with gong master Mehtab in Hong Kong |
Both of the training I've attended were at the Red Doors Studio, founded by Martha. This is where her collection of 19 gongs (and still growing) is housed. She established Red Doors in Aberdeen as a platform to share her passion with a larger audience.
I've been drawn to gongs ever since my first gong bath experience at the Summer Solstice Festival in France in 2013 by Nanakdev Singh. He had on stage massive gongs (more than 40" in diameter). He was at the center and there were 5-6 students with him. As they played, I felt that my tired, aching plus jet lag body was being healed by the overwhelming overtones of the gong. I would go back each day of my stay at the festival to receive a 30-minute gong bath by his group.
The gong is one of the oldest transformational and therapeutic instruments used in rituals, ceremony, prayer and meditation since the Bronze Age. The sound generated are multi-dimensional ripples that swell into varying degrees of sound waves. What happens in a gong bath is that the person receiving (in a lying position) is 'bathed' in the swelling sound vibrations, shifting brainwave activity from beta (normal state) to theta (meditative) where deep healing takes place. The process is called entrainment where the sound frequency is the agent that produces the shift.
And now, four years after my first experience, I find myself starting a collection of Paiste gongs - first, symphonic (24" and 34") and then, Mars (32") and recently, Earth (40") - and continuously undergoing training. For my kundalini yoga classes, I normally bring one gong with me and play the gong at the end of the class or at times, when I do special 'rebirthing' classes where the gong is played to clear emotional blockages. I also hold longer, 45-minute gong bath sessions at the Third Eye Wellness Center every Wednesday evening and for a very special group every other Wednesday afternoon. At times, I do participate in public events and give gong baths.
at an outdoor yoga class hosted by Life |
at SouLove Center |
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integrating gong during my Kundalini Yoga class |
After undergoing eight days hands-on training with Mehtab, I now integrate the sound of the gong in my kundalini yoga classes and not just play it at the end or during special featured classes. One of my students, Natasha Rodriguez, remarked that the gong helps her concentrate better and encourages her do the poses more. Mind you, in kundalini yoga, we hold the poses at times for more than a minute or two.
Gong Therapist certification |
One of my first clients said that she experienced loose bowel movement after the one-hour session. Imbalances in the body may cause accumulation of toxins in certain parts of the body. The sound helps move high vibration energy through the body, loosening, dislodging and flushing out these accumulated toxins which may come out either as loose bowel, skin rashes, etc.
It may take some time for sound healing to become mainstream here in the Philippines. Nevertheless, I'm hopeful that people will turn to sound as a complementary healing modality. Edgar Cayce (1877-1945), the father of holistic medicine said that "Sound is the medicine of the future." Even Rudolf Steiner, German philosopher said that "pure tones will be used for healing before the end of this century."