Sounds & Music Therapy 9 h agoAdd to bookmarks

A rug, a cushion, two or three objects, low lighting. What you really need to turn a corner of the house into a sound relaxation space.
One often thinks that one must first buy a bowl, a flute, a carillon. In reality, what changes everything is the place where one listens. A dedicated corner - even tiny - sends a signal to the body: here, we slow down. Regularity comes from there.
There is no need for an entire room. One square meter near a window is enough. The important thing is that it is stable (it is not put away every evening) and free from ambient noise (away from the kitchen, the TV, the phone).
Sit down. Three slow breaths, eyes half-closed. Then, if you have a bowl: strike it once, with the felt mallet, on the rim (not the bottom). Let the sound rise, then decrease, then disappear completely - until the silence that follows. It is this silence that one listens to, as much as the sound.
Repeat three times, a few minutes apart. The session lasts ten to fifteen minutes. If you don't have a bowl, put on a track of Tibetan bowl or crystal bowl at low volume, lie on your back, one hand on your stomach, and follow the sound as one follows a wave.
Much is said about the « Solfeggio frequencies » (396, 528 Hz…) attributed to a monk from the 11th century. Rigorous studies remain rare: these are frequencies pleasant to listen to, not « healing waves ». Listen to what relaxes you, without seeking a medical effect.
Avoid very cheap models under 20 €: the sound is often metallic and tiring.
Regular practice of a few minutes a day helps to relax the nervous system, slow down breathing, create a reference point in the day. It is not a treatment: it is an art of attention. A way of telling one's body "I am here, I listen to you", through the vibrations of a bowl that decreases, through the silence that follows.
Sound listening accompanies well-being and relaxation - as a complement, not a replacement for medical treatment. For any anxiety disorder, sleep, or medication that affects hearing or mood, consult a health professional.
Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.