Monday 22 February 2010

Dancing Your Way to Health and Fitness


Wu Tao is a healing dance modality that balances Life Energy. Wu Tao is proving to be a potent healing therapy suitable for many people including children and the elderly. It is currently being used successfully to treat patients with dementia and other cognitive disorders in Australia.
Wu Tao Dance brings together a number of components that create a powerful energetic change within the body/mind. The dance form is a specific set of choreographed movements set to music that stimulate and open the meridians. (channels that Qi energy flows through). Doing the dances assists in increasing the flow of Qi and unblocking areas of stagnant energy in the body. Refining and perfecting the movements of the dance helps to increase the natural flow of energy.
To encourage energy to flow freely, the dance technique is based on softness in the knees, elbows and other joints, with the movements flowing from one position to the next. The Hara (belly) is brought into awareness and engaged through deep breathing, and core strength is developed. The spine is encouraged to be fluid and flexible, the head and neck relaxed, and the lower body is grounded and balanced.
When Qi is flowing correctly there are a numerous benefits. A person will have greater amounts of physical and mental energy, resulting in increased stamina, vitality and strength. She will feel more balanced and even in her emotional responses, and difficult emotional states can be moved through with greater ease. Due to lifestyle, westerners have significant levels of stress and toxicity which causes energy to stagnant particularly in the Liver. When energy has been unblocked and is flowing normally, a person will feel positive, energised and less stressed.
Within the context of the Wu Tao dance form, there's plenty of room for self-expression. On occasion emotions will surface and these can be expressed through the dance. At other times, a person may be engaged in a particular situation or aspect of their life journey that desires release. All these things can be taken into the dance and expressed through Wu Tao.
Wu Tao uses creative visualisation to connect to the energy and quality of each dance. This frees up stuck emotions and energy in the body. The focus in Wu Tao is very much on the dance movement, which enables you to feel and express emotions as they arise. There is no need to get caught up in a story or emotional drama. Rather the expression through the dance, helps you to move back into a natural connection with life energy. Energetic changes happen more quickly when awareness stays grounded within the body and the energy is allowed to move freely without being limited or controlled by the mind.
Wu Tao Dance is an active and dynamic form of meditation. Meditation is the act of quieting the mind and allowing the stillness and peaceful nature within to arise. While the mind is focused on the creative images and the body is engaged in embodying these images, there is less room for the mind to chatter! Over time, as a person deepens into the dance process, the mind begins to relinquish its hold.
Embodying positive emotional states such as gratitude has a healing effect on the body/mind. As we have more of these kinds of thoughts that flow on through our emotional state to the body, we create connections between cells that encourage healing, a stronger immune system and increased energy. Wu Tao helps us to embody these higher thought processes. The brain then begins to rewire itself and the cells of the body start to rejuvenate and harness the life energy efficiently.
Energetically, when we have embodied the highest qualities of each of the elements, we have embodied Life, as it is meant to be lived through us. It isn't normal for us to resist change. Change is natural and normal. When we align ourselves with the correct way of flowing with the energy we begin to experience safety, trust, joy and balance in our lives. This is normal!
The Elements
The Air element (Metal in Chinese medicine), is related to the Lung and Large Intestine organs and the season of Autumn. It relates to how well we are able to deal with the past, release what no longer serves us, and open to new life and the present moment. Through the Lungs we take in life energy in the breath. As we breathe out, we release old energy that is no longer useful to our body. The Large Intestine has a similar function in that it's the organ through which we eliminate our waste. Unbalanced, the energy in this element reduces our capacity to let go and release what doesn't serve us. It can keep us looking backward into the past, grasping and holding on and manifest as symptoms of unresolved sadness, grief and depression. We cannot look forward into the future without it being shadowed by the past. Sadness tints our perception and our bodies can be closed to receiving and welcoming our greater good.
These manifestations occur at a cellular level. They can cause a whole range of physical symptoms such as breathing problems, asthma, reduced immunity and intestinal problems. However, when we embody the higher aspect of this energy, that of 'release and transformation', the body begins to reflect a whole different way of being. It is natural for things to change form just like the leaves change colour and drop from the tree in autumn. When we allow change to occur, when we flow with it even embrace it, we become one with the energy of Life in this manifestation. Our bodies and every cell in our body is then able to do what it is meant to do. It can release old and no longer useful energy (experience), and stay open and welcoming to new enlivening energy and experience. Emotionally we can maintain equilibrium while still allowing ourselves the full expression of our grief and sadness (which are the natural emotions that arise with change).
The Water element corresponds to the Kidney and Bladder organs, the season of winter and the emotion of fear. It is responsible for building and storing our energy or Qi. We unbalance this element when we waste our energy by work too hard, not getting enough sleep, rest, and leisure time, and generally not respecting our need to balance our active masculine with the more passive feminine. The water element is the deepest Yin time and like winter, it is the time to hibernate, build our energy resources, rest and dream.
Out of balance, this energy is driven, yet exhausted, running on an empty tank of fuel. It manifests fears and phobias both conscious and unconscious, which can play out as a nagging unrest with Life, lack of motivation, and control issues.
When we honour this energy in our bodies we manifest a different story. We rest when we need to. We tune into our dreams and deepest desires and feel safe enough to allow them to germinate in the fertile ground of our inner world. We take time to imagine and fantasize about what we desire to create. We are able to be still in the void of non-doing and await the spring rains of energy to awaken us. Physically our body rejuvenates itself during this period, rebuilding our structure and beliefs into forms that serve our highest Self and increase our potential.
Wood is the next element in the cycle. It relates to the season of Spring and governs the Liver and Gall Bladder organs in our body. In balance, the Wood element gives us the raw vital energy to create and express our potential and purpose into the world. In Wu Tao we use the image of the tree. We dance our roots down into the earth so that we are grounded and can be nourished by the Yin energy of Life. We grow ourselves up as the young plant into the sapling, expressing ourselves into our leaves and branches. We reach for the light of the Sun, drawing the Yang energy into our being. Through this dance we embody flow, vitality, self-expression and purpose. We also allow ourselves to simply be who we are, without using effort or force, just like the tree.
This element is particularly important for us, as in western society, as we tend to live our lives using force, effort and ambition. The nature of the Wood element teaches us that the way to grow into what we are meant to become, is to express ourselves freely and creatively, flow with vitality and be true to our Selves.
Out of balance, this element manifests in the emotions of anger, frustration, depression, irritability, competitiveness and ambition. The energy tends towards blockage and stagnation due to its sensitivity to emotional and physical toxicity. The dance frees up this energy and gives it space to find its natural flowing nature. We then feel positive, on purpose, and creative.
The Fire element follows the Wood. It corresponds to the season of summer and governs the Heart. In Chinese medicine the Heart houses the spirit, the aspect of consciousness known as Shen. If you visualise a fire, even a simple single flame, it is easy to understand why spirit is represented here. The light of our inner nature shines through our eyes, and the Fire energy is what gives rise to our passion, the ability to radiate our essence and to transform the dross of our ego mind into a true reflection of our spirit. When balanced, the Fire energy illuminates us. We know ourselves as consciousness and our naturally peaceful and joyous nature radiates from our heart.
Out of balance, the fire of our passion can be extinguished leaving us sad and depressed, even suicidal. Or it may burn out of control, destroying everything in its path by inflicting heat, consuming energy and eventually reducing us to nothing. The practice of working with this energy is to maintain equilibrium between our ego mind and spirit, with the mind serving our spirit rather than running the show and threatening our state of internal balance. Out of balance the fire can manifest as egocentricity, mania and anxiety. For all of us, when working with the fire element, we have the opportunity to shed the masks of the ego and allow our true Self to shine through.
When we dance the fire, we shed the illusions we have about ourselves, freeing up our hearts and connecting again with our inner nature and source of real passion. The burdens we carry that cover our joy, are surrendered joyously to the transforming power of the Fire and we become peaceful again. It is always wonderful to see the smiles erupting and joy shining though on people's faces as they dance the Fire dance!
The Earth element is the final element of the five. If any dance was to capture the essence of Wu Tao this is the one. The Earth is our physical home. It reflects our bodies as the home for our spirit. It is the manifestation of life force in form and as such it embodies the feminine principle completely. In all its beauty and wonder, the earth as manifestation of Life Energy invites us to rest and to give thanks for the bounty that Life brings us in all ways. In Chinese Medicine it relates to the season of Late Summer, the time of harvest. Its nature is still and receptive and it teaches us to be open and receive what Life has to offer.
The benefits of embodying this element are profound. A sense of gratitude immediately opens us to Life's gifts in whatever form they present. Gratitude allows space for deep connection through trust to emerge. Bliss and grace are found in this state. This is where we realises our oneness with Life and can open ourselves completely to her expression through us.
Out of balance, the energy of Earth manifests as worry and obsessive thought as the mind (which feel itself as separate from Life) attempts to control the inflow and outflow of energy. This imbalance shows itself in how we nourish ourselves in all areas. Physically, we may focus on food, taking in too much for our needs or not getting enough depending on our patterns around physical nourishment. Emotionally, we may give ourselves away through unhealthy nurturing of others or not offering enough love and support. Both these patterns come from a sense of deprivation of love and energy. Love is what Life Energy feels like when it flows from our heart and spirit.
The Earth dance is a dance of prayerful gratitude. As we do the simple movement sequence to each direction we surrender to the river of Life and open to receive her gifts, as they flow to us through every opportunity, challenge and manifestation of experience. It is impossible to resist anything from this place! A deep sense of peace permeates our whole being and flows into all we do. We are one with the very flow of Life Energy itself. Harmony and balance are restored to body, mind and soul.
Michelle Locke is the creator and founder of Wu Tao Dance, a unique health dance system that increases vitality, fitness and energy. To find out how you can become healthy and happy through dance visit http://wutaodance.com

Friday 19 February 2010

How to Use Music As a Health Aid in Dementia


Working in a Residential home recently a conscientious carer sought to cheer up the residents whilst she was clearing the meal table. Being of a happy disposition and with a pleasant singing voice she thought back to some of the music she remembered her mother singing around the house and launched into some familiar 'singalong' type songs.
The residents, all over the age of seventy and with varying forms of dementia, smiled and listened. Within a very short space of time one or two were seen silently mouthing the words. One brave soul began to join in, fingers were seen to be tapping on chair arms and feet started to move in rhythm. Very soon the sound of singing started to permeate beyond the Dining Room and was soon picked up by other members of staff, who after their initial surprise, joined in the choruses, much to the obvious enjoyment of their charges.
Later that evening while preparing one resident for bed the same carer found herself humming one of the tunes that she had sung previously. The client, an elderly gentleman, was usually fairly co-operative but would never speak, what little communication that took place was normally by way of minimal use of signs or nods when asked a question - and little else.
Picking up on the sound of the now familiar song, the usual air of disinterest was gradually changed into a smile of recognition and a glint of interest in otherwise lack-lustre eyes. The carer responded by singing the actual words - " ........ who, who, who's your lady friend?" An almost mischievous smile appeared and the resident wagged his finger at her in mock accusation - exactly as she had done to him earlier in the evening. The carer laughed with him and said in friendly banter, "I bet you have some tales to tell!".
It was a very simple matter to get him to bed (and sleep) in what appeared to be a very contented state of mind. He has not got to the point of 'telling any tales' yet, but when he becomes a little agitated or difficult to persuade a song works wonders.
Although the residents frequently had opportunity to listen to the radio or CD's in their room or communal lounges, when coupled with a direct communication, i.e. the carer actually singing to the individual and making it personal and importantly, interactive, this is when it can be seen that music can be very beneficial for health and well being.
The same principle applies in a home care situation. It is so easy to just switch the radio or television on in the hope that it will act as a distraction and leave the hapless individual unattended for ages with just 'something to listen to'. Whenever possible interaction and encouragement to join in leads to a response, even to the extent of a faint smile, and means we may have added just a little to the quality of life.
When caring for those with dementia it also pays to be aware of the persons reaction to different types of music or even individual pieces. Although in the majority of cases the effects are beneficial, occasionally an adverse reaction can arise, for example when a bad experience or memory is triggered and causes agitation. Another reason of course to ensure that a) a conscious effort is made to provide the 'right' type of music and, b) that there is an interactive element or at least an ongoing communication to assess the response.
Are there ways that you can implement suitable music to 'lift the spirit' or improve the quality of life of those in your care?
Music is available to everyone, but to learn more about its role in improving the well being of Dementia sufferers, how it is being put to practical use in Care Homes throughout the UK, through the Music for Health program and how you could become a part of it please visit the web site below: http://www.musicforhealth.mfbiz.com
Author: Tony Ockendon

Sunday 14 February 2010

Sing, Sing, Sing a Song! Health Benefits of Singing


What if you went to your health care provider with a specific physical complaint and he or she referred you to a music therapist who recommended twenty minutes of singing daily as the treatment? It isn't as crazy as it may sound.
Music therapists have found that singing blocks pain pathways in the brain and find it useful in treating a variety of physical and emotional conditions. In fact, recent studies reveal that just ten to twenty minutes of singing - whether you are in the car, the shower or anywhere else - has numerous health benefits, including:
- Lowering levels of the stress hormone, cortisol, by as much as 25%;
- Causing increased release of endorphins, those feel good brain chemicals;
- Diaphragmatic breathing exercises the lymphatic system;
- Slowing and regulating breathing and heart rate; and
- Oxygenating the blood.
All this has been linked to lowering blood pressure, reducing anxiety and stress, effective pain management, boosting immune function as well as improvement in mood, cognitive function and energy levels. So exactly how does belting out a tune or two accomplish all that? Researchers explain that the vibrations produced in your throat when you sing, travel to the brain causing release of those endorphins that make you relax and feel good. Singing also involves varying the tone and pitch of your voice, repeating certain melody sequences while gradually increasing and decreasing the volume of your voice, which positively impacts breathing patterns.
God encourages us to enter His presence with singing (Psalm 100:2). What if you think your singing sounds more like noise than music? That's OK. In Psalm 66:1 He also tells us to make a joyful "noise" unto Him. That tells me that even if our singing sounds like noise to us, as long as it is joyful, it sounds like the sweetest music imaginable to Him. And you can improve your health at the same time! Definitely a win-win proposition.
There are other ways to reap these benefits of singing without actually singing. A British Medical Journal published a study that showed that any repetitive type of speech, such as reciting prayers out loud or chanting, produces the same health benefits. If you absolutely cannot bring yourself to sing aloud, try speaking your prayers, praises and scripture confessions out loud. You will still experience physical, spiritual and emotional benefits.
So, do as Ephesians 5:19 says and "Be filled with the Spirit speaking to one another in psalms, hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord."
Ann Musico is a certified Biblical health coach and independent nutritional consultant. She has developed a "3-D Living Program" to assist her coaching clients in achieving vibrant health and wholeness - spirit, soul and body. Visit her website at http://www.threedimensionalvitality.com to learn more about the "3-D Living Program" as well as the e-books, products and coaching packages she offers. Subscribe for her free monthly newsletter and weekly email messages. Health is more than just the absence of illness. Let Ann show you how to create a life of passion and purpose, wholeness and harmony.

Thursday 11 February 2010

Health Benefits of Music - DocShop.com

Sing, Sing, Sing a Song. Health Benefits of Singing


What if you went to your health care provider with a specific physical complaint and he or she referred you to a music therapist who recommended twenty minutes of singing daily as the treatment? It isn't as crazy as it may sound.
Music therapists have found that singing blocks pain pathways in the brain and find it useful in treating a variety of physical and emotional conditions. In fact, recent studies reveal that just ten to twenty minutes of singing - whether you are in the car, the shower or anywhere else - has numerous health benefits, including:
- Lowering levels of the stress hormone, cortisol, by as much as 25%;
- Causing increased release of endorphins, those feel good brain chemicals;
- Diaphragmatic breathing exercises the lymphatic system;
- Slowing and regulating breathing and heart rate; and
- Oxygenating the blood.
All this has been linked to lowering blood pressure, reducing anxiety and stress, effective pain management, boosting immune function as well as improvement in mood, cognitive function and energy levels. So exactly how does belting out a tune or two accomplish all that? Researchers explain that the vibrations produced in your throat when you sing, travel to the brain causing release of those endorphins that make you relax and feel good. Singing also involves varying the tone and pitch of your voice, repeating certain melody sequences while gradually increasing and decreasing the volume of your voice, which positively impacts breathing patterns.
God encourages us to enter His presence with singing (Psalm 100:2). What if you think your singing sounds more like noise than music? That's OK. In Psalm 66:1 He also tells us to make a joyful "noise" unto Him. That tells me that even if our singing sounds like noise to us, as long as it is joyful, it sounds like the sweetest music imaginable to Him. And you can improve your health at the same time! Definitely a win-win proposition.
There are other ways to reap these benefits of singing without actually singing. A British Medical Journal published a study that showed that any repetitive type of speech, such as reciting prayers out loud or chanting, produces the same health benefits. If you absolutely cannot bring yourself to sing aloud, try speaking your prayers, praises and scripture confessions out loud. You will still experience physical, spiritual and emotional benefits.
So, do as Ephesians 5:19 says and "Be filled with the Spirit speaking to one another in psalms, hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord."
Ann Musico is a certified Biblical health coach and independent nutritional consultant. She has developed a "3-D Living Program" to assist her coaching clients in achieving vibrant health and wholeness - spirit, soul and body. Visit her website at http://www.threedimensionalvitality.comto learn more about the "3-D Living Program" as well as the e-books, products and coaching packages she offers. Subscribe for her free monthly newsletter and weekly email messages. Health is more than just the absence of illness. Let Ann show you how to create a life of passion and purpose, wholeness and harmony.

Monday 8 February 2010

Top 50 Music Quotations


Discover the phenomenonal complexity of music and reflect on the way it can positively influence your life with this sound collection of riveting quotes...
  1. "Music, the greatest good that mortals know, And all of heaven we have below."
    -- Joseph Addison
  2. "Music was my refuge. I could crawl into the space between the notes and curl my back to loneliness."
    --Maya Angelou
  3. "Music is either good or bad, and it's got to be learned. You got to have balance."
    -- Louis Armstrong
  4. "Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life."
    -- Berthold Auerbach
  5. "The aim and final end of all music should be none other than the glory of God and the refreshment of the soul."
    --Johann Sebastian Bach
  6. "Music is the mediator between the spiritual and the sensual life."
    -- Ludwig van Beethoven
  7. "Music - The one incorporeal entrance into the higher world of knowledge which comprehends mankind but which mankind cannot comprehend."
    -- Ludwig van Beethoven
  8. "Music can change the world. "
    -- Ludwig Van Beethoven
  9. "Music can name the unnameable and communicate the unknowable."
    -- Leonard Bernstein
  10. "Music has to breathe and sweat. You have to play it live. "
    -- James Brown
  11. "Music is well said to be the speech of angels."
    -- Thomas Carlyle
  12. "All music comes from God."
    -- Johnny Cash
  13. "If you learn music, you'll learn most all there is to know. "
    -- Edgar Cayce
  14. "Music is nothing separate from me. It is me... You'd have to remove the music surgically. "
    -- Ray Charles
  15. "Good music is good no matter what kind of music it is. "
    -- Miles Davis
  16. "There is no feeling, except the extremes of fear and grief, that does not find relief in music."
    -- George Eliot
  17. "You are the music while the music lasts."
    --T. S. Eliot
  18. "We need magic, and bliss, and power, myth, and celebration and religion in our lives, and music is a good way to encapsulate a lot of it. "
    -- Jerry Garcia
  19. "Music is the language of the spirit. It opens the secret of life bringing peace, abolishing strife."
    -- Kahlil Gibran
  20. "When people hear good music, it makes them homesick for something they never had and never will have."
    -- Edgar Watson Howe
  21. "Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossile to be silent."
    -- Victor Hugo
  22. "The history of a people is found in its songs."
    -- George Jellinek
  23. "Music is the vernacular of the human soul."
    -- Geoffrey Latham
  24. "It requires wisdom to understand wisdom; the music is nothing if the audience is deaf."
    -- Walter J. Lippmann
  25. "Just as certain selections of music will nourish your physical body and your emotional layer, so other musical works will bring greater health to your mind."
    -- Hal A. Lingerman
  26. "Music is the harmonious voice of creation; an echo of the invisible world."
    -- Giuseppe Mazzini
  27. "Music is a beautiful opiate, if you don't take it too seriously."
    -- Henry Miller
  28. "I started making music because I could."
    -- Alanis Morissette
  29. "Music helps you find the truths you must bring into the rest of your life. "
    -- Alanis Morissette
  30. "Music is spiritual. The music business is not. "
    -- Van Morrison
  31. "Like everything else in nature, music is a becoming, and it becomes its full self, when its sounds and laws are used by intelligent man for the production of harmony, and so made the vehicle of emotion and thought."
    -- Theodore Mungers
  32. "Without music life would be a mistake."
    -- Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
  33. "In music the passions enjoy themselves."
    -- Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
  34. "Music is your own experience, your own thoughts, your wisdom. If you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn. They teach you there's a boundary line to music. But, man, there's no boundary line to art."
    -- Charlie Parker
  35. "Music should be something that makes you gotta move, inside or outside. "
    -- Elvis Presley
  36. "It's the music that kept us all intact, kept us from going crazy. "
    -- Lou Reed
  37. "The music business was not safe, but it was FUN. It was like falling in love with a woman you know is bad for you, but you love every minute with her, anyway."
    -- Lionel Richie
  38. "Music should never be harmless."
    -- Robbie Robertson
  39. "Give me a laundry list and I'll set it to music."
    -- Gioacchino Antonio Rossini
  40. "All music is important if it comes from the heart. "
    -- Carlos Santana
  41. "Music is the key to the female heart."
    -- Johann G. Seume
  42. "The best music... is essentially there to provide you something to face the world with. "
    -- Bruce Springsteen
  43. "All I try to do is write music that feels meaningful to me, that has commitment and passion behind it."
    -- Bruce Springsteen
  44. "In music one must think with the heart and feel with the brain."
    --George Szell
  45. "When I hear music, I fear no danger. I am invulnerable. I see no foe. I am related to the earliest times, and to the latest."
    -- Henry David Thoreau
  46. "For heights and depths no words can reach, music is the soul's own speech."
    --Unknown
  47. "Most of us go to our grave with our music still inside of us."
    --Unknown
  48. "I believe in the power of music. To me, it isn't just a fad. This is a positive thing."
    -- Eddie Vedder
  49. "Music at its essence is what gives us memories. "
    -- Stevie Wonder
  50. "There's a basic rule which runs through all kinds of music, kind of an unwritten rule. I don't know what it is. But I've got it."
    -- Ron Wood
Resource Box - © Danielle Hollister (2004) is the Publisher of BellaOnline Quotations Zine - A free newsletter for quote lovers featuring more than 10,000 quotations in dozens of categories like - love, friendship, children, inspiration, success, wisdom, family, life, and many more. Read it online at -http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art8364.asp

Saturday 6 February 2010

Music is a Remedy For Whatever Ails You


It is a well-known fact that listening to music has a positive affect on our brain waves and physiology. Whether we need to slow down or speed up, music can help us go where we need to go. Music therapy is used for pain management, to promote healing, reduce stress, and to stimulate brain activity. Brainwaves can affect breathing and heart rate.

Music has been shown to reduce blood pressure and to alleviate depression. Both of these conditions can be life threatening and if something as simple as listening to music can help, it should be part of our healthy lifestyle.

A little relaxation and pleasure can actually protect us from making ourselves physically sick from stress, which is a very real possibility.

Music can benefit our state of mind even after we stop listening to it, and unlike drugs, music is completely safe. (Safe as long as we don't blast it too loud, which has the total opposite affect, and can damage our hearing). Even dental offices are piping in music. This has the benefit of giving people who are in a state of anxiety, something else to focus on.

Dancing to music is a much more natural and pleasant way to help lose weight and to promote circulation than boring gym machines or repetitive exercises. Having said that, music can also make the gym or exercising more pleasant. Whether you like rock and roll, classical, jazz, or gospel music, and listen in the car, at home, or at work, there are many ways we can benefit from hearing music in the background.
So listen up!

Mastering a Musical Instrument For Your Health


Are you into music? Have you been thinking to learn about musical instrument? If yes then you must start right away. There are many advantages associated with learning to play the different kinds of musical instrument. Not only physical but they give you a sense of relaxation and also attract you emotionally. At any age you can learn to play musical instruments and fulfill your dreams of playing in a band. It's really never too late.

It has been research that playing musical instruments is very healthy for your brain cells. It has also been noted that little kids who can do well with music can really perform better in school relative to other kids. They would have a better IQ level and would have better skills of reading their books. For older people and adults musical instruments keep their minds awake and they are more energetic with sharper memory for long.

Most people refer to learning to play music as learning a second language. This is because they both are equally challenging for the learner. One of the very traits that a person learns through music is that he becomes disciplined in every aspect of his life. This is due to the fact that discipline is needed in order to learn the various kinds of instruments. If you lack discipline then you are more likely to fail in your goal.

Music relaxes mind and body and it can really help in lowering your stress. When you play the instrument you would be far more relaxed than what you felt just listening to it. You can feel a little frustrated in the beginning because you would want to learn it in a day. But this is not the case learning needs some time and great commitment. Stay focused and you would get to play the key you want. Once you are successful you would feel a great sense of achievement which can prove to be very healthy for your own confidence.

You can have real fun once you become master of the musical instrument. There are many types of instruments that have been developed. Some are played manually while some run on electric. It depends on your personal choice which one you want to go for. Then start taking classes and be regular in it otherwise you would not be able to learn.

Thomas is new to writing articles, and hopes that you enjoyed his work. You can read more of his work dealing with musical instruments about a french horn for sale which includes information on the used french horn for sale.