Articles and Testimonials
SOUND HEALING, ORIENTAL MEDICINE & THE MUSIC OF THE SPHERES:
by Ellen Franklin, PhD, © Kairos Institute of Sound Healing, LLC
Sound Healing is a powerful creative healing force used by cultures around the world for thousands of years to transform body, mind, and spirit. We take a unique approach to Sound Healing working with the Music of the Spheres and the principles of Oriental Medicine to develop a system of healing that is having profound results treating chronic and debilitating conditions, and helping people to balance the spiritual, emotional and physical. The Music of the Spheres, which can be traced back to writings of Pythagoras, represents the supreme harmonic intelligence that interconnects everything in the universe. It includes, but is so much more than, the sound of the planets traveling through space.
Every cell in our body is a sound resonator. Every cell lives in a rhythmic pattern. Each organ has its own cycle and its own pulse. Each and every system has a cycle, rhythm, pattern, and pulse that exist in resonant harmony and sympathy to the cycles of the eartheavens. These body systems respond to ... (read entire article)
CHRONOBIOLOGY: THE RHYTHM METHOD FOR OVERALL HEALTH:
By: Cynthia BeMent
Clocks. We're always answering to them -- they tell us when to wake, when to eat, when to go to work, and when to fall exhausted into bed at night. These oft-cursed timekeepers set the rhythms to which our bodies and minds dance daily. Or do they?
A new field of science called chronobiology suggests that it's really a clock within our body that produces the rhythms that rule our lives and our health. Chronobiologists and doctors who practice chronomedicine are discovering that the key to better managing illnfrom the common cold to cancer lies within this timepiece inside the... (read entire article)
LEARNING DAY FROM NIGHT:
By: Judy Foreman
For more than 25 years now, Debra Brandon has been looking for better ways to take care of preemies - babies born weeks or even months before they are ready to leave the safety of the womb. In her early days as a nurse, recalls Brandon, now an assistant professor of nursing at the Duke University School of Nursing in Durham,N.C., it was standard practice to leave bright lights on all the time in NICUs, or neonatal intensive care units, the better to attend to the preemies' urgent medical needs.
Over the years, as researchers found that constant light was stressful for preemies, many NICUs switched to near-darkness, the better to mimic the darkness of the womb.
Now, in a provocative study published in February in the Journal of Pediatrics... (read entire article)