Skip to Navigation | Skip to Content

User login

Log in using OpenIDCancel OpenID login

harmony

Tibetan Singing Bowl Sound Healing, Reiki and Non Judgmental Communication

By Experience Nirvana on June 9, 2009 - 6:36pm

Heal your body and free your mind
With original ancient Tibetan singing bowl sound therapy

In ancient Tibet, sick people were treated with the sound of the singing bowls. The miraculous sound coming from bowls made of seven metals and the special music composed for the therapy were guarded secrets there until recent times. This knowhow reached Nepal in 1959 when the Tibetans left their country. Today, there are only few artists in Kathmandu pursuing this practice. Megha Ratna Shakya has just recently come to settle in Vancouver and he brought along with him this ancient knowledge in its original form.

Human body is made of innumerable cells. Each cell carries electrical energy. Each cell vibrates creating certain sound frequency. When a person is sick, there is imbalance in the sound frequency of the cells in the body and mind. The singing bowl balances the sound frequency rejuvenating the sick person’s body and mind. If you are suffering from stresses, pains and other difficulties, physical and mental, try out this sacred sound therapy used by sages and monks in monasteries. Megha provides this service with Reiki energy which also happened to have originated in Tibet.

If we ain't got soul ... then we ain't whole

By wholistic on June 22, 2008 - 10:55pm

Many of us are trying to eat right, exercise regularly, and think positive thoughts but we still don’t feel complete or whole. We seem to say and do all the right things but there is still something missing!

That missing something could be a rich variety of spiritual experiences that come through a healthy spiritual practice.

Wholistic living is about using all parts of who we are; body, mind, and spirit. Without the spiritual part our life can feel empty, meaningless, and incomplete . No amount of clever thoughts and material success can replace the meaningful impact of an active spiritual life.

What is a spiritual practice? It’s something that gives us inner peace, self awareness, and guidance in a way that our ordinary thinking, feeling, and physical actions alone can’t provide.

What the best spiritual practice to follow? Can’t and won’t say. That’s depends on our own individual path in life and is a personal matter between each of us and our Creator.

The only thing I can say with some certainty is friends; if we ain’t got soul … we ain’t whole! Michael

see more posts on wholistic living at our new blog at wholistictalk.com

Syndicate content

Syndicate

Syndicate content