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Purple Sky

People are increasingly looking to the arts as a manner to enjoy inner calm and to find meaning in the world around us.  We often experience healing through this process, thus the description of Healing Arts.  This is not “curative” healing that I speak of, rather finding balance in all aspects of our humanness.  Ease, joy, and gratitude comes to mind when I think of what healing means to me.  This certainly may be different for you.

The beauty found in a Purple Sky reminds me of the ease, joy, and gratitude that I experience while in a balanced state.  It is my hope that all may find this space for themselves so that peace may become a reality.  Purple Sky Healing Arts LLC offers that opportunity through private and group sessions as well as events to nurture your soul.

Purple Sky Healing Arts LLC is owned and operated by Robin Burk, Therapeutic Musician and Sound Practitioner.

Private & Group Sessions

Offering private and group sessions for unique experiences of relaxation and renewal through music and sound.

Promoting Healing Arts

Presenting a variety of Healing Arts and Music events in the greater Chattanooga area for all to enjoy.

 

 

Therapeutic Sound

Various Sound Healing trainings including a Healing Sounds Intensive with Jonathan Goldman and Gong Master training with Don Conreaux.  Currently training for certification through Globe Sound Healing Institute in San Francisco, CA.

Therapeutic Music

I am a Certified Music Practitioner, trained through the Music for Healing and Transition Program to provide live therapeutic music at the bedside of the ill and dying.  My study concentration was on stress relief and deep rest as well as the special needs of those in final hours of life.

Reiki

I am a Level 3 Reiki practitioner, which the Master/Teacher in the Usui tradition.  Adding Reiki to a sound session can deepen the experience and provide the benefits of Reiki energies.  I also have Reiki only sessions available.

 

Therapeutic Music

“The magic of “Musical Medicine” will come into its own. The application of such healing potencies will not be limited just to man’s body and mind. It will be an agency for building and healing his soul as well.”
Corinne Heline

The therapeutic uses of music and sound have been widely researched throughout history.  Although this may sound like a New Age principle, it dates back to the time of Pythagoras and before.  Modern science has brought us Cymatics – the study of visible sound and vibrations.  There is also much research into the frequencies of particular musical notes.   Conventional vibrational medicine often takes a diagnostic approach which assists medical professionals through use of EKG, X-ray, CAT Scan and MRI.  Its uses can also be found in pain management such as TENS and laser therapy.  Traditional vibrational medicine takes these sames principles with a holistic approach using acupuncture, homeopathic and herbal remedies, a variety of bodywork modalities (including Tai Chi), and of course music.

“It has been found that musical vibrations make their impact upon the entire body, being picked up by the nerves, spinal column, and even by the bones. This is why people who are deaf can react to music. It has also been demonstrated that music affects the pulse, respiration, and blood pressure; but it’s deepest effects, and those from which most of it’s curative properties are derived, are mental and emotional.”
Doren Antrim (Music Is Medicine)

How does this relate to music?  As we listen to the music and sounds that surround us, it becomes more clear how these vibrations impact our daily lives.  As I think about a fire alarm going off, I can sense my body tensing and my heart rate going up.  As I think about the sounds of crickets or the ocean surf, I immediately become soothed.  The music played at your local gym is another good example.  It is no coincidence that the BPM is roughly the same as the average adult’s target heart rate for activity.  Consider how a mother instinctually sings lullabies to care for and soothe her baby.  My approach to therapeutic music is by creating a soothing environment using brainwave entrainment.

I completed training as a Therapeutic Musician in 2013 through the Music for Healing and Transition Program with my internship set to begin mid 2014.  As a Certified Music Practitioner Intern, I am trained to provide live therapeutic music at the bedside of the ill and dying.  Therapeutic Musicians differ from Music therapists.  First, therapeutic musicians have completed a certificate program and receive certification through the National Standards Board for Therapeutic Musicians while music therapists receive a degree through an accredited college or university.  Both have a similar approach to using receptive music at the bedside, however Music Therapists also work directly with patients to address specific outcomes as prescribed by a physician.  A therapeutic musician may play a harp at the bedside to soothe a patient while a music therapist may do the same as well as allow the patient to play the harp in an effort to reach therapeutic goals such as muscle coordination.

After completion of internships and certification, I will begin to provide live therapeutic music in the Chattanooga area.  My concentration is on stress relief and deep rest as well as the special needs of those in final hours of life.

Therapeutic Sound

“The highest goal of music is to connect one’s soul to their Diving Nature, not entertainment”
Pythagoras

Therapeutic benefits go beyond what we think of in terms of music, this is where Therapeutic Sound is utilized.  I like to describe this as applied sound in comparison to the listening experience of music.  It is through these techniques that the body takes in vibration.  Emphasis is placed on pure tones and harmonic relationship of musical notes rather than melody as in a song.

Therapeutic sound is a also of interest to me and I have completed two sound healing courses to learn the basics of applied sound.  I attend Jonathan Goldman’s Healing Sound Intensive in July 2014.  This experience opened up many new sound tools to use in my work as well as deepened my own practice.  I use a variety of instruments to approach therapeutic sound that best fits the client.  Sessions may include a variety of stringed instruments, native and world flutes, drums, rattles, handpan, metal tongue drums, kalimba, chimes, bells, gongs, tuning forks and tubes.  I most often utilize a beautifully matched diatonic set of contemporary Himalayan singing bowls as well as deep tone antique bowls.

I currently offer Therapeutic Sound sessions as well as Vibroacoustic Therapy.

Therapeutic Benefit

These two approaches, music and sound, can be used in a variety of modalities for a wide range of benefits.  Below is a list of the most common therapeutic offerings that I provide for clients.

  • Stress Relief & Relaxation
  • Calming the mind, body, and spirit
  • Emotional Release – Letting Go
  • Relieving tension and blockages
  • Brainwave entrainment for mental clarity, creativity enhancement, and deep rest
  • Meditation – beginning practice or to deepen experience
  • Centering/Mindfulness
  • Heart Opening
  • Chakra balancing
  • Development of inner harmony

 

“The prime objective of all Initiatory music in the Temples of Antiquity was to bring about physical purification and renewal, mental stimulation and alertness, spiritual exhilaration and Illumination.”    
St. Ambrose