Chaldean plate shows the form pattern made by sound vibrations

How Sound Shapes Our World

Cymatics is the study of sound made visible, showing how sound shapes our world. We don’t usually see the effect vibration has on matter. Yet since 1967, when Swiss physician Hans Jenny published the first volume of Cymatics: The Study of Wave Phenomena, acoustic science has tested sound’s impact.

Experiments often involve what’s called a Chladni plate, a metal surface sprinkled with sand to show emerging patterns as related to sound frequency.

Listen and watch matter magically move in this brief demonstration (2 min):

What fascinates me about this phenomenon is the power that we, as sound producing beings, have on our environment. Ever seen a child shrink back at a teacher’s scolding? Or watched an athlete take in all the fans’ cheers for a sprint to victory?

Sound is powerful, whether individual or in a collective group. 

Certain frequencies produce patterns. Some tones form clearer images on the Chladni plate. This got me curious about resonance and imagery.

What if we’re more mindful of internal thought habits and external sounds in our environment?

Can we clear our mind with higher frequency thoughts? I’ve been experimenting. When stressed about a particular outcome, I choose to say “we’ll see,” as a more neutral viewpoint than gloom and doom. This increases my ability to ride life’s ups and downs and my confidence that all is in its right place.

Similarly, if we play an uplifting piece of music repeatedly, will we “see” a difference in our household? My husband and I notice that playing a sacred chant in our home on a regular basis calms us and our environment, including our cat Zoey.

When we recognize sound’s impact on matter, we look more closely at our choices.
We notice the effect of sound and try new thoughts, new tunes in order to stay uplifted.

That is living as music. 

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Hummingbird in flight near a feeder

Hummingbird Wings

Have you ever been close enough to hear the sound of hummingbird wings? I found it magical.

Hummingbirds hover at an average rate of 80 wingbeats per second. With strong muscles, and rotating shoulder joints, their wings flutter in a figure 8 pattern. This allows them to move forward, backward, or pivot to the side.

Take a listen to this remarkable creature in flight. You’ll hear some chirps, too!

Who isn’t delighted by catching sight of a hummingbird? In some Indigenous cultures, this little bird is the symbol of joy and healing. In others, a sign of strength, endurance, beauty and harmony.

My husband and I often share our ‘highlight of the day’ right before we go to sleep. One night, after a day of many gifts—abundant organic produce from our local farm, excitement of my upcoming book launch, strength my husband is gaining from weight lifting—how remarkable that we both named our highlight as the hummingbirds at our feeder!

It’s good to celebrate life’s big events. And, on any given day, our peak experience might still be as tiny and miraculous as the sound of a hummingbird’s wings.

All we need to do is stay alert for the small joy that darts into our lives.

That is living as music.

Photo by Eric Brehm on Unsplash

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Giraffe in motion in the wild

Giraffes Hum!

I first learned that giraffes hum to one another from reading the historical novel West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge. The novel fictionalizes a 1937 trek across the U.S.A., when two young giraffes arrived in New York harbor during a hurricane, barely alive, and were transported by make-shift rig to the San Diego Zoo. [A great adventure tale, highly recommended.]

Who knew that giraffes hum?
Click below to listen to this extraordinary nocturnal sound:

Giraffe in motion in the wild

In the novel, the young giraffes hum to comfort one another, to create safety, and to express a sense of contentment. The human characters are awe-struck when they experience this vibration firsthand.

I got to wondering if people who experience insomnia might benefit from learning the giraffes’ secret to comfort and peace. Many of us may listen to ocean waves or soft music as a way to relax into sleep. But what about making our own sound?

It turns out that humming isn’t just soothing. It stimulates the vagus nerve and signals the brain to calm down. It lowers our heart rate and blood pressure. Humming produces oxytocin, can release melatonin, and induces parasympathetic dominance.

Several research studies have been done on humming’s healing impact. In fact, a book called The Humming Effect dives deeply into the topic.

As we look for ways to calm our nervous system, quiet our minds, and balance our emotions, isn’t it heartening to know that we carry with us this simple sound technique? I’m trying it out.

Thank you, giraffes!
That is living as music.

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Three tuning forks on small wooden platforms

Tuning Forks

On a Zoom call I led recently, one of our team members mentioned that he’d just purchased tuning forks. We all wanted to hear the sound, so I suggested he strike one to end the meeting.

Perhaps you heard this sound once, long ago. Take a listen to these tuning forks on resonators from the Smithsonian’s collection, crafted somewhere between 1870-1900: 

Perhaps you heard this sound once, long ago. Take a listen to these tuning forks on resonators from the Smithsonian’s collection, crafted somewhere between 1870-1900 (1 min):

Does this vibration calm your mind or stop your thinking process for even a millisecond?
That, in itself, is valuable!

Tuning forks are being used to alleviate pain and to resolve all kinds of physical, emotional, and mental challenges. How is this possible?

Biofield Tuning is a sound therapy to relax and restore the body/mind by using the body’s natural intelligence to tune itself.

Biofield tuning works with our electrical system and the magnetic field surrounding our body. When forks are placed on or near the body, they register dissonance, as either resistance or turbulence. Practitioners listen for any changes in overtones or undertones of the sound.

Once dissonance is located, the fork is struck again and held in that spot until the resistance releases. Tuning fork vibrations create a harmonic that can shift a causative symptom. Mental and emotional habit patterns, as well as physical tensions, dissipate.

Amazing? Consider a time you attended a live musical performance and walked away feeling vibrant and uplifted. The sound rang through you, impacting your mood or state of mind long after the concert ended.

And, whether for healing or not, noticing sound’s impact on you is living as music.

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Two Lakota youth singing a gratitude song

Lakota Gratitude Song

Our neighbor, Steve, offered to trim our arborvitae shrub in exchange for collecting the branches. Steve is deeply connected to Native American culture here in Minnesota, where arborvitae is called “flat cedar” and burned in sweat lodges. Our dried branches would go to serve lodges further north.

When Steve arrived at our backyard, I was struck by his fully present and respectful approach—as if tree trimming was sacred work. When he finished, he asked if it would be OK to sing a Lakota gratitude song. And he did, heartily!

Take a listen to the two Lakota youth who sing a Lakota song of thanks in their way (2 minutes):

The care our neighbor put into trimming branches mirrors the respect these young men have for keeping Lakota culture alive through music. All three of them create harmony and bring awareness by honoring Native culture, ancestors, and all life.

What inspires your respect? What do you take great care in doing, even if it’s a small task?

Choosing to be more harmonious as we go about our day impacts others. Think of the small act of letting another car merge in front of you, or picking up trash where you walk your dog. Your choice creates a ripple effect, without you knowing where this courtesy lands next as others pass it along.

When we do this, we’re singing our own gratitude song, in our own way. We’re recognizing and acknowledging the gift of this person, this plant, this culture, this moment.

We’re demonstrating an appreciation for life.

That is living as music.

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If you want to hear what our neighbor sounded like, this is close.

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Call of the Loons

Last week, I drove to a lakeside cabin in northern Minnesota and returned to the call of the loons. Midwest loons are the same species as those of the Adirondacks, my heart’s home.

Common loons call out to one another across a misty lake. Their sound emerges from stillness and silence. Before dawn, I paddled a kayak to the center of the lake to listen. It’s a resonance like none other, haunting and healing.

Take a brief moment to appreciate their beauty:

When we make room for stillness and silence in our lives, we hear a soul-stirring sound. We’re moved by, changed by, a call we must somehow answer.

This sound often becomes amplified during transition times. Like the sunrise or sunset that invites the loon’s cry when humanity settles, our inner call emerges when our thoughts settle.

We may recognize an inner nudge to heal a broken heart or to trust a new, amazing opportunity. The call might beckon us to soul-awareness or to a renovation of our life’s work.

For me, it takes courage to perceive this penetrating signal because I know it will be life-changing.

Yet when a loon-lover friend of mine sits in quiet, the environment awakening around her, she says, “The revelation is so compelling, I go into it with love, affection, and beauty— without needing courage.” Maybe that’s you, too.

Are we willing to be still and wait—to hear, to accept, and to answer?

That is the call and response of living as music.

[Want more loons? https://www.nature365.tv/video/2024-04-29-loon]

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Piano player and elephant playing music together outdoors in clearing.

Interspecies Music

Elephants World, a self-supporting sanctuary in Thailand for special needs and rescued elephants, provides an unexpected studio for making interspecies music.

Until 1989, elephants in Thailand worked for humans in the logging industry. When logging was banned due to deforestation and floods, these animals needed protection. Today, the elephants play in a new way—making music with their human caretakers.

Pause and enjoy this unusual trio. (1 min):

In human interactions, we sometimes feel like we’re talking to a different species. Of course, we’re the one making music while the other person is blaring dissonant, unintelligible sounds.

Yet, if it’s possible for human-elephant connection through music, surely we humans can learn to play better together. What’s a good way to go about this?

Notice what the Elephants World pianist does. He brings his instrument into their habitat. He’s not expecting them to walk into his practice room.

He also lets them be elephants. He’s not trying to convince them to be otherwise, or to make other than elephant trunk sounds.

We don’t have to be of the same genus—or even have the same perspectives—to harmonize. This is what interspecies music can teach us!

The next time you find yourself feeling like an upright piano in a field of trumpeting elephants—stop, and just listen. Look for a way to bring your song and theirs to a higher level of composition.

It won’t work every time, but if you can recognize that you’re playing different instruments, you can step into their world a bit.

Maybe you’ll discover how seemingly dissonant sounds can coexist.

That is living as music.

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Young Sugar Chile Robinson smiling while playing the keyboard

Sugar Chile Robinson

What is it that delights us about a child prodigy? Surprising talent flows naturally and joyfully in someone so young that we’re baffled.

Where does it come from? Whether we believe the gift is in-born, earned in past lives, or a simply a mystery, there’s no denying the result.

Smile big as you watch Sugar Chile Robinson at age six (less than 2 min.):

Did you happen to notice Sugar’s hands on the keyboard? Young Sugar Chile hits the keys in a way that suits his hands, not the restricted manner in which a player might be schooled.

We each have talents as natural to us as piano was to Sugar Chile at age six. We play the keys in our own way. But sometimes our gift is so natural to us, we don’t even recognize it.

I had a friend who could listen to anyone’s story without making a ripple. Holding profound respect at being invited to listen, the storyteller’s pain, joy, growth, learning, or simple observation emerged in all its fullness.

He never saw his gift as any big deal. But we did.

What’s your unrecognized gift? Maybe you just naturally:

  • know how to be patient when someone needs extra time
  • make others feel included in social situations
  • keep a cool head in an emergency
  • lighten a heavy moment with humor
  • repair any machine that’s broken
  • appreciate animals and advocate for them
  • distill complex ideas into simple, comprehensible statements

What’s most common to us may seem insignificant. It’s not. It’s music!

Today, when you notice someone else’s “invisible” talent, name it for them.

Help them see, and maybe you’ll begin to notice yours, too.

That is living as music.

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Take a look at this if you are in a major life transition and need help.
💛Emma

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Oboe up close with fingers on keys

Gabriel’s Oboe

I adore the sound of woodwinds. On my very best nights, I’ll hear something similar to a far off oboe, drawing me towards it as I drift off to sleep.

Gabriel’s Oboe has been performed by many musicians, on a variety instruments. Yet, it’s Henrik Chaim Goldschmidt whose playing makes my heart soar on sound.

Pause and listen through to that final high note (4 min):

To me, this version of Ennio Morricone’s Gabriel’s Oboe embodies the art, feeling, and grace of music.

Why is it that music played by a certain person opens our hearts? It can be music of any style, yet the vibration resonates deeply when that individual begins to play.

Who’s your person?

This phenomenon, perhaps explained by the physics of resonance, also occurs with the voice of someone we love. We may awaken to the fact poignantly when our loved one has been away, and we hear that unique sound once again.

“It’s just great to hear the sound of your voice,” my husband and I said recently when we were finally able to talk to a friend in the hospital.

Someone’s sound is not just words. The music of your child’s laughter may open your heart. My cat makes a certain meow, a tiny throat trill, that I find most endearing.

Whatever the music that warms and uplifts you, listen today.
Be grateful for that sound. It’s not forever.

That is living as music.

Learn more about navigating the challenges of life.

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Riding the rhythm, the Nicholas brothers best tap dancers of all times shown here in mid-air

Riding the Rhythm

Two of the greatest tap dancers who ever lived, the Nicholas Brothers, bring fresh, dynamic, awe-inspiring expression to riding musical rhythm.

As if born in synchronicity with each other and with big band music, these gifted dancers fly. Pause now to experience their surprising story, sound, and way of riding rhythm (less than 2 min):

The Brothers’ level of rhythmic genius is precise, acrobatic, and fluid. Can you hear/feel their tap shoes matching the beat of the music?

Most impressive to me is the joy with which the Nicholas Brothers dance to a song they didn’t even like! Yet, they found a way through their love of music and dance.

That’s inspiring—and gives us a key to navigate more easily.

When the soundtrack of our lives turns sour, we can sweeten the discord. The Nicholas Brothers offer an image of moving gracefully and playfully in a distasteful situation.

We may be frustrated by our current job, ending a relationship, having to relocate cross country, or facing a real health concern. Whatever the story, for the moment we’re in a tough time.

Let’s remember the Nicholas Brothers and lean into the rhythm, find something in the song we can dance to and be inspired to stay light on our feet.

Bring the best we can, given the circumstances, without self-judgment. The song won’t last forever. We, too, can be riding the rhythm, tapping lightly.

That is living as music.

P.S. Want to see the Nicholas Brothers as kids? check out their Lucky Number “audition”



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