Harmonic Sounds for the Soul
by Viki Sky
Harmonics are inherent within all sounds. Anything
that vibrates in air produces sound and creates harmonics: the
pop of champagne cork, the roar of a jet engine or the sound of
our voice. In fact, harmonics are responsible for our individual
and unique speaking voices. Also known as overtones, harmonics
are mathematically interrelated ratios or intervals that are created
when striking any fundamental note (e.g. F, F#, G, G#, A, etc.)
Regularly listening to harmonics, and especially if we create
them with our own voice, as in chanting or toning, can alter our
states of consciousness and shift our perception of "reality".
This is because sound has a frequency it vibrates, dissipates
and permeates other sounds. It also shapes matter and can influence
the operation of the total human system.
Dr. Hans Jenny, a Swiss scientist, demonstrated how sound shapes
matter. He placed sand granules on to a metal plate and then played
a few notes from great composers such as Mozart and Bach. The
sand granules formed constant shapes to the vibration of the sound,
and extraordinary patterns were observed. He also described the
biological effect of sound on the human body, as every cell of
our body has its own vibrational frequency. Human cells are composed
of atoms and molecules that resonate according to their mutual
harmonies. Many cells together form tissues and organs that are
part of a biological system. This system then vibrates according
to new harmonies.
There are four states of consciousness, defined by brainwave activity
and frequency. Beta, the logical, stress-oriented state, allows
us to use verbal language. Alpha, the conceptual, highly creative
and meditative state, allows us to grasp concepts. Theta is the
activity of deep sleep or deep meditative state, and delta
is super-conscious, beyond the pain threshold. When we are listening
to harmonics, the brain shifts from beta to alpha (as it is in
alpha that our brain processes music) and even to theta states,
in those who regularly meditate.
All the neuro-chemical processes in our body are controlled by
our states of consciousness. Specific sound frequencies can be
used as a healing modality to balance energetic blocks or misalignments
in our mind-body system. In terms of frequencies, our auditory
system has an audible range of 20 HZ 20,000 HZ (cycles
per second) and can resolve remarkably small temporal differences
in music. It also locates us in space and can be thought of as
a central switchboard for our sense of space and time. The semicircular
canal in the inner ear is the most important of our receptors
for balance but it also regulates all other receptors distributed
throughout our body. It is the only receptor that can measure
angular velocity, allowing us to know the angle at which we are
lying, even when we are still half-asleep.
When we meditate with sound and enter a low alpha brain wave state,
we can actually "become one with the sound". It is also
possible to achieve the deeper, theta state of consciousness,
where profound healing takes place. This can be promoted if we
regularly listen to harmonics especially those created
in metaphysical/trance music and harmonic choirs. We can then
"become one with the harmonics" and travel to their
source. Such a state of listening is not always experienced. However,
regular meditation particularly utilising a Sanskrit mantra
can take us to that level. Sanskrit is a perfect language;
it is more copious than Greek and more grammatically perfect than
Latin. It is melodious and its vibrations are believed by Ayurvedic
practitioners to be healing to our mind-body system.
According to quantum physics, all matter at the subatomic level
is in a state of constant flux. Matter is energy pulsating at
different rates of vibration or frequencies and it is the rate
of vibration that distinguishes one form of matter from another.
It has been proven that an atom is both a particle and a wave
matter and energy are intertwined and interchangeable.
This understanding takes us to the origin of the universe. "In
the beginning was the word and the word was
sound.
The formation of sound came out of the void or, as Deepak Chopra
calls it, "The Unified Field". Through silence, we allow
our mind to transcend everyday chatter and the frenetic Western
pace of high-tech living and access the unified field, which contains
all answers and all possibilities.
The origin of sound reveals the origin of all creation. The Hindu
belief is that the "soundless sound" is the subtlest
element. It is beyond the speed of light, contains all universal
knowledge and is the cohesive source of all that is. Listening
to harmonics may also have great healing effects on our total
body (including bone and muscle tissue). Healing whether
emotional, psychological, spiritual or physical is an act
of re-creation. It is the process of re-organising a created being
toward its intended state of dynamic equilibrium a state
of change in which the fluctuations remain within a healthy range
for us.
Kay Gardner, author of Sounding the Inner Landscape: Music as
Medicine, has identified nine elements that demonstrate the healing
effects of music.
1. Drone healing music should have a constant tone
that drones behind a simple melody.
2. Repetition short musical phrases, vocal and instrumental,
should be repeated over and over which produce a calming effect.
3. Harmonics long sustained tones produce harmonic
overtones, which balance the entire physical body at the cellular
level.
4. Rhythm rhythm duplicates many pulses in the human
body and via entrainment, move the pulses into harmonious pattern
5. Harmony affects the emotions. Various keys (minor
or major evoke feelings of joyfulness, sadness or calmness.
6. Melody the mind becomes enchanted with melody
and ceases to engage in its continuous mental chit-chat.
7.Instrumental colours each instrument has its own
unique vibration. (playing the note of C on the piano would sound
very different to the same note on a violin)
8. Form. pieces that have many changes in tempo
will affect stimulate us and steady pieces will calm us.
9. Intention music played with a focused intention
of healing would contain that intention in its frequency.
Rudolf Steiner believed that people understand each other in reference
to rhythm. He attributed rhythm to will and associated melody
with feeling. Through melody, our conscious mind opens up to feelings
and this forms a head-heart connection, by which relating to oneself
and to the world becomes a more dynamic and complete experience.
Our feelings are orchestrated by harmony.
Harmonics as a healing modality
Resonance, entrainment (two or more frequencies pulsating in unison)
and synchronicity (analogously, two pendulum clocks mounted side
by side on a wall will swing together in perfect synchronicity)
are universal in nature and can be explained in terms of rhythm.
Rhythm is "harmony in time". Rhythm and harmony complement
each other. That is, the inclination toward rhythm includes the
inclination toward harmony.
Rudolph Haase demonstrated that the rhythms of the human organism
the frequencies of pulse, breathing, blood circulation,
etc. function according to harmonic principles. He also
pointed out that, if these rhythms are interrupted, the resultant
disharmonious rhythms cause dis-ease to develop in the human body.
This is apparent in cancer cases, where there is total irregularity
of all rhythms, because the cancer cells do not vibrate according
to the harmonious rhythms of healthy cells.
Tuning forks comprise a sound modality that can align the seven
chakras (energy centres) and correlate with fundamental notes.
(base chakra is C, pelvic chakra is D, solar plexus is E, heart
chakra is F, throat chakra is G, brow chakra is A and crown chakra
is B.) By placing the tuning forks on or over the chakras (the
appropriate location and procedure having been determined by muscle-checking
the client) the optimal vibrational rate of the chakras is realigned
by resonance with the tuning fork. Tuning forks can also be used
to re-align cranial bones, balance auric fields, and to introduce
frequencies that the body needs for optimal healing. The same
respective chakras are treated in the Ayurvedic system utilising
high-pitched humming of the following sounds: Vum, Lum, Rum, Yum,
Hum, Ka Shun and Aum. These are just simple sound modalities that
we can all do by ourselves to achieve balance and harmony.
We feel good when our bodies are in harmony. Disease sets in when
the human body loses its optimal rhythm. As harmonics can shift
our awareness and our states of consciousness, allowing us to
perceive our world differently, in so doing, our mind-body system
begins to resonate with more energising, life-promoting frequencies.
Viki Sky, M.A. (UTS), B.A. (UNSW),
is a Holistic Kinesiologist and practitioner of Holographic Repatterning.
She uses sound/harmonics as one of the healing modalities in her
sessions.
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