Blog – Flying with Broken Wings

The Healing Benefits of Sound

As soon as Rebecca White Raven speaks you are immediately hit with the cheeriness of her voice; you are grateful for being in her space and want to experience more. A few years ago I experienced one of Rebecca’s sound healings and was hooked. The best way to describe any of my sound healing experiences with Rebecca is peaceful, warm, and at times jarring. Let me explain…
Sound healing is described as powerful therapy that combines different healing sounds such as crystal singing bowls, gongs, voice(s), chimes, and more to improve our wellbeing and reduce stress, tension, anxiety, and whatever else you might be dealing with. Sound invokes memories and feelings (sometimes unwanted), and sound healing has been used globally for centuries. Rebecca uses sounds, vibrations, and frequencies to create energy shifts and to ultimately help people feel good. The benefits are well documented. An article in Psychology Today highlights the benefits of sound healing and music as therapy. 

A Bit About Rebecca
Rebecca has always been a musical and spiritual person, and she experienced an awakening in 2012.
“The sound brought me to a deeper place,” explains Rebecca. 
This life-changing experience made her world bigger as she met like-minded people who encouraged her to step into herself. As her world became bigger, she bought crystal bowls and other sound vessels, invited friends over, which led to training others to step into it, to get to know the sounds, and letting it come through to transform. 

Sounds Bath vs Sound Healing 
Until I spoke to Rebecca I didn’t know there was a difference between a sound bath and sound healing. A sound bath is a group event where the sound enables minds to get quiet and the  participants feel calm with stress levels decreasing. Sound healing can be transformative because of the frequency of the sound. Sound healing may trigger deep emotional release so it might be uncomfortable or unsettling. When you leave a sound healing it might not be rosy and you might actually feel grouchy. Think of a session with a psychiatrist–you need to feel the bad stuff before you feel the good. Rebecca recommends that when it become uncomfortable, you need to take the frequency and to literally energetically send it to the earth, by doing so new patterns are created. 
Rebecca goes on to explain that you can use frequency and sound to transform. This transformative shift in a person’s brainwaves is like a wanted invitation for the body to have the freedom to shift (with the caveat that patience and time are needed). The sound frequency works on an emotional level, enabling you to let go and bring good stuff in. 

The Benefits of Sound Healing
The benefits of sound healing is up to the individual. I certainly felt at peace after my first experience, but I’ve also heard people saying it made them uncomfortable and they didn’t like it. You need to sit with that experience and move the energy to the ground. Sound healing is a process and there are stages to experience the full benefits. A little at a time is recommended and time is needed to allow what you experienced to integrate. 
“When there’s release, a shift happens in stages,” says Rebecca. “How much of a shift depends on how willing and ready one is to accept.”
When you’re participating in a sound healing, ask yourself, “Do I want to shift?” ” Am I ready to shift?” It’s ok to just sit and feel. The healing will be available when you’re ready.
Rebecca recommends to “listen to your own heart and intuition”.
Rebecca gives warnings during group events because emotions and thoughts will likely arise. By participating in a sound healing session the body has started a process of progress and will respond when ready. 
Sound is powerful and it can do things,” says Rebecca. “Acknowledge that something is happening and it’s starting the process to get over the hump.”
Part of that acknowledgement is that “getting over the hump” might take a while to feel right so try it again.  
After leaving a sound healing  I sometimes feel agitated but I still enjoyed the experience. I know that uncomfortable feeling is because something happened. I need to feel it and be open to allowing it to shift something inside of me. 

Next Steps
Sound healing can be powerful. Rebecca recommends time to integrate the experience, release the emotions, and continue to feel the frequency. Drinking water and taking a bath or shower are great integrators. 

Rebecca offers sound healings throughout Ottawa. I encourage you to experience one and feel its benefits. 

The Wheel

The mind is made to think. Lying on my mat before the start of yoga class, my mind was quiet, but the quiet mind didn’t last long. I remember thinking, what can I think about? What can I sort out before this class? No! I then thought, enjoy the stillness, knowing my last thought and anything related or remotely connected would carry through into my practice.

The wheel is the mind. The turning of emotions and thoughts. I often think, how can I get off the wheel or can I stop it for even a bit? What benefits will I reap when the wheel isn’t constantly turning? Can I be more intentional when I’m on the wheel? Do I need to get off to feel peace? And how does my yoga practice help?

Yoga: An Intentional Practice

Sylvie Gouin of Inspired Living Yoga (and also my very first yoga teacher, not counting VHS tapes) explains that yoga is meditation and that we often think of yoga as asanas/postures or the separate portion of our practice. She goes on to explain that meditation is a process.

This might be hard to process for North American minds, but yoga (or asanas)  = meditation. That’s right, a true yoga practice is meditation.

Sylvie believes that our practice is an opportunity to turn our senses inwards. Simply put, it’s a discipline, therefore, we need to show up and when we practice with nonattachment, our practice becomes a discipline with ease. Sylvie believes that the poses provide an opportunity for us to look inward without attachment and to make us aware of our body in space. What a thing of beauty!

“When we show up we develop fortitude to soften our edge. It’s depleting if we push ourselves,” says Sylvie. 

Meditation is part of the practice whether it’s practiced seated or by moving through poses. While the asanas turn our  attention inward, meditation provides an opportunity to turn our attention to the body. This next sentence is so important: this is where YOU become in control of where your attention goes. You soften your edge even further and you soften your expectations. That’s where the magic happens!

This process of exchanging energy enables us to perceive the world differently according to Sylvie. How does this help to get off the wheel? Well, when you get off the mat because you’re more aware of your body and you’ve softened your edge then you’re better at responding to the world and to living life off the mat. When you return to the mat, you’re more in control and more focused. The process is circular and always moving when you dedicate yourself to a practice so maybe we don’t need to get off the wheel but learn how to work with it by becoming more self-aware.

I think of the car analogy…your car will go where your eyes go. That applies to life on so many levels. Where am I sending my breath, focus, and energy? When we practice yoga we become more present on and off the mat.

“You become more receptive to the world,” says Sylvie. “You have the same intention doing dishes as you do practicing yoga. You are grateful for the extraordinary in the ordinary.”

I find Sylvie’s comment to be so profound. When we come to this realization we accept and love (or at least try to) every human experience, from washing dishes to celebrating a birthday. With discipline, this is where your yoga practice becomes part of your everyday life, the practice moves off the mat.

Sylvie takes this notion one step further. She suggests through this discipline we can observe the wheel of life, rather than getting off it. So we become able to observe, take note, and tell the mind “not now”. 

Therefore, finding trustworthy teachers and a community are important as you delve deeper into your practice. I’ve been fortunate that my yoga studio and home practice through books and videos are able to support me. Yoga can be depleting if it isn’t taught with the intent to soften a yogi’s edge. 

“When yoga is taken out of context we can become attached to the body. This attachment is depleting,” says Sylvie

It’s important to find a teacher who teaches the meditative qualities of a yoga practice. As we move through each posture in our physical body, we become intentional and the meditation naturally happens. You can have meditation without asanas but to experience the full benefits of yoga you can’t have asana without meditation. 

The Investment

What often brings us to a yoga practice is some kind of physical pain and/or stress. We all acknowledge the benefits of a regular practice (the “quick fix”) even if a regular practice is once per week. The “mind fix” requires an investment of more time and energy. 

“If you want yoga to be part of your life you need to invest more time in the practice,” says Sylvie. “Start somewhere and invest more time and energy in reflection, reading and practice.”

A Sylvie quote from many years ago is, “You know you found a class that works for you if it gets you to put your boots on in -40 degrees weather and go.”

That quote has been on replay in my mind for years. My practice has ebbed and flowed as I’ve aged. As I continue to commit to my practice I get new insights or reaffirmations of old ones. Sometimes I’m needing more of a quick fix rather than a mind fix so I pick a class that suits what I’m feeling and needing at the time. But, yoga is a gentle and patient teacher and when the time is right we delve deeper and get from the practice what it is that we’re needing.

Sylvie says it so beautifully, “Yoga is for everybody and it does not have to be your everything to be of value. If all you want from yoga is more flexibility, yoga will provide. If you want more energy, calmness, and concentration, yoga will provide, but you’ll have to invest more time and energy. There is no wrong reason to practice and what we want from the practice determines how much we’re willing to invest.”

Yoga: A generous practice

A familiar adage is “you don’t know what you don’t know”. That rings true with yoga. Sylvie calls yoga a “generous practice”. She goes on to explain, “It gives us what we don’t even know is available because we don’t know.”

There’s beauty and peace when dots get connected: you’re able to deepen your breath, resulting in a focused practice while moving into the postures with attention and drawing your attention inwards.

The Importance of Community

When there isn’t a true sense of community I find my practice can become depleting. I don’t often practice at home because I need the guidance of a teacher and the energy of a class. Sylvie refers to this as “good company”. 

I’ve been a member of my yoga studio for 20 years. It’s welcoming and special, despite its location in a congested strip mall. It’s a place I call home. Over the years, my practice has evolved, depending on life’s events. The studio has remained a consistent and patient life force. It’s always there, ready to give, depending on what I need. 

Sylvie says the special energy and connection of a yoga community is as important as the practice.

So maybe we shouldn’t be trying to get off the wheel but observe why we want to. The wheel is what keeps us going and motivated. Working on decreasing or eliminating the pressure points that cause the wheel to quicken its pace is more achievable. Like Sylvie says, we want to learn to work with the wheel. A healthy (not depleting) yoga practice helps us achieve this goal. 

Namaste