Nicole Lloyd
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7 ways you can use your Koshi chimes!

3/5/2014

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So you have just received your beautiful Koshi Chimes and now you are wondering where to hang them and what you can do with them!  Here are some of the ways I have used my chimes and ways I have heard other people using theirs over the years...

  1. People often ask where to hang their chimes.  So far I have hung mine in some of the doorways in my house using one of those hooks that have a sticker on the back (you can buy from supermarket).  Whenever I go through the doorway I dingle the chimes sprinkling myself with their magic.  My baby LOVES this of course so now every time we go under the doorways she looks up and  points and grunts and insists I play them!  She always smiles and wants to play them herself.  I let her touch them gently but being careful she doesn't grab them and pull them down!  
  2. Another place people have been hanging them is inside next to a window where a breeze gently blows through.  Someone told me that this helps them to fall asleep at night.  Anywhere undercover outside is perfect too...on a verandah, patio area. If you can hear them tingling and they're not getting wet it is a perfect place for them.  If you do want to hang them outside make sure you varnish them to protect the wood from rotting away.
  3. If you have a baby hanging a chime above her in the car works really well to help soothe them, distract them and to give them something beautiful to listen to while you are driving.  I know that my babies never liked the car very much and these chimes worked a treat for my last baby!  (Make sure the chimes are tied securely so that they won't fall on the baby!!!)
  4. Another place to hang them if you have a baby is on their pram!  It could  become "the familiar sound" that triggers sleep time which you can then use as a tool when they need a nap or YOU need them to nap! 
  5. If you have young children a lovely ritual to do with them before going to sleep at nighttime is ask them "What are you grateful for today?".  Or, "What was the best part of your day?".  Or, "What would you like to do in your life one day?". Then they say what they loved or share one of their dreams and you play the koshi chimes around their little bodies. My kids think the chimes sound like fairies making their wishes come true or just listening to what they had to say. This ritual really is a very nurturing way to end the day...and you will find that your children will ask you to do this very night because they KNOW what is good for them!!
  6. If you give massages or facilitate relaxation or meditation sessions a beautiful way to end the session is by playing these chimes around people's bodies.  Once again...the sound is nurturing and relaxing and seems to be the perfect way to end any "session".  You could also invite your client/s to think about what they want to bring into their lives at the moment while you play the chimes.  Sound magnifies your thoughts so thinking about what you WANT is important when listening to quality sounds such as these chimes...they are powerful manifesting tools!
  7. If you are a midwife or doula supporting a woman during labour you could see if she enjoys hearing the chimes in between contractions...during the quiet, relaxing time.   

There you go!  Some quick and simple ways to use your chimes!  I hope this helps in some way.  Please share with me where you have chosen to hang your chimes and how you have used them in your life!

Listen to Koshi Chimes
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Creating a Relationship with Music

5/1/2013

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I recently bought a new CD for my Birthday present to me…I listened to a few of the songs and wondered if it was worth spending that $32.  I didn’t FEEL anything.

I realised that this isn’t anything new.  It has always taken time for a new piece of music to “grow on me”. Why is this?

Well, I believe that we create a relationship with music just as we do with people.  When you meet someone for the very first time you look, listen, feel into them, work out whether or not you resonate with each other…then decided whether or not you want to pursue the relationship any further.  From here you may call the person again, see them again, talk, go out..basically get to know each other on a deeper level each time.

It is the same with hearing a piece of music for the first time.  You may listen to it in the car, as you go for a walk, you may dance to it with your lover, you may use it to soothe your baby to sleep and the list could go on and on.  In both situations you will be deepening the relationship and creating new memories connected to the music or person each time.

Then, in twenty years time when you bump into the person or now friend again, your whole being remembers what you had together as if it happened yesturday.  This is the same as if you hear that piece of music again…the memories you created together come flooding back and you experience the same feelings as what you did twenty years earlier.

For example, the other day I was showing my kids who Kylie Minogue is on utube and I heard “I Should Be So Lucky” for the first time in 20 + years!  In those days (I find it hard to admit) I went through a Kylie Minogue phase, so hearing this music again bought tears to my eyes… It bought me straight back into my family home with those young teenager feelings… No wonder elderly people light up when they hear songs they used to dance to with their friends and lovers in the “good old days”.  Music takes us straight back.

So remember this as you sing or listen to the same song over and over and over again as you put your baby to sleep or keep your toddler happy in the car… One day you will hear this music again and all the lovely memories and feelings will come flooding back…and you may also shed a few tears.



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A Musical “Routine"

23/10/2011

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Types of Routines
I have always cringed when people used to ask me after I’d had a baby, “Have you found a routine yet?”  I used to wonder, “Are you talking about a routine that I have imposed on the baby or a natural routine where I am following the baby’s rhythm?”  Hmm… I was never one for rigid bedtime or feeding routines for a number of reasons but mainly because it just didn’t feel right.  I believe and I have experienced for myself four times now that baby’s find their own natural rhythm just like any baby animal does.  I learnt to let go and trust that my babies would let me know when they were hungry or tired and as they let me know I learnt to meet their needs quickly and from a loving space.  Every family finds their own way through parenting and uses “routine” in different ways to different degrees.  Whatever works for both parents and baby is the best.  By the way, you know if it is best for baby  if the s/he is content, peaceful, happy most of the time.  If the baby is crying it is an indication that you, the parent needs to try something different or the baby is experiencing physical discomfort.

Musical Magic!

So how does music fit into all of this?  Like I said, I never forced my kids to go to sleep or feed at certain times or play happily on their tummies for 20 mins a day…but I did use music as a tool to help them move into sleep or stay playing for longer periods so I could make dinner or wash the dishes.  Every time they heard the “sleep” music they would associate this with mummy, boobies, warm, cozy, rocking, feeling relaxed…sleep!   Whenever we did a nappy change I sang “Der Glumph went the little green frog one day” and they would smile and most importantly let me change their nappy without screaming their head off!.  When they were playing on the mat I would put on “Mozart for Babies” by Don Campbell and they would play contently for a much longer period than if there was no music.  The best example was when my last daughter screamed in the car I would put on her “sleeping” music and she would stop crying immediately and sometimes fall asleep!  I wasn’t holding her and she couldn’t see me but the familiar music was enough to trigger those feelings of being safe and secure and sleepy…and she would settle down.

The “Music Method”

ANYONE can use music in this way as a tool to assist in finding that natural rhythm in your lives together.  This “method” doesn’t involve crying babies, feelings of guilt or stress when babies aren’t doing what you think they “should” be doing…all it involves is playing a piece of music or singing a song as you flow through your daily activities.  It’s free, it’s nurturing, it makes YOU feel good and is a way of building a connected loving relationship with your child.

However you choose to do the “routine” thing in your family, music will assist you and you baby to move through your daily lives with more grace and ease.

Types of Music

Here are some more ideas of when you can use music to assist with routines:

Bath music, go to sleep music, car music, nappy change music, playing music, cleaning-up music (older kids), feeding music.

I’d love to hear when you have used music in your families and how it has served you.






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Songs From the Heart

17/10/2011

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PictureMe, my Dad and my baby sister
My Dad’s Heart Songs
My Dad made up a song for me when I was three called “The Mushroom Song” after we went picking mushrooms in someone’s cow paddock in the country.  This song is so meaningful to me not because of the lyrics or the tune but because I know that my Dad chose to spend that moment in time thinking about me.  Because of this those moments have been captured in a song that speaks to my heart every time I have heard him sing it to me…  I know that even when I am 80 this song will bring tears to my eyes and remind me of the soft, caring, loving part of my Dad.


My Heart Songs
I have made up several songs for my babies…some funny and some to soothe them to sleep… My two year old will demand that I sing her special song as I feed her to sleep every time.  When I sing the funny song called “Boobies are the best” I have to sing it several times of course.  I know that these songs are already meaningful to her and if I continue to sing them, they will stay in her heart forever.

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My little Kira having her Boobies
Heart Songs in Uganda
A similar story about how a song has the power to resonate feelings of love for a lifetime is from Don Campbell’s book Mozart Effect for Children.  He writes about a tribe in Uganda where a woman when first “conceives” of the idea of having a baby with a particular father in mind goes off by herself and listens for the song of the child.  Once she has heard the song she returns to the tribe and teaches the song to her lover so they can sing it together as they make love.  They invite the child to join them.  After the child is conceived, the mother sings it to the baby in her womb, then she teaches it to the old women and midwives of the village so that throughout the labour and at the miraculous moment of birth, the child is greeted with its song.  After the birth all the villagers learn the song of their new member and sing it to the child when it falls or hurts itself.  It is sung in times of triumph and in ritual and initiations.  The song can become part of the marriage ceremony when the child is grown, and at the end of life, his or her loved ones will gather around the deathbed and sing this song for the last time.

Create Your Own Heart Song
I LOVE this story and will definitely do this is I ever choose to bring another baby into the world (did I say that?). In the meantime I would love to support other women in creating their own heart songs or “Family Lullabies” or even songs about a moment in time they experienced together as in my “Mushroom Song”.   These songs are not only sacred but also an effective tool that can be used to soothe and reassure your child when they are tired, when they hurt themselves, when they feel insecure and when YOU feel you need to connect with them again. Singing a funny song you have made up is also a FUN thing to do to lighten up your family when things start to get stressful!  I have done this many times!

Anyone can do this by the way whether you believe you are musical or not!   If you feel drawn to creating a Family Lullaby before conception to bring your baby to you, during pregnancy or after your child has been born Soundbirth will assist you in this process.  Together we can create the song that will stay in your hearts forever!

I will leave you now with a few songs I made up recently.  

Ruby's Lullaby 
Boobies are the Best!
The Boobie Blues

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Sing Your Baby to You

6/2/2011

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PictureNicole singing to Ruby
SoundBirth is about “Singing Your Baby to You” before, during and after the birth on ALL levels – physical, mental, emotional and spiritual.

I believe that the most important part of our job as a Mother is to build and maintain an emotional connection with your child. The more connected or “attached” you are the more you are able to “read” and meet the everchanging needs of your growing child. This leads to a happy and content baby and a fulfilling mothering experience.

Dr Sears describes this connection beautifully when he writes,


Attachment means that a mother and baby are in harmony with each other. Being in harmony with your baby is one of the most fulfilling feelings a mother can ever hope to have. Watch a mother and baby who are attached (in harmony) with each other. When the baby gives a cue, such as crying or facial expressions, signifying a need, the mother, because she is open to the baby’s cues, responds.
Dr Sears
Using music and sound during pregnancy, birth and on your parenting journey are powerful tools to use to build the bond that both you and your baby need.

Sing Your Baby to You During Pregnancy


Dr Tomatis found in his research about sound and babies in utero that they can hear their mothers voice from four and a half months before they are born. Singing combined with being aware that your baby can hear you is a beautiful way to connect during pregnancy. You can sing in the shower, sing in the car, sing in the kitchen and sing in the garden. The more you sing the better you feel and the more familiar your voice will become to your baby. Making up your own words about how you feel towards your baby or about the dreams you have after s/he is born can make the song you sing even more powerful and connecting. It may even bring tears of joy to your eyes as you sing. The song you make up may also be a great sound tool you will use to connect for many years to come.

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Nicole pregnant with Ruby. Just for Kids Photography
Sing Your Baby to You During Labour

Singing or toning during labour assists to bring your baby from his/her cozy little space inside you into your loving arms. There are many benefits of toning during labour such as giving more oxygen to you and baby as you take fuller breaths; the vibration of the sound relaxes and energises you; the sound of your voice combined with the sound of the crystal bowl help you to focus and put you in the “zone”; and it helps you to express and release pain. All of these assist you in riding the waves of your contractions, staying present and strong so you can birth your baby the way your body already knows how.


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Nicole toning during labour
Sing Your Baby to You After the Birth

You have birthed your baby. The umbilical cord is cut. Now s/he is in your arms sometimes content and other times crying and unsettled. After trying to meet all of his/her needs (feeding, changing, making them comfortable etc) I have found that the next best cure for an unsettled baby is movement and hearing the familiar sound of your voice. 

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Nicole after Ruby was born
Nothing is as pleasingly stimulating to your baby’s brand new ears and growing neuronal network as your own voice – no matter what your friends and relatives think of it! 
Don Campbell, The Mozart Effect for Children
So sing your “Heart Song” or another song you may have sung during pregnancy. You could also make up a chant as you pace with your baby or feed your baby. Or choose gentle music that you can sing along with. I have found that putting on the same music track every time I was trying to settle my baby and singing along too helped as the baby soon recognised the song and connected it to being settled or sleeping. I also used the same song in the car when baby was crying or trying to sleep. It has now become their special song that brings me straight back to when they were a baby.

Remember that YOUR VOICE is the most soothing, powerful, beautiful, simple and nurturing way to connect with your child no matter how young or old they are. Singing will create an invisible cord of connection between your souls that will last forever!

SING SING SING!


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    Author

    Nicole Lloyd B(Mus) is a mother of four girls and creator of SoundBirth. Here she shares her experiences using sound before, during and after the birth and anything else about sound or birth that she feels like writing about!

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