Sound healing, explained

Every wellness aficionado has surely listened to the many tones of the singing crystal bowl during a sound bath. The modish wellness practice envelops you in other-worldly sounds to ignite bodily and spiritual healing through sonic vibration. Shutting out the voices in your head, the sounds of your surroundings and indeed throughout the cosmos, the therapist rubs a small mallet around the edge of instruments like bowls and gongs to produce meditative sounds as you lie on your back.

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At some point, the bowls are placed on your body so it can absorb the gentle chimes and calming vibrations. Unlike a massage, this hour-long session of stillness doesn’t do anything for sore muscles, but it’s a moment of pure zen, lifting spirits, calming the mind and leaving you as invigorated as after – if you’ll excuse the pun – a sound night’s sleep. From trendy meditation studios to intimate spas and Kendall Jenner’s home, the ritual is all the rage, and while its reputation is more woo-woo than science, purists believe the healing goes much deeper than just those feel-good mental-health moments.

Vibrational Healing

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Mona Choi, a sound healer at Balance Health in Central, says that sound work has been around “since the beginning of time”. Thanks to celebrity endorsements from the likes of Robert Downey Jr., the Kardashians and Charlize Theron, singing bowls are having a wellness moment, but indigenous tribes around Asia have used them for healing and shifting the body’s energies for centuries – though they probably didn’t take selfies during the session.

Holistic healing is said to ‘wash over you’ – hence the name ‘sound bath’ – with chimes, vibrations and different frequencies cocooning people in a deep state of meditation. Group classes focus on relaxation, while bespoke one-on-ones can be self-reflective, therapeutic journeys that work on chronic stress and anxiety.
“I weave sound frequencies from all distances and directions to create crescendos,” says Choi, a certified therapist with over 15 years of experience. “As the vibration enters your brainwaves, the effect is multi-layered, active and very positive. The experience allows you to detach, relax and essentially find space for a new level of harmony.”

Garden of Zen

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Energy flows where attention goes, and for many, a sound-healing session acts as a way to flow awareness towards one single point in order to meditate – something similar to breathwork in yoga or chanting.

Hasanal Lythgoe-Zafrullah, founder of mental health and wellness clinic Mindish, says that the idea is not to be whisked away to another dimension but to get reconnected to oneself as a vibrating being in motion. “Many people think that meditation is about calming the mind or being in a particular space. No, it’s about being in the body, and the mind follows,” he opines.

“Some people are not able to meditate or reap any benefits because they’re too aware, too conscious in the moment. When you do that, you’re not really meditating anymore. From a therapeutic point of view, sound healing comes down to listening to vibrations; the voice work of a teacher slows everything around you and creates an empty space.”

Music & Voice

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Whether Mozart or Motown, Bach or Bieber, music elicits a variety of reactions in our mind and body, impacting us in different ways, but on a basic level, all music is just organised sound. Sound healing aims for the same – deconstructing music into pure tuneful sound and allowing it to channel our emotions, anxieties and energies.

Dipping into her two decades of therapeutic experience, Mindish’s Head of Wellness Surj Bahra uses her voice – talking and singing – to induce relaxation in her sessions. She notes that the sound of the crystal bowls can sometimes be unfathomable or peculiar, but “the soothing voice of the therapist is a really powerful instrument in guiding clients to a calm state”.

Some attendees are so immersed in the soundscape that they feel as light as a floating cloud; others report feeling heavy, almost merging with the ground on which they lie – but almost everyone experiences a noticeable shift in spatial awareness.

Sound Science?

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Sound healing carries a somewhat woo-woo reputation (it’s right up there with crystal healing), and the lack of regulations and proliferation of unqualified practitioners with lofty claims don’t help, but there is some science to back this ancient healing therapy.

A 2016 observational study on Tibetan singing bowls found that the practice helps to lower blood pressure, improve breathing and blood circulation, and relieve chronic aches and pains. Matching the frequencies of the singing bowls with your body is said to slow down the heart rate and helps the brain move from a beta-dominant or focused state to more relaxed, alpha-dominant frame of mind.

Don’t expect an instant cure-all, though. As Balance Health’s Choi says, “Clarity, pure consciousness and an end to your emotional problems are not a one-hour job, but even a single session can be a journey to enlightenment where your problems are clearly defined or understood differently.”
Everyone has a different experience in a sound bath, but for this novice, an hour-long session felt like my body was cleansed and bereft of all thought. It was an unusually profound, noise-less state of being – somewhere between hypnotherapy and a calm afternoon at the beach. If it weren’t for my characteristic scepticism, I might add that it felt like my chakras were aligned. Well, almost.

 

(Text: Nikita Mishra Photos: Mindish, Hong Kong)

Good Vibrations: How gong baths reduces stress and heals the body

A gong bath reduces stress, heals and retunes the body.

Despite its name, gong baths have nothing to do with taking an actual bath. Rather, it is a form of sound meditation that balances the body’s frequencies through the vibration of sound.

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The bath part of it has more to do with the feeling of gong baths or any form of sound baths. It is a sensation that many sound bath goers describe as being bathed in vibrations, a frequency transmission that can be felt throughout the body. With the body made up 70 percent of water, and with water a conductor, it makes sense for gong baths to affect the body’s resonance.

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The gong is a percussion instrument traditionally used in East and Southeast Asian countries. The circular metallic bowl is usually paired with a mallet to produce a low-frequency sound. This low-frequency sound has been described throughout history to have a calming and healing effect on the body comparable to massages. A gong bath, though, is probably the only massage and bath in which you won’t have to strip down.

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More often than not, Hong Kong people are stressed out. And as research has shown, stress on the body has serious impacts on physical and mental health. This explains why the hyperactive lifestyles of the city’s busy residents have influenced the popularity of meditation and wellness studios around the city. For those too busy or tired to engage in exercises or other forms of meditation, a gong bath offers an extremely easy and relaxing form of sound meditation in which all you have to do is literally lie down and close your eyes. This bath type relieves symptoms of anxiety and insomnia. Other sound baths with similar effects use Tibetan sound bowls and tuning forks.

“Imbalances in the body are addressed and resolved using sound meditation which is a natural alternative”

If you experienced tossing and turning in bed in the middle of the night, exhausted but unable to fall asleep, the culprit may be an imbalance of frequencies in your body. The different frequencies throughout the body relate to the different levels of brainwaves, indicating how alert or relaxed the body is. Our mind and body, however, are highly receptive to sound. The body has its own resonance and natural ability to synchronize brainwave frequency with the rhythm of external sounds which, according to Simon Heather, an internationally-known teacher in the field of sound healing, can be made harmonious with the use of sound meditation.

When stressed, the body releases hormones that boost our alertness like adrenaline and cortisol – keeping our body active even when our mind is fatigued. Too much of these hormones in the body also takes a toll on the body’s health, increasing blood pressure and inflammation, which underline the importance of correcting these imbalances in the body. A gong bath activates the body’s natural mechanism to relax, countering the adverse effects of stress hormones in the body. The process slows down the listener’s heart rate, brings down blood pressure and restores the body’s natural breathing rhythm, gradually restoring balance and calmness to the body. A gong bath is also a natural and holistic alternative to a growing trend in the use pharmaceutical medication as a mechanism to cope with stress and anxiety.

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Very little action is required to participate in a gong bath. There is no need for extraordinary skills or proper attire in any meditation studio in the city. Experiencing a gong bath is easy as it entails just turning up and letting good vibrations flow through you.