



November 2017 – Self empowerment in the time of need January 2018 – Setting an intention to contemplate on through out the year.ĭecember 2017 – Reflection and integration rising from the body March 2018 – Article in the Oakland Magazine May 2018 – The powerful practice of Inner Joy June 2018 – Empowering practice of giving and receiving
#SOULSTICE SPA SANTA ROSA HOW TO#
January 2019 – How to make decisions based on my values March 2019 – Living in a time of increased anger and fear September 2019 – Structure and freedom in our daily lives Links to my news letters and pressĭecember 2019 – Remembering joy and happiness There simply is no place to hide from sound. If you spend time in anechoic chamber (room without echo), you can hear your nervous system and the liquids moving in your body. We use ultrasound in a variety of ways in the hospitals. Even astronomers use sound waves to ignite solar ring of fire in space. We sing to babies or at the bedside of elders in the hospice. We also energize ourselves or others with sound. We listen to or perform sounds to express variety of emotions from sadness to joy, anger to calm. In most religious or spiritual settings, sound is used for evoking, honoring or connecting with the spirits. Many westerners have adapted these old traditions and sound healing methods as well, mixing and expanding both the cultural and healing aspects of these sounds. The early chants of Tibetan Bon tradition are still sung today, as well as Sanskrit chants in India, Icaros healing songs in Peru and Joiks by the Sami people in Lapland. Every religion uses sound and voice as a significant part of its ceremonies, but sound itself is still universal. The use of sound and particularly sound healing, has roots that go back tens of thousands of years and it still has a significant role in every culture in our planet. One could say that music is organized and/or intentional sound. Music is sound, but sound is not always music. Olympus in an attempt to catch Zeus with the nymphs.” Eventually, Zeus’s wife, Hera, became suspicious, and came from Mt. Zeus loved consorting with beautiful nymphs and visited them on Earth often. Wikipedia defines sound scientifically as “a mechanical wave that is an oscillation of pressure transmitted through some medium (like air or water), composed of frequencies which are within the range of hearing,” and in Greek mythology “Ekho (Greek: Ἠχώ, Ēkhō, “echo” from ἦχος (ēchos), “sound”) was an Oread (a mountain nymph) who loved her own voice.
