After World War II, soldiers turned to musicians for healing...
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The Military's Music Doctors
After the fall of Nazi Germany in May 1945, veterans traveled home from faraway places filled with death and fear... Many of them returned convalescing and facing long hospital stays.
To support the healing servicemen, the military hired female musicians to perform for the men. Instrumentalists began stepping away from their lives to become professional, traveling military musicians.
And after the traveling bands hung up their uniforms to return to regular life, many of these musicians used their experiences to become America's first music therapists... forging a new field, which we now call biofield science.
Biofield science is akin to energy medicine, which includes techniques like acupuncture and magnet therapy.
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Energy medicine uses your body's energy field to both obtain useful information and to administer healing modalities. And by manipulating soundwaves, modern medicine can do some incredible things...
That's why sound and sound therapy make life so phenomenal.
But there's a lot of work that goes into us just hearing sounds...
Soundwaves travel into the outer ear – the pinna – and through the ear canal where the sound becomes amplified. Once the soundwaves reach the end of your ear canal, your eardrum vibrates.
This vibration moves three tiny bones– the malleus, incus, and stapes – which further amplifies the sound. As the sound now travels through your inner ear, it enters your snail-shaped cochlea. This is where the soundwaves change in an electrical charge.
More than 25,000 nerve endings receive those chemical charges and transmit the sound information along a communication superhighway to your brain. That's when you're able to recognize what you're hearing.
Some of these sounds vibrate at frequencies that we audibly can't detect but are still affected by, like a dog whistle... There are even practitioners who use inaudible frequencies to heal and calm your body's energy.
Our hearing picks up soundwaves between 20 and 20,000 cycles per second or hertz ("Hz"). And it's most sensitive in the frequency range of 2,000 to 5,000 Hz. Anything below 20 Hz or above 20,000 Hz is typically inaudible.
These vibrations influence our minds and mental state.
Sound can calm us when we're stressed. But too much sound – noise pollution – can overwhelm our bodies and emotions. And as I shared before, just 45 minutes without sound is torture.
We experience sound via vibrational frequencies that travel as energy waves through matter (solid, liquid, or gas). Many cultures have used sound as a healing mechanism for thousands of years...
Australian natives use the didgeridoo as a healing tool to help facilitate meditation. Native American tribes also use instruments like drums, rattles, and voices for celebration, prayer, healing, and meditation. And we've shown readers for years how meditation helps calm the mind and even improves your body's ability to heal itself.
Tibetan and Himalayan peoples traditionally create sound baths – using a variety of instruments to "bathe" the listener in sound – as a healing modality as well.
Like the didgeridoo, the sound bath switches on your parasympathetic nervous system, which controls a lot of activities associated with rest and healing. It's our "rest and digest" system that balances our fight-or-flight response.
In the U.S. and other parts of the world, a technique known as "binaural beats" is gaining steam. Research into binaural beats is ongoing, but we have already learned some fascinating things and the technique is already a scientifically accepted treatment for anxiety, stress, sleep, pain, cognition, and memory.
Getting Started
Check out our selection of different types of sound medicine below. There's lots to explore, from binaural beats to sound baths. The links below are clickable, so have a listen...
Be sure to try the autonomous sensory meridian response videos. They use sound that stimulates the nervous system and makes some folks tingle.
And of course, do what I do and listen to your favorite music. It's not hard to catch me in the office singing to the Jonas Brothers, Elton John, or Dua Lipa. What do you like listening to? Let us know with an e-mail to feedback@healthandwealthbulletin.com.
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