The energy in sound is creative energy. I’ve been looking at this for a while and have collective quite a few links that people can follow and learn more. One of the most well known studies is known as Cymatics. See: Cymatics: The World of Sound
After years of drifting from one ineffective treatment to another, Andrea Bowen is rhapsodic about the one that finally relieved her chronic back problems: music therapy.
“It was a godsend,” says Bowen, 55, of Weld, ME. “Music helped me relax through the pain. It was really the beginning of a new life for me.”
In pain? Try music plus guided imagery
Simply listening to music for 1 hour a day can ease your pain by 20%, Cleveland Clinic researchers recently found. It can even reduce the need for pain medication before and after surgery. Music seems to stimulate the release of pain-masking endorphins in the brain, says Cheryl Dileo, a music therapy professor and director of the Arts and Quality of Life Research Center at Temple University. Music can also amplify the effects of a visualization exercise called guided imagery, in which patients focus on a specific image or sensation that evokes the emotions they want to feel, says Ronit Azoulay, a music therapist at the Louis Armstrong Center for Music and Medicine at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City.
Sound Advice
To stage your own music-guided imagery session at home, find a comfy chair in a quiet place to sit with your eyes closed and feet up, suggests Joke Brandt, PhD, assistant director of the Arts and Quality of Life Research Center at Temple. If pain is limiting your mobility, select music that makes you feel energetic; if it’s interfering with your sleep, choose tunes that make you feel relaxed.
Next, think of your favorite place or a calming image, such as a quiet stream or deserted beach, says Brandt. “Focus on your breathing and the sensations in your body. Imagine each of your senses reacting to this favorite place or image–the smells, the sounds, the sights. When these thoughts wander, focus on the music.” Once the song stops, don’t jump up–sit and relax for another minute or two. Repeat daily.
The guy who sent this to me has this website: The PreNatal PreSchoolâ„¢ Early Enrichment System provides a simple, yet proven technique, to stimulate brain growth and development in your unborn child


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