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Chantdoc returns from European journey

April 13th, 2009 · Music Healing

I’ve just returned from a fantastic trip to Paris and Dublin with two of my daughters and we had such a wonderful time.  I think most of you know that I have a background as a harpsichordist (as well as a pianist) and did all of my Ph.D. dissertation research in Paris in 1987.  I went back not only to visit my daughter there but also to uncover more new information on Landowska and her Ecole de Musique Ancienne.

While there I also had the chance to meet a harpsichordist in Paris named Skip Sempe.  Here is an excerpt from my Parisian blog on the day I visited him:  Today is my final day in Paris and I don’t have much time, but just wanted to post some of my pix from yesterday for all my friends to see. Today is Good Friday and I’m hoping to find a concert for tonight. If you have questions about any of these pix, I’ll answer them when I return! Au Revoir! This magnificent harpsichord is in the apartment of my friend Skip Sempe! Isn’t it gorgeous?

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More info on surgery headphones: per your questions!

March 29th, 2009 · Music and Surgery

More info on the surgery headphones

Sold the surgery headphones today to a dear lady who has end-stage renal disease.  She had been wanting to get them for some time, but at the moment, they are on sale at a very generous discount.  She was so excited and because she lives right here in Louisville, KY, I was able to deliver them to her personally and show her exactly how to use them!  Interested?  Go to:  http://www.surgicalheadphones.com
Several people have asked me about the headphones…if they go over the head or behind the neck? The answer is “behind the neck.” This is the newer way that headphones are being made today and we have had 100’s of people try them lying down, walking around, leaning back in a comfortable chair or sitting up straight. So far, all of those positions are reported to be perfectly comfortable. I think it’s important to know that, although the headphones come pre-programmed with the music that I have chosen as “ideal for surgery” once your procedure is over you can delete this music if you want to and put any music you want onto the headphones. They come with a USB cable and all instructions. But keep in mind, it’s not about entertainment, it’s about “entrainment” and synchronizing the heart-beat and breathing to the slow, steady pulse of the music! This 60-minute selection of music repeats in a loop until the headphones are turned off, hopefully when you leave the recovery area! Let me know what your other questions might be! Happy listening!

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Wireless headphones or MP3 player for your surgery?

March 28th, 2009 · Music and Surgery

Do you want Headphones or MP3 Player for your surgery music?

Now that we’ve established what all the many benefits of music during are, what are the pros and cons of the pre-programmed headphones vs. the music that is downloadable to your MP3 player. For me, the most obvious benefit is that:
  • the headphones are totally cordless and the MP3 player or iPod has wires that connect the earbuds to the player
  • During surgery, or other medical procedure, you need to be able to move your head easily and many people report a problem with earbuds falling out.
  • Although many people take iPods and MP3 players into surgery and do not report a problem, I think the cordless, pre-programmed headphones are safer and less likely to become entangled with anything the surgeon or nurses might be doing for you.
  • Another advantage is that you don’t have to worry about where to put the MP3 player. Although surgical gowns often have a small pocket, it’s not really intended to keep an object in it and could easily slide out.

Of course either one is preferable to no music for your procedure. What’s the downside? Absolutely nothing! Let me know if I can help you!

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Is Mozart really the best music for healing?

March 26th, 2009 · The Mozart Effect...why Mozart?

People ask me that all the time and of course, the answer is an absolute MAYBE?

Is Mozart’s music the most healing music of all?

What do you really know about “The Mozart Effect?” It seems to me that many musicians are a bit “up in arms” about the whole premise. I, as a musician and a therapist, truly believe that the whole idea has been misunderstood. Neither the woman who did the original studies nor Don Campbell who came up with the idea of trademarking and writing a book called “The Mozart Effect” ever said that the music of Mozart is the most healing of all or that it raises anyone’s IQ!! A very good source to look at for information is: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,901060116-1147107,00.html.
I also have a recorded program called “Healing with Music: Why Mozart?” that I think you would find very informative and factual…and entertaining! Check it out at www.HealingMusicEnterprises.com/products.html

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Feeling Stressed? Just breeaaattthhhee…

March 23rd, 2009 · Toning and Chanting

The Connection Between Breathing and Peace

No matter what is going on in your life, you can always take a moment to focus on your breathing.When you find yourself in a tense situation, for example, you may notice that you are holding your breath.
Putting your attention on your breathing can help you relax and immediately be in the here and now.

This practice, found in many spiritual traditions, is often referred to as mindfulness, being present, or living in the now.You may ask, since we’re breathing all the time, why do we need to practice it?

What we’re practicing is conscious awareness of the breath. Then breathing becomes a concentration exercise that not only focuses the mind but brings many healing benefits as well. – John-Roger with Paul Kaye -(From: Momentum, Letting Love Lead – Simple Practices for Spiritual Living, p. 61)

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“Music May Help Soothe Surgery Pain” says WebMD

March 21st, 2009 · Music and Surgery

April 21, 2006 — After surgery, patients may feel less pain and need less pain medicine if they listen to music, according to a new research review.

The review appears in The Cochrane Library. It shows that patients who listened to music after surgery tended to report less pain intensity and required slightly smaller doses of painkillers, compared with those who didn’t listen to music.

“Music should not be considered as a primary method for pain relief,” the researchers write. However, they note that music may easily, inexpensively, and safely help cut surgery patients’ pain and painkiller needs.

The reviewers included M. Soledad Cepeda, MD, PhD. Cepeda is a visiting professor of anesthesiology at Tufts-New England Medical Center in Massachusetts, and a professor in the anesthesiology department at Javeriana University’s medical school in Bogota, Colombia.

Tune Therapy

Cepeda and colleagues reviewed 14 scientific studies on music and postsurgery pain. None of those studies combined music with other nondrug therapies, such as guided imagery, relaxation, videos, healing touch, hypnosis, or acupuncture.

The studies randomly assigned a combined total of 510 patients to listen to music after surgery. For comparison, another 493 patients were assigned not to listen to music after surgery.

Patients who listened to music after surgery were more likely to report lower pain intensity and to need smaller doses of painkillers, the review shows.The difference in painkiller doses was small and its clinical significance is unclear. Music didn’t appear to equal the pain relief of drugs, the researchers note.

In some studies, participants chose their own music. In other trials, patients didn’t get to choose their tunes. Music choice didn’t matter, in terms of pain relief, according to the review.

Cepeda’s team also reviewed other studies of music and nonsurgical pain. They found mixed results in those trials.

Future studies should check whether mixing music with other nondrug therapies brings greater pain relief and whether music affects pain patients’ anxiety, note Cepeda and colleagues.

 

 

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Music and Brain Injury: Sometimes it’s too late

March 18th, 2009 · Music and the Brain

Brain injury is a terrible thing, no doubt about it!  There are so many times when music can greatly assist in brain-related injuries and disorders. I’ve written in this space about music with strokes, dementia and Parkinson’s disease. But when one has a sports-related injury to the head that could have been prevented or greatly minimized by wearing a helmet, it’s doubly tragic. Why Natasha Richardson did not wear a helmet is unknown, but the reasons most people give are:
It’s too heavy
It obstructs my vision
It ruins my hair
I’m just going on a short run
etc., etc.

Here’s the story, as quoted in the New York Post:

Actress Natasha Richardson is brain dead – after falling in a ski accident in Canada – and is now on sad journey home to New York, friends told The Post today.
Richardson, who was being treated at a Montreal hospital, is being transported to New York this afternoon so her mom Vanessa Redgrave, two children and other loved ones can say goodbye before she’s taken off life-support, friends said.

If you ski, ride a bike, skateboard, snowboard or do any sport where helmets are recommended, please put on a helmet! Thank you!

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Do you have a fear of anesthesia?

March 15th, 2009 · Music and Surgery

Fear of Anesthesia

It’s not too surprising that many people have a crippling fear of anesthesia. As a matter of fact, their fear is so intense and so overwhelming that they choose not to have surgery, rather than subject themselves to their terrifying projections. But is anesthesia really that dangerous? According to Sarah Wassner Flynn, (http://www.sheknows.com) “Serious complications from general anesthesia are extremely rare: Malignant hyperthermia affects about one in 10,000 to one in 30,000 patients and far fewer – about five in one million – will die. But even one is too many. More common are side effects like nausea, dizziness and muscle aches, which are much less dangerous and easily managed. Of course, my purpose in introducing this topic is to let you know that listening to soft, slow, steady instrmental music during surgery has been proven to relax the mind and body tension to the point that up to 50% less anesthesia can be taken and still the body and mind are completely anesthetized! Now that’s worth investigating, isn’t it? To read more, go to MUSIC FOR SURGERY. Feel free to contact me if you have any questions at all about the process, the research, or the music I have chosen! To your successful surgery!

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