
Sound Healing
Sound healing has a basis in both neurology and psychology. It has been proven in neurological studies that listening to music makes us more productive and creative; it can relieve stress and, depending on the sort of music, can improve our moods.
This is because listening to music floods our brains with dopamine — the happy chemical. It also releases oxytocin, a natural painkiller and hormone that allows us to bond with and trust people.
What Can Sound Healing Help With?

Sound healing has been used to treat symptoms of several conditions:
- General Physical Ailments
- Psychological / Psychiatric & Behavioral Disorders
- Mood Swings or Negative Emotions
- Anxiety Disorder
- Sleep Challenges
- Stress
- Cancer
- Fibromyalgia
- Autoimmune Disorders
- Parkinson’s Disease
- Post-Traumatic Stress (PTS)
The Science & History Behind Sound Healing
Sound healing is a type of “frequency medicine” that’s rooted in the concept that every cell, tissue, and organ emits specific frequencies.
Disruptions to these frequencies contribute to various health issues — the goal is to restore balance by introducing specific frequencies that resonate with the body’s natural rhythms, promoting healing.
The therapeutic power of sound and movement has been used by different civilizations for thousands of years as a way of treatment.
Techniques range from mantras used by Hindus and Icaros, to medicine melodies used by Indigenous peoples of Central and South America, to Pythagoras’ use of interval and frequency.
All of these practices share the same goal: to move us from a state of imbalance to a state of equilibrium.