friend’s laughter. You are a wave.
“Todo es onda.” — Everything is a wave. The irony is that while these ondas connect
When you smile, you send a positive onda into a room. When you speak, you disturb the air. When you love, you create a resonance that changes the frequency of another person’s life. To understand ondas is to understand that nothing is static. The rock erodes. The star burns out. The sound fades. But the onda continues—transforming, reflecting, interfering, and amplifying. “Todo es onda
In Brazil, the onda is the bossa nova—the gentle, lapping wave of João Gilberto’s guitar that revolutionized jazz. In Portugal, it is the melancholic fado , a wave of longing ( saudade ) that crashes against the limestone alleys of Lisbon. In Argentina, it is the onda of the bandoneón in tango—a sharp, staccato wave of passion and grief. When you love, you create a resonance that
This is the ultimate metaphor for life. Ondas (challenges, opportunities, trends) come and go. The successful person is not the one who fights the wave, but the one who learns to ride it. In the 21st century, we have created artificial ondas . Wi-Fi, 5G, and Bluetooth are layers of electromagnetic architecture that allow us to stream, text, and scroll. We live inside a "cloud"—a poetic word for a network of invisible waves.
In the Spanish and Portuguese languages, the word onda (singular) does more than describe the water curling toward a beach. It describes the very fabric of existence. From the vibration of a guitar string in Lisbon to the radio signal bouncing off a satellite above the Amazon, ondas are the threads that stitch the universe together.
