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SOUND APPROACH TO ART OF HEALING


Tone deaf AMY VICKERS finally found her voice on a Greek mountain.

SOUND has been used as a way of healing for thousands of years but we
are only just beginning to rediscover its importance.

Intrigued by a yoga and "voicework" workshop in Greece, I headed for the sun.
I've always thought myself tone deaf so I was excited about liberating my voice.
I've done yoga for several years so I was keen on the idea of using it to help
to open up my lungs.

At the same time as doing yoga, we made "ooo-ing" and "aah-ing" sounds
to deepen our breathing. We also did singing and chanting, which left me
feeling more confident. I soon started to enjoy the range of noises (in tune
or not) that came out of me.

Another part of the course was toning, which involves deep breaths and
changing the shape of the mouth to make vowel sounds. I started to feel
the sound vibrations in different parts of my body. By the end of the week,
I felt different. My voice sounded more "whole" and I was aware of its vibrations.
People have since remarked that it has softened slightly.

HOW DOES IT WORK?
Modern medicine already uses high energy sound waves to break up kidney
stones and gallstones. The theory behind sound healing is that by tuning into
the body's energy frequencies and clearing blockages caused by stress,
exhaustion, anger or depression, the body can be brought back to harmony.
Just as blood needs clear vessels to circulate, so our energy needs clear
meridian channels.

WHAT'S INVOLVED?
We learned to use tones to give a "sound bath", during which a recipient is
bathed in healing "ooo" sounds for about five minutes. When it was my turn,
the gentle waves of sound made me feel as if I was floating and the aches
and pains in my body disappeared, as did my headache. I felt tension slip
from my head and shoulders, and I felt lighter. My breathing also improved.
At the start of the week, I could barely hold a note for three seconds. But,
by the end of it, I was managing about 10 seconds in one breath. I also felt
a heightened awareness of myself and nature.

WHAT IS THE ACCOMMODATION LIKE?
I stayed at a retreat centre on the Greek mainland, in the Pilion mountains.
Our workshops were held in a relaxing outside space close to nature.
During the day, when I wasn't doing the workshop, I wandered down to the
beach and bathed in the Aegean.

WHAT'S THE COST?
I paid £345 for the week-long course and accommodation at Pilion, which
offers holistic holidays from May until October. See www.pilion.org or
contact sound healing teacher Narayani Guibarra on 0796 247 0611 or
through www.innerstillness.co.uk For forthcoming sound healing
workshops in the UK, visit www.collegeofsoundhealing.co.uk and see Dates.

By Amy Vickers as appeared in the DAILY EXPRESS - 26/09/2006


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Healing Hands - The benefits of sound therapy

The Treatment: Healing tinnitus with sound energy

The Problem
After enduring constant ringing in my ears for years, I was diagnosed as
suffering from tinnitus. A visit to a specialist led to an MRI scan, revealing
the suspected cause - an untreatable, dysfunctional jaw joint. I was told I
would have to 'live with, and learn to manage' the condition, but, as part of
my treatment, I was referred to a Sound Therapist, who would use
enriching sound to counteract the noise I was experiencing. Although I was
at first sceptical, my symptoms had become so relentless over the past
year that I was unable to relax or sleep. Feeling exhausted, stressed and
permanently close to tears, I was desperate to try anything that would
improve my sense of wellbeing.

The Experience
I lay down and my therapist Narayani walked around me, making long
soothing vowel noises. Changes in tone would, apparently, enable her to
identify imbalanced parts in my body that required healing. As I lay with
my eyes closed, the sound enveloped me completely, and I noticed a
wavering in pitch when she met the centre of my back and head area.
Sound therapy works by isolating the perfect 'note' that will help a certain
area of the body heal, before directing the energy created by the sound
waves towards the imbalanced area. I have to be honest and say I didn't
expect great results, but, as Narayani walked around my head and spine,
the sound resonated through the room and I felt myself relax.

The Verdict
At the end of the treatment, I felt completely physically and emotionally
relaxed; when I returned home, I experienced an unfamiliar sense of
balance and peace. The ringing in my ears had abated enough for me to
sleep soundly for the first time in months. I continued to feel relief from
my condition for days, and have been so impressed with the treatment
and its ability to improve my wellbeing that I've already booked my next
session. I plan to utilise sound healing as a way to help me manage my
condition.

Healing Waves
Sound healing is based on the principle that every part of the body vibrates
harmoniously. Negative factors can unbalance the frequency and health
of areas, but sound waves can restore harmony, enabling treatment of
conditions including depression, insomnia and chronic pain.

As appeared in November 2007 issue of Psychologies magazine

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What Is Yogic Massage? How Yogic Massage Found Me
by Narayani Guibarra

Yogic massage can assist the following conditions: backache, any muscular
tension, sciatica, headaches, tiredness, restlessness, stress, anxiety,
panic attacks, raised blood pressure. I have found it helpful with those
who have deeply held trauma resulting from injuries or operations.

As a yoga teacher and healer I wished to expand my range of therapies and
became interested in holistic massage. I searched the Internet and found a
course that sounded very appealing. However, what interested me perhaps
even more was another course by the same teacher on yogic massage. I
suppose it was the word 'yogic' that caught my interest and fired my
imagination – how appropriate it seemed for a yoga teacher also to
practise a therapy called yogic massage! Could this be what I was looking
for? I decided to take things step by step and take the introductory
weekend course in holistic massage and, in the interim, went for a session
with the course tutor, Brigette Hass.

How Yogic Massage Came to Be

Yogic massage was developed by Brigette Hass who trained as a massage
therapist and has also trained in the fields of healing, movement
awareness and energy awareness. She is a tutor of the MTI and also teaches
holistic massage, energy awareness, dance and movement and meditation.
Yogic massage is a synthesis of Brigette's experiences of giving and
receiving various forms of treatment and is guided by her intuition and
energy awareness.

My First Experience of Yogic Massage


The first thing that I became aware of in this session with Brigette was
that yogic massage is a form of healing. I realized that at first there
was a tuning in, in what way I did not know, but as soon as Brigette
placed her hands on my feet I could feel a great deal of healing energy
flowing into me from her hands. I knew I was receiving something very
powerful. As the session progressed and other bodywork techniques were
introduced my interest was stimulated further.
At various intervals within the session there would be a pause, a holding,
a deep listening, a time to assess, a time to release, a time to let go.
In this way it is somewhat comparable to cranial sacral therapy whereby in
my experience the listening is undertaken both by practitioner and
recipient. In yogic massage, the listening enables the practitioner to
feel, sense or intuit which areas need work and which of the bodywork
techniques are to be used in that session. The body stretches are often
held for longer than those that might be employed by a shiatsu
practitioner or massage therapist. This is very reassuring on the
receiving end and I have found myself more fully able to let go.

The Next Step

On the introductory weekend, Brigette said that the yogic massage
practitioner course was ideal for someone already grounded in massage
therapy and working with clients who was interested in learning more about
working with energy. Considering my experience as a yoga teacher and my
work with energy healing, I asked whether I would be a suitable candidate.
It seemed as though I was approaching from an energy direction rather than
from massage. After some reflection, Brigette offered me a place on the
course.

How Does Yogic Massage Compare To Other Forms Of Therapy/Healing?

Yogic Massage

Is a form of massage but does not involve the repetition of the strokes or
squeezes or deeper tissue work that may be included in a massage session.
Yogic massage can be received with or without clothes and combines body/
energy work.

Osteopathy

From memory, some of the techniques used in yogic massage are reminiscent
of osteopathy in the way that finger pressure is used around joints. The
main areas of overlap of the two types of treatment would seem to me to be
around the shoulder blade/head/ neck areas. In my experience, yogic
massage has been more effective as the practitioner has a deeper
understanding of my being on an energy level and so I have felt that the
treatment has been more holistic.

Shiatsu

In many respects I would say that these two are the most similar out of
those I can compare from my own experience. When making this comparison I
am using the following criteria:

In what way does the practitioner use bodywork on the recipient?


With shiatsu the bodywork consists considerably of finger or palm pressure
either into the pressure points or joints or muscles. The difference is
that with shiatsu the pressure is generally vertically downwards whereas
with yogic massage (in respect of the palm mainly) the pressure is often
diagonally outwards (i.e away from the centre) and downwards.

Is it an holistic practice?

Shiatsu is an holistic practice as is yogic massage.

Is there an element of healing?

Certain schools of shiatsu include off-body scanning and healing, but in
my experience up to now, this is used not nearly as much as in yogic
massage.
Do practitioners use their awareness to sense what is going on for the
recipient on an emotional/physical/ energy level?
Here there is a strong similarity, as shiatsu practitioners do use their
awareness of energy both intuitively and via body scans to assess how
recipients are feeling and what is happening with their energy so that the
necessary treatment may be assessed.

Energy (spiritual) Healing

In certain respects, as with other forms of energy healing, there are
similarities between the healing element both of spiritual healing and
yogic massage. When performing spiritual healing, I ask to be a channel
through which healing energy may flow to the recipient. In yogic massage,
the practitioner also transmits healing energy through the hands. However,
the difference has been the amount I have opened up. It's almost as though
the channel is wide open in spiritual healing and energy comes through
very strongly. With yogic massage, the channel is perhaps on a different
frequency so that other subchannels may simultaneously be accessed in
order to allow a fine and delicate quality of healing energy through. This
can readily be noticed by recipients who focus their awareness on their
experience of the treatment.

Another difference between these two therapies is that yogic massage,
whilst having particular bodywork techniques to offer, encourages a free
style of treatment based on the answers received from the listening, both
energetically and verbally, that takes place throughout the session. In
this way, the recipients receive what they need and this process, together
with the pauses, uses less energy by the practitioner and allows a very
fine quality of energy to flow through to the recipient during the
session.

So the difference perhaps between spiritual healing and yogic massage is
that with the former I simply act as a channel for the energy to flow
through and with the latter I act partially as a channel and partially as
a receiver of information whether by sensations in the hands or inner
knowing.

The Role of Awareness


My awareness has been growing and changing in the eleven plus years since
I began practising yoga and meditation. It is from some of the simplest
practices of breath co-ordinated with movement that I have become aware of
and tuned in to energy. However, it is through the gentle opening and deep
listening and checking in or asking what it is that I can sense that I
have been encouraged to do through yogic massage, and this has very easily
and quickly increased my sensitivity and awareness. It is also useful to
recipients to remain aware and awake throughout the treatment in order to
observe any changes.

What Makes Yogic Massage 'Yogic'?

The word yoga means union of mind, body and spirit. Giving a yogic massage
requires a clear mind, an open body and an understanding of spirit, of
prana, of energy. In order to work effectively, the yogic massage
practitioner has to be in a state of flow on a physical level and, for me,
this method of using the body is assisted by my yoga practice and energy
awareness. When the body is open, the practitioner can truly act as a
channel through which the energy can flow and bring about a balanced
'yogic' state in the recipient.

Who Can it Help?

Yogic massage can assist the following conditions: backache, any muscular
tension, sciatica, headaches, tiredness, restlessness, stress, anxiety,
panic attacks, raised blood pressure. I have found it helpful with those
who have deeply held trauma resulting from injuries or operations.

A Case History

One client, 'A', was involved in a car accident a few months before coming
to see me and had suffered from whiplash. She complained of pain and
tension in her lower back and found it difficult to sit still for long
periods, which made her work in an office quite stressful. On each session
I took time tuning in to her energy and providing grounding for her. I
sensed not only that her pelvic area needed attention but also her neck
and shoulders. Time was spent giving healing and grounding up the legs;
then I employed side and diagonal stretches from shoulder to hip followed
by neck, face, shoulder arm massage/releases and general holding for
further grounding purposes. 'A' found the sessions beneficial and said
that she felt relaxed and much freer, particularly in the upper back and
shoulders, and that the opening stretches really eased her out and
released tension. Visually, she was noticeably softer and more open,
particularly in the hips and shoulders and energetically she was more
balanced, grounded, calm and less pressured.

Why Does it Work?


Yogic massage has a lot to offer all types of people with different levels
of energy awareness. Each type of person can receive whatever combination
of pressure and level of healing that they need. I have found on
mentioning this therapy to people I know, that one of the instant
attractions is that they may remain clothed. Those who have received
treatments from me often say that the diagonal stretches in particular
have opened and released them like nothing else they have previously
experienced. This, with the combination of the healing energy and the
reassurance of simply being held, or the stretches being sustained,
provides a very nurturing environment in which recipients can let go. I
feel that the treatment is effective because it combines earth and
universal energy; earth energy via touch and a connectedness on an
individual level and universal energy through the practitioner tuning in,
listening, sensing, receiving and directing energy through to the
recipient. This connects the recipient with cosmic energy which can be
very comforting in that it allows a connectedness on a vaster scale and at
a deeper but less individual level. Even if the recipient may not easily
be able to recognize or verbalize this, it is nonetheless felt on an inner
level and has a beneficial effect on their whole being.

originally published in Positive Health issue 101 - July 2004

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