30/04/2026
There is a difference between a soundbath that feels nice, and one that actually creates change. Or soundbaths that feel intense, and overwhelming, compared to ones that feel transformational, and deeply restorative.
Over the years, I've had already qualified sound healing students some to me for training because they didn't feel confident, or risk aware enough from the training they'd done. This is where my advanced practitioner training was born from.
Sadly I myself have witnessed sessions where participants are barely acknowledged, let alone given information of what the soundbath will entail, how it will flow, and how the sounds, vibrations, and frequencies will impact the nervous system, the physical, mental and emotional bodies. How to soften into the experience and how to bring yourself back into the moment if your mind won't stop chattering. Often held with poor technique, and unsafe practices.
What many people are not taught is this, that a big part of the work is in how the space is held. It's not just how the instruments are played.
The beginning of a session shapes everything. How safe people feel. Whether their nervous system can actually soften to the experience. Whether they are guided into the experience, or left trying to navigate it alone.
Then comes the pacing, the awareness, and the ability to read the room and respond, rather than simply follow a structure. And most importantly, there is the ending.
This is the space where everything integrates. The silence that allows the body to absorb what has just moved. This is where transformation happens. Not because of the instruments alone, but because of the container they are held within.
This is the difference between simply playing sound & facilitating something that truly has the potential for allowing a deep, transformational experience.
If you are already a practitioner, you will feel this. And if you are just beginning, this is the level to grow into.
If you feel called to hold spaces like this, you can explore my trainings through the link in my bio.