But why gongs? What’s their history? What do they do to us? Why do they make us feel the way they do?
- Gongs have been used for thousands of years, all over the world, for a variety of reasons. Tibetans have reportedly used metallophones of various sorts (including singing bowls) as a meditation aid for centuries. The Buddha himself is told to have instructed that all gongs and bells should be inscribed with the Tai Loi symbols, meaning “happiness has arrived”. In China, gongs are said to have been used for thousands of years for royal and religious ceremonies. Various civilisations have used them to fend against evil spirits and also to frighten their enemies in war.
- Sound is being used more and more frequently to enhance well-being. The gongs are generators of very rich sounds and vibrations – often considered beautiful, subtle, powerful and with an immensely broad range of frequencies, overtones and harmonics building atop one another.
- Laying near a gong, the body’s atoms are literally vibrated by the sounds, thus we effectively have a ‘sound massage’. If everything in the world is vibrating, then it is doing so at various different speeds or frequencies, depending on its nature/make-up. The gongs, in their capacity to vibrate at a wide range of frequencies, are therefore able to bring about a resonation in whatever is nearby…. essentially they shake it up, they get things moving. They not only vibrate in our ears, but in our skin, our organs, our whole being. And with a little poetic license one could say that when things vibrate, they sing……they sing their best songs. 🙂 Such is the nature of vibration.
- Furthermore, our emotions are often deeply affected too. Just as the sound of a violin may lead us into feeling sadness, exhilaration, the desire to dance, so the gongs may make us feel deep emotions too…. and yet the sounds are frequently thought of as so profound, so enveloping, so beyond melody and rhythm that the mind often struggles to pigeon-hole the experience, and instead we may find ourselves thrust into the present moment, our minds taking a back seat while the rest of our being begins to awaken…. we may feel emotions that we have not felt since childhood, casting us back to forgotten times that had a hand in our making us who we are today.
- In the presence of the gongs, it’s not uncommon for us to slip into meditation or dream states, the brain waves moving from their usual beta function (thinking, concentration, anxiety) into alpha (daydreaming, the imagination set free…), to theta (more like meditation or dreaming in sleep) and potentially to delta (as in deep sleep). In this way we may become more and more available to our deepest intuitive capacity, open for insight, relaxation, understanding, silent knowing and awakening.
- Everyone is different, so give it a try a find out what it does for you. 🙂