Trauma-informed sound experiences using gongs, singing bowls, and non-demanding listening
Created for those who need space—not pressure—to reconnect with themselves
For some nervous systems, sustained tones can feel overwhelming, disorienting, or intrusive. This is especially true for people with sound sensitivity, migraines, tinnitus, or certain trauma histories.
This does not mean the body is “resistant. "It means the body is communicating.
Trauma-informed sound work does not override that communication.
We have been taught—through images, language, and expectation—to associate healing with comfort and visual harmony. If it looks serene, if it feels gentle, if it can be captured and shared, then it must be working.
This belief confuses appearance with truth.
Real healing is not a performance. It does not arrive curated. It often begins in discomfort, confusion, or a sense of disorientation as old patterns loosen their grip.