top of page
  • soundlife

Crystal and Himalayan Sound Bowls

Updated: Mar 18, 2019



Mitchell Gaynor, MD, an oncologist and assistant clinical professor at Cornell University’s Weill Medical College in New York, used singing bowls with his cancer patients. Gaynor saw sound as part of a broader trend toward the humanization of medicine in which the whole person, not just the part that’s broken, is addressed.

"I believe that sound can play a role in virtually any medical disorder, since it redresses imbalances on every level of physiologic functioning, Good for both the mind and the body, it has been shown to help lift depression, clear sinuses and help cancer patients recover more quickly from chemotherapy."



15 views1 comment

Recent Posts

See All

Sound and Dementia

From the Bright water Centre in Australia Dr. Caroline Bulsara and Silke Steuxner, registered Nurse and accredited sound therapist found early indicators show that Singing Bowl therapy is relatively

bottom of page