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Music Therapy for a Better Mood

June 27, 2021

The way a song can take you back to a fond moment in life, creating new memories dancing and singing with friends, a soothing song when you’re having a rough day, the goosebumps live music can give you. Music can evoke so many emotions and sensations, it can have positive effects on our thoughts, behaviours, feelings and actions. It can be a tool to help support a person’s physical and mental health, as well as overall quality of life. Some of the well-researched areas that music therapy can help improve include;

·       Cognition & memory

·       Speech & communication, respiratory strength

·       Mood, motivation, energy

·       Physical function & coordination

Music therapy can be beneficial for people at any age or stage in life, irrespective of an individual’s ability or background. The blog below provides an insight into music therapy -

Research has shown that music alleviates symptoms of anxiety and depression. As music therapists – we see this every day. These days – my first encounters with clients often bear the marks of anxiety, depression, and loneliness. Their faces are drawn, shoulders slumped, and body language closed and tight. They report that they are “okay” or “getting by” – and as we enter into the music together – it never takes long for a shift to occur. The muscles around the mouth and eyes begin to relax, shoulders draw down the back and the body begins to express a sense of openness. There are smiles, even laughter.

“I listened to this song a lot when I first started experiencing depression. It’s different to listen to it now – to see how far I’ve come.”

We know that music impacts the limbic structures of the brain – namely the amygdala and hippocampus – calming the nervous system and stimulating powerful memories and strong emotions. We know that music increases the production of dopamine, serotonin, and oxytocin in the brain – decreasing cortisol levels and inducing feelings of well-being. For the music therapist – understanding the effects of music on the brain and the body helps us to assess in the moment what the client is experiencing and how we are to respond. For the client – the experience of music, and its impact – are often felt, and more easily expressed – through stories and meaning located in the music.

“Sometimes I think that this artist could have been experiencing exactly what I am now when they were my age.”

Music is one of the ways we mark our passage through time. It accompanies nearly every human ritual and experience – weddings, funerals, cultural celebrations – graduations and birthdays – every experience of celebration and mourning. The soundtracks of our lives and the way we experience music over time often provides us with opportunities to reflect on our own growth and change by connecting to our memories, values, feelings, and community.

“I relate so much to the lyrics – it’s like she’s singing exactly what I feel” 

Hans Christensen once wrote – “Where words fail, music speaks.” Every day, experiences in music therapy prove this to be true. When we are experiencing a downturn in our mental wellbeing – it can be difficult to find the words to express exactly what we feel. Sometimes – we may not even be aware that depression or anxiety are at the root of other experiences such as sleeplessness, loss of appetite, or racing heartbeat. When we find a song that captures our experience so perfectly, we feel seen, heard, and understood. 

“When I listen to this song – I don’t feel so alone.” 

We will look back on this time and no doubt recall it as one of the loneliest times in our history. This is especially true for people experiencing challenges with their health – as hospitals, treatment programs, and care facilities restrict visitation and community engagement to protect the most vulnerable. But the right song, at the right moment – a musical interaction or experience – nurtures connection not only with others but to ourselves. This remains unchanged by distance, bandwidth, or layers of personal protective equipment.

“This song reminds me of someone I’ve lost.”

“Someone I was in treatment with showed me this song – and it got me through that tough time.”

“Whenever I listen to this song – no matter what – it makes me feel better.”

We return again to the human brain and bodies chemical response to music. Dopamine increases motivation, serotonin stabilises mood, oxytocin creates a sense of connectedness, and endorphins reduce pain – both physical and emotional. The result? We feel “better.” More than that – our brains, and the many systems within the body it governs – are functioning more optimally – carrying us forward. But it isn’t just chemistry – it is story, community, connection, memory – all the things that make us human that we miss so dearly these days. All the things that music gives us, without failing.

To me – being a music therapist on the frontlines is about the union of story and science – what we need, what we feel, how we evolve and heal, and who we are – which can all be discovered, expressed, and experienced so fully in music therapy. The role of music therapists on the frontlines is to be a part of maintaining this balance in the organisations and lives of the clients we serve – to approach health, wellness and recovery firmly rooted in both sound clinical evidence and making sense of it all through the stories we find, and tell –  in our music.

Article source: https://www.jbmusictherapy.com/songs-stories-and-healing/
Author: Jesse Dollimont


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In Well Being Tags Music, Music Therapy, Kirtan, Community
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Yoga, Music and the art of Listening

March 28, 2021


At one time or another, most people have probably been disappointed when a teacher has not played music in a yoga class. Some people feel they need it in order to complete their experience and fully enjoy the class, others may not even notice the absence of music. So why would a teacher consciously choose not to play music, when so many people enjoy practicing to it? Ari Levanael explains below the impact music and sound can have on our practice of yoga, both on and off the mat.

We all love music, don’t we?

Music and movement have been united since drumming and dancing around the fires of our ancestors and more recently to the night club and festival party scenes of today. It can also really help create an ‘atmosphere’ in a yoga room, but lately I haven’t been playing music in my classes and there is a good reason why.

“When the mind runs after the wandering senses, then it carries away one’s understanding, as the wind carries away a ship on the waters. Therefore, the wisdom of whose senses are withdrawn from the objects of the senses stands firm.”
— Bhagavad Gita 2.67

So, what does this mean? The mind running after the wandering senses?

When the mind follows the relentless pursuit of stimulation and sensation is it at the expense of our physical, emotional, and mental health? Do we need more stimulation in an already often bombarding world? The above teaches us that when our senses are not disturbed or influenced by things that could possibly make our minds wander, we can stand firm or be calm in the stillness. Wisdom and understanding will come as a result of not being so easily led astray by our senses.

Over the past few years I have gone through stages with yoga playlists in my classes, but for 20 years I practiced in silence. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy music and the creative process like most, but when I’m practicing and teaching without music, I am able to dive deeper and listen clearly to the students. The silence helps me do that. I love the students that remember their attention to detail of our entire practice, and what I was actually teaching, not what song I played.

For me, yoga is a conversation with my body. I need my complete attention there in order to hear what it has to say. There is also a grace and art to moving and breathing as with any form of exercise and the way you carry yourself through your day in any given situation sets the mood of your mind. Your actions and responses (or reactions) will teach you about the person you are in that moment.

I am noticing that students are dropping into “the zone” easier without the music playing, when their focus is honed on their own practice and my alignment cues. I sense the difference at the end of practice, I feel it in the room. The sound of silence.

As a teacher it’s my job to help you listen. Not specifically just to me, but more-so listen to your breathing and the sound your feet are making in your practice. It will teach you so much about how you are progressing on your path. It will also teach me if you are listening.

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Silence can be crucial in your yoga practice to help you listen to the sound and rhythm of your breath. Equally as important as I mentioned, is the sound your feet are making through your practice. Is there a heaviness to your step? To your breathing? How can you hear this with music playing? I’ve been in classes where I can hardly hear what the teacher is saying over the sound of the music and the thumping of people’s feet. With no music playing I hear instantly when there is heaviness and someone is pushing themselves to do something that maybe their body is telling them they are not ready for. We are aiming for grace and elegance and knowing how to listen is fundamental in achieving this in your practice. It is one of the most important things you could do on your mat. Sure, listening to music is also fun in the practice, we feel like we are dancing on the mat and that’s great. Maybe learning to listen to yourself amongst the noise and distraction of life is a good lesson also. There is a season for everything, right?

I understand that noise is around us constantly, there can be a music to the nature of our world. Even traffic could be a form of music. Students have often told me they love my playlists and sometimes I too enjoy moving and grooving, but now it feels different. I know noise is everywhere and the path of Pratyahara is not to be so easily disturbed by the external stuff. To not get so easily distracted. I get it now. I can remain calm in the cacophony of noise now that I’m older and more experienced, but maybe not so much in my 20’s easily influenced by the energies around me. Anxiety is in many people, they are absolutely over stimulated, and calm could be just what they need.

I notice it straight away when I hear huffing and puffing in the class, and when this has happened, students have lost the point of the yoga practice. Yoga teaches us to listen, to explore the depths of our potential and the workings of our mind. In order for the magic to happen we need to be able to direct our clear attention to the parts of the body asking for our attention. We direct this attention through calm intention and calm breathing. We know energy flows where attention goes right?

Let the practice be soft, strong yet calm and serene. Be gentle on yourself. You deserve it.

 I’m diving into Pratyahara, into the depths of silence, being in the world but not of it and not so easily swayed by the barrage of anything hoping to get my attention. I’m practicing yoga and finding a connection with my breath and movement of my body. Such a gift to be able to move as we do. In quiet I can tune into subtleties that with music is not as obvious. As a teacher, I’m connecting to the room of students in front of me, sometimes 70 people at once. I listen to each and every one of you. We are in it together.

With no music it makes students more conscious of the sound they are making in the practice. It’s like they know the rest of the room can also hear, so actively work to be quiet and calm, to not be the one making all the noise… (and I’m constantly reminding them!) When loud music is playing, the loud footsteps and thumping and huffing and puffing can get lost in a cacophony of noise. Already jacking up a nervous system bombarded with external stimulation.

What is pratyahara again?

If you are easily disturbed by the noise and turmoil of the environment around you, you will need to practice pratyahara. Without it, you will not be able to meditate. Yoga and meditation are no different.

Pratyahara, the fifth limb of the eight limbs of yoga, is composed of two Sanskrit words, prati and ahara. “Ahara” means food, or anything we take into ourselves from the outside. “Prati” is a preposition meaning against or away. “Pratyahara” means literally “control of ahara,” or “gaining mastery over external influences.” You could think of it as a type of sensory transcendence, where the calm waters don’t become massive waves crashing to the shore because a pebble was thrown in the water. It is during this stage of understanding yoga that we make the conscious effort to draw our awareness away from the external world and outside stimuli. Tricky in an era of social media, likes, follows, comments and buy my this or that.

Anything that takes your focus away from the external impressions and creates peaceful and positive inner impressions is pratyahara. So, take time to detox from the media and music in yoga, move yourself into a place of peace. Focus the mind and the senses will follow. If we are moving toward focus and meditation and ultimately an enlightened state of bliss then possibly removing (maybe temporarily) another external noise could help.

Always with patience and practice.


Author: Arian Levanael
Source: https://ari.yoga/2020/02/13/yoga-music-the-art-of-listening/


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