
I was sitting in a hotel lobby in the Boston area recently when an embodiment of healing energy walked in. Although my companions didn’t know who he was, they immediately sensed the same light and power emanating from this figure that millions have experienced.
Yo-Yo Ma is a healer who happens to be a musician. He is currently the most famous cellist in the world. If you’ve every seen as well as heard him perform, you will know what I mean about his healing energy.
You don’t have to know anything about classical music to appreciate Ma’s gifts. He exudes such passion and joy with his playing that you simply feel better as you watch and listen.
One of the healing gifts least appreciated by the traditional medical world is the power of the arts. Stories of the impact of music and art therapy in hospitals, hospices, nursing homes, and shelters for abused women and children abound. Yet the tendency is to tell these stories as anecdotes – as if they’re simply quaint occurrences.
Artistic expression, both by performers and listeners, involves the movement of energy. Illness represents toxic energy. The arts can dilute some of this poison by the way they introduce Love’s energy into the patient’s presence. The arrival of beauty counteracts the ugliness of illness.
The arts are also healing for caregivers. Great caregivers always appreciate the power of the arts because they know what the arts do for them.
How do you engage the arts in your life?…
Artistic expression, both by performers and listeners, involves the
movement of energy. Illness represents toxic energy. The arts can
dilute some of this poison by the way they introduce Love’s energy into the patient’s presence. The arrival of beauty counteracts the ugliness of illness.
-Erie Chapman
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