Music is Powerful Medicine: Babies and Parents Know Why: with Birth Expert Penny Simkin

Ginger Garner MPT, ATC, PYT, ERYT500

Ginger Garner, singing to her days old son

Music is Powerful Medicine

Parents’ Singing to Fetus and Newborn Enhances Their Well-being, Parent-Infant Attachment, & Soothability: Part One

I’ve said for many years now that I am a mother’s biggest fan.  Birth and mothering are not just dear to my heart – they determine the future of our world. I am a mother of three boys, and as an enthusiastic supporter of mother-centered birth, I was happy to see this article by birth veteran and expert, physical therapist Penny Simkin.

Here’s an excerpt:

Regular contributor Penny Simkin shares her experiences with parents who sing to their baby in utero and then continue after birth and looks at what the research says about this practice in this two part blog piece.  Part two will run on Thursday. Join me in reading about some unique situations that Penny shares as she explores this opportunity for parents to bond with their unborn child.  - Sharon Muza, Science & Sensibility Community Manager.

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People have sung to their babies forever. Every culture has lullabies and children’s songs that are passed down through the generations. New ones are written and shared and the custom goes on –a rich part of the fabric of human civilization. These songs are designed to relax babies, calm their fears, or entertain and amuse them throughout childhood. As we have learned more about the life and capabilities of the fetus, we have realized that the fetus can hear clearly for months before birth, and also can discriminate sounds and develop preferences for some sounds over others. Furthermore, at birth, newborns respond to familiar sounds by becoming calm and orienting toward the source of the sound, and even indicate their preferences for familiar voices and words over the unfamiliar.

Read the full post from Science & Sensibility: A Research Blog About Healthy Pregnancy, Birth & Beyond

from Lamaze International
Want to learn more about the how music and sound is powerful medicine? I teach a medical continuing education course (3 CE’s): Music and Sound as Medicine

An Evening of Inspiring Live Jazz with Ginger Garner

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Join Ginger as she performs in her 3rd Annual Seaside Arts Council evening of live jazz.  Joined by veteran jazz musicians that span six decades of American jazz and blues history, Ginger is looking forward to performing a soul-swooning array of tunes for jazz lovers.

Glen Pointe, a veteran jazz and blues drummer and the master member of Ginger’s crew, has played with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins and alongside jazz greats like Ella Fitzgerald.  The fresh sounds of classically trained bassist George Knott will join the band this year, hailing from the Atomic Rhythm All-Stars, a big-band jazz group based in the Raleigh area. Tony Ray, a veteran pianist who, like Glen Pointe, has toured the US in previous bands longer than Ginger has been alive, will take up his usual spot at the ivories to accompany Ginger on a unique blend of songs for this year’s performance. Chris McNally will join them all on sax again this year, while Jeff Jablonski, musician and sound engineer, will be mixing it up from the sound board at the back of the room.

Come on out and support local live music and jazz in the Eastern NC area.

Tickets are available now through the Seaside Arts Council and the Swansboro Town Hall.
For more information and to purchase tickets.

$30 per person includes heavy hors d’oeuvres
Cash bar will be located on site as well
Location: Swansboro Town Hall Annex
Time: 6 pm doors open

Tickets: Tickets are available at the Swansboro Area Chamber of Commerce and Emerald Isle Town Hall. Tickets may also be available at the door shortly before an event, if it’s not sold out.

Secrets for Easing Labor Pain

Secrets for Easing Labor Pain

Ginger, just after giving birth to her second son September 12, 2007

Studies have, for a long time, shown that deep breathing, mental imagery, deep massage or acupressure, and the presence of a constant companion or coach during labor can ease labor pains, making the miracle of birth more, well, enjoyable.

During the birth of all three of my sons, all three vastly different, I used all of these methods for pain management during labor. But my secret for pain management was… music.

Music has the power to take everyday moments in life and make them sacred. Music allows your mind to retrieve and feel with the same intensity experiences that happened two months or even two decades ago. Music harnesses tremendous power. But how can it help with labor pains?

 

The Magic Pain Soother

Perinatal Nursing supports that music can be an effective means for managing both pain and stress during labor. Using music during childbirth, in a 2000 study, shows the planned use of music by mothers during labor has a significant effect on their perception of pain (Browning 2000).

Another second study in 2000 revealed perinatal physicians, nurses, and caregivers became more relaxed, slowed their activities, and demonstrated increased respect for laboring mothers when music was used (Difranco 1998). Music was also found in a (Wiand 1997) study, when combined with progressive relaxation, to be more effective in inducing relaxation in laboring mothers.

In the months before each of my sons were born, I started creating my “Birth Soundtrack.” When the big day came, wafting from my labor room like a sweet breeze, were sounds of “designer music” from my birth playlist.

Sounds that both soothed and motivated me to work diligently and gracefully toward delivering my sons into this world. To make my playlists, I scoured my music library and uploaded artists sounding out from across centuries of music… from Mozart’s Serenade for Winds to Sam Cooke’s That’s Where It’s At.

 

What is Designer Music?

In the field of music therapy, “designer music” is defined as music that is selected to have a specific effect on the listener. It is proven more effective than listening to just any music. I use music and sound as therapy as an educator in integrative medicine and physical therapy. I craft and use designer music in private and group therapy sessions, and in community-based classes which integrate yoga and Pilates for therapeutic benefit. As a musician, sometimes I even use my voice as therapy, speaking and singing for therapeutic benefit during sessions.

But guess what? You don’t need special training. With a few tips listed below, you can design your own music, too.

 

Designing Your Birth Soundtrack

Here are a few guidelines for expectant mothers and other patients who want to use music for pain or stress relief:

Certain instruments and genres of music are better suited to promote relaxation and a sense of well being.

The ancient medical systems of Ayurveda and Chinese Medicine have identified instruments which are best suited to different emotional states and physical needs. However, experts in the field of music therapy agree that the most important aspect of using music as medicine is pleasing the ear of the listener.

Make a playlist

Make a playlist for your smart phone or mp3 player, or download music onto a USB memory stick that you can plug into your car.

  • Create a minimum of 8 hours of continuous music. If you have a long labor (my first one was 36 hours), you’ll need more than just a few hours of music to get you through.
  • Choose relaxing as well as motivating music which inspires you and develops your sense of connection and bonding with your unborn child.
  • Order your music with the stages of labor, or create separate playlists for each stage. First stage can be much longer but less intense than second stage labor. Second stage labor will bring with it different requirements. During transition and delivery you may opt for silence so you can hear those first sounds from your baby. Or, you may opt to have quiet, contemplative music playing which motivates you to go the distance.
  • Avoid rock or other heavy music which emphasizes drums or electric instruments like guitar or synthesized piano. These genres have been proven to elevate vital signs and cause feelings of anger, hostility, and despair.

Name Your Playlist(s).

You may choose to create different playlists. With each birth, I get increasingly more “complex” and detailed with my playlists. By the third birth I had 4 different playlists:

  • Baby Breathing: One for inspiration and meditation during early labor
  • Baby Labor: One for motivation and “hard-core” meditation to work through hard labor
  • Baby Thanks: For postpartum bliss (I used that one for years after giving birth)Consider a post-partum playlist for after delivery and when you return home. I made a separate playlist for after delivery. I played it during the entire stay of my post-partum in the hospital. (The nurses and my midwife loved it. The staff told me they made special trips to my room just to hang out and chill to the cool music).
  • Baby Dance: Literally, this one expressed the sheer joy I felt after giving birth, and I did use it do dance with all my sons after each of them were born. I also made one for a friend for post-partum healing and called it “Baby Hopes & Dreams.”

Buy the appropriate sound/stereo set up.

These days this can mean just carrying your smartphone to the birth facility. Relying on just your smartphone or iPad speakers may not be enough to fill the space of your labor room. Since we wanted the best sound, we bought a tiny set of speakers for $30 or so, to connect to (at the time) our iPod. Since I was “busy” during labor, my husband took care of music setup. In fact, it was the first thing he did when we got settled into our room. Of course, if you are home birther, no transport is necessary, just plug in and play!

I used music throughout the entire labor. When it came time to delivery, my husband made sure (we pre-planned this) that a continuous play of meditative, calm solo piano music flowed low and quiet so I could hear my baby’s first cries. I can attest that in my first birth the music helped to calm and attune everyone including the medical staff. During my last birth, my son was born to the soothing sounds of Native American music, part of my heritage.

 

If You Don’t Prefer Music, No Worries

If you prefer silence during labor music and sound therapy can still help you manage pain. Nada Yoga, or the yoga of sound, teaches chanting and vocal toning as a way to ease pain and suffering.

Sighing the sound “mmm” with the mouth closed on your exhale, during contractions, has been found to be balancing, harmonizing, and integrating to the nervous system: lowering blood pressure, heart rate, and assisting in pain relief. In yoga, it is the most subtle and most powerful of toning sounds.

 

Music Brings Consciousness Forward

Anecdotally, music was just as important to me as having a companion at my side. Although I would not trade my incredible midwife, husband (who acted as coach/doula), and nursing staff for anything, music made my birth experiences more memorable, enjoyable, and now years later – music has created a permanent recall of those emotions I felt right after giving birth. It allows me to recapture that intense feeling of blissful joy that I felt right after giving birth – when I met each of my sons for the first time. That, perhaps, is the best reason of all to use music during labor.

But more than just for laboring women, everyone can benefit from using music prior to, during, or after medical care. Scientific sources supporting therapeutic benefit of music are numerous and have been proven in children, open heart surgery patients, cancer patients, pre-operative patients, women waiting on surgical procedures, or testing (such as a mammography), just to name a few.

Take advantage of the instant healing effects of music. Experiment with how different instruments and genres of music create different moods and physical states in your body. Music is not just something to listen to… but to heal and heighten your enjoyment of life.


Read the whole post on Modern Mom here

 

Sources

  • Using Music During Childbirth
  • Di Franco, J (1988). Relaxation: Music. In F.H. Nichols and S. Smith Humenick, Childbirth education practice, research, and theory (pp.201-215). Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders.
  • Wiand (1997). Relaxation levels achieved by Lamaze-trained pregnant women listening to music and ocean sound tapes. Journal of Perinatal Education 6(4), 1-8.

 

SwanFest Concert in the Park Promises Americana

SwanFest Concert in the Park

August 19, 2012 – Ginger Garner will be performing with her band at the Pavilion in downtown Swansboro, NC on August 19th. A free concert as part of the 2012 SwanFest Concert Music Series, bring your lawnchairs and pack a picnic to enjoy the sights and sounds of music by the waterfront.

Ginger will be accompanied by the incredible talent of veteran jazz drummer Glenn Pointe, who has toured and shared the stage with R&B, soul, and jazz legends from Screamin’ Jay Hawkins to Ella Fitzgerald; Mark Hibbs, longtime blues guitarist and current bassist in the band PTM, and Jeff Jablonski, veteran bassist who has over the past 25+ years played in venues from ranging from the famous 9:30 club in D.C. to the Seafood Festival right here in Morehead City, NC.

The lineup of tunes Ginger has selected for this free concert will include a happy mix of uplifting soul, blues, folk, and gospel music that highlights the struggles and triumphs of Americans throughout history. It’s sure to leave you with lots of smiles.

Location: Swansboro Pavilion
Time: 6:30-8 pm
Rain Location: Swansboro Town Annex

 

28th Copper Mountain Jazz and Wine Festival

Ginger Garner slated for Friday 24, 2012 Performance

Ginger will be performing at the upcoming 28th Annual Copper Mountain Jazz and Wine Festival  at Copper Mountain, CO this summer happening August 24-26, 2012. Among jazz greats and an incredibly talented lineup for this year’s festival, Ginger is looking forward to sharing the stage with fellow musicians on Friday, August 24 at 6pm.

 

Says the Genuine Jazz Festival,

Relax in the beautiful backdrop of Copper Mountain as stars from Smooth Jazz and Fusion to Mainstream Jazz delight your senses. Known for its scenic splendour, internationally renowned talent and diverse wine selection, Genuine Jazz & Wine will not disappoint this summer.

In addition to amazing live jazz music, sample some of the country’s best wines.

 

Ginger will also be delivering a lecture series on women’s health and orthopaedics in medical yoga at the 2nd Annual Copper Mountain Pose Medicine and Yoga Symposium, running concurrent with the Copper Mountain Jazz and Wine Festival.  Music and yoga lovers alike will have a fantastic time at the festivals, and Ginger looks forward to collaborating with some of the best jazz musicians in the US today.

 

Free Concert for Haiti Aid

April 27, 2012 – SAVE THE DATE! Sending aid tHaiti Aid M4M and Ginger Garnero Haiti to create a sustainable future.

Ginger and her company of musicians will be performing a FREE CONCERT to raise funds for women and children in Haiti.  All funds will go to support the Sustainable Goat Farming project and land/building projects.

To date M4M has raised over $12,000 in aid for Haiti. The aid funds have been hand carried directly in-country and spent on projects in the area of Michaud, Haiti. See all M4M’s funded Haiti projects and more information at www.music4haiti.org.

Ginger’s organization, M4M (Musicians 4 Missions) is sponsoring the event.  It will be held in the Swansboro United Methodist Church at 7 pm. The concert is free. Donations will be happily accepted.

Doors will open at 6:30 pm.  The event will include a FREE Children’s Educational program about their fellow peers in Haiti and FREE CHILDCARE.

 

Ginger Garner Jazz News

Ginger Garner Jazz - Seaside Arts Council Series 2012

Ginger Garner Jazz – Seaside Arts Council Series 2012

February 15, 2012 – The Tideland News covers Ginger’s latest concert for the seaside Arts Council. Support the Arts Council by coming out to one to one of this season’s concerts. For information on the concert series, call (910) 436-1174.

Performing to a packed out audience, similar in size to last year’s sold out performance, Ginger and her band played a high energy 90 minute set – featuring Ginger’s own interpretations and arrangements of jazz standards and tunes dating from the 1920′s forward. Ginger’s band for this year’s series included pianist Tony R. Ray, jazz drummer Glenn Pointe, blues and jazz bassist Bob Sienkiewicz, and saxophonist Chris McNally.

Ginger in Concert

February 14, 2012 – Upcoming press on the Seaside Arts Council presents Ginger Garner evening of dinner and jazz. Tickets $40 More Info.

Ease Labor Pain with What?

Music has saved my life,over and over again.
Photo taken in 2006, singing to my firstborn.

Studies have, for a long time, shown that deep breathing, mental imagery, deep massage or acupressure, and the presence of a constant companion or coach during labor can ease labor pains, making the miracle of birth more, well, enjoyable.

During the birth of my two sons, and with another one due to arrive in June, I have (and will) use all of these methods for pain management during labor.  However, that is not all I will use.

With both of my previous labors, each vastly different, I used one, well, two other tactics – both of which played a very important role and were equally effective in helping manage pain.

One is yoga, but that is a topic that will take an entire book to address. In fact, I am working on that book now. The other tactic – the remaining secret weapon in my arsenal of labor pain management methods is – music.

Perinatal Nursing supports that music can be an effective means for managing both pain and stress during labor.  Using music during childbirth, in a 2000 study, shows the planned use of music by mothers during labor has a significant effect on their perception of pain.

In the months before my sons were born, I started designing my “Birth Soundtrack.”  When the big day came – wafting from my labor room, like a sweet breeze, were the sounds of designer music.   Sounds that both soothed and motivated me to work diligently and gracefully toward delivering my sons into this word.  I called on it all – from Sam Cooke to Patty Griffin to Gabriel Yared – from the genres of soothing soul to inspirational folk to contemplative classical.

What is designer music?  In the industry, it is known as music that is selected to have a specific effect on the listener.  And it is proven more effective than listening to just any music. I teach music and sound as therapy as an educator, so for each of my labors I designed my own music. But guess what? You don’t need special training – with a few tips in my guide (an excerpt from my text on Using Music for Therapeutic Benefit)  and those listed below, you can design your own music too.


Designing Your Birth Soundtrack
Here are a few guidelines that I give to expectant mothers and other patients who use music for pain or stress relief:

  • Certain instruments are better suited to promote relaxation and a sense of well being. 
    • The ancient medical systems of Ayurveda and Chinese Medicine have identified the instruments which are best suited to different emotional states and physical needs. Learn about them here.
  • Make a playlist for your iPod or MP3 player or download music onto a USB memory stick that you can plug into your car or stereo.  Name your playlist something that inspires you.  I called my playlist “Baby Breathing.” I made one for a friend for post-partum healing and called it “Baby Hopes & Dreams.” 
  • Make sure you have the appropriate sound/stereo set up.  My husband took care of this “technical” end – however speakers are so compact and portable now that they could fit in an overnight bag, along with your iPod or MP3 player. Of course, if you are home birther, no transport is necessary – just plug in and play!
  • Create a minimum of 8 hours of continuous music.  If you have a long labor, as my first one was 36 hours – you’ll need more than just a few hours of music to get you through.
  • Choose relaxing but also motivating music which inspires you and develops your sense of connection and bonding with your unborn child.
  • Order your music with the stages of labor, or create separate playlists for each stage.  Meaning, the first stage can be much longer but less intense than second stage labor.  Second stage labor will bring with it – different requirements.  During transition and delivery – you may opt for silence – so you can hear those first sounds from your baby.  Or, you may opt to have quiet, contemplative music playing which motivates you to go the distance. I used music throughout the entire labor.  When it came time to delivery, my husband made sure (we pre-planned this) that a continuous play of meditative, calm solo piano music flowed low and quiet – so I could hear my baby’s first cries. I can attest that in my first birth – the music helped to calm and attune everyone – including the medical staff.
  • Avoid rock, grunge, and other heavy music which emphasizes drums or electric instruments like guitar or loud synthesized piano. These genres have been proven to elevate vital signs and cause feelings of anger, hostility, and despair.  
  • If you prefer silence during labor – music and sound therapy can still help you manage pain.  Nada Yoga, or the yoga of sound, teaches chanting and vocal toning as a way to ease pain and suffering.  Sighing the sound “mmm” with the mouth closed on your exhale, during contractions, has been found to be balancing, harmonizing, and integrating to the nervous system – lowering blood pressure, heart rate, and assisting in pain relief.  In yoga, it is the most subtle and most powerful of toning sounds.
  • Consider a post-partum playlist for after delivery and when you return home. I made a separate playlist for after delivery. I played it during the entire stay of my post-partum in the hospital.  (The nurses and my midwife loved it – it relaxed everyone. I think they made special trips to my room just to hang out and chill to the cool music). I called it “Baby Dance” – and after we came home I listened to it for months afterward, (literally did dance with my baby to it) and enjoyed shedding many tears of joy recalling the precious memories that the music helped bring forward in my consciousness – those I spent with my son and husband in those early special moments.  

But more than just laboring women, everyone can benefit from using music prior to, during, or after medical care.  Scientific sources supporting therapeutic benefit of music are numerous – and have been proven in children, open heart surgery patients, cancer patients, pre-operative patients, women waiting on surgical procedures or testing such as mammography, and the list goes on. Get a full list here

Take advantage of the instant healing effects of music.  Learn more about how different instruments create different moods and physical states in your body – and how you can choose music not just to listen to – but to heal you.

NC Musicians are Composing A Brighter Future for Haiti’s Children: Event Slated for March 5


If you are in the region of Eastern North Carolina this Friday, March 5, please come out and support efforts to raise money for the children of Haiti.

Visit Musicians 4 Missions, an effort I founded in 2009, to learn more about the cause and the concert.

Concert Time: 7 pm
Door Open: 6:30 pm
Free Concert. Donations will be collected.

Location

Over 2 dozen artists from across North Carolina are slated to perform at M4M. All genres of music – from classical to bluegrass to R&B; – will be featured.

Public Radio East’s Finley Woolston and M4M Founder, Ginger Garner, will be hosting the evening in conjunction with our corporate sponsors and partners.

M4M is completely staffed by volunteers so that 100% of the proceeds can go straight to the children of Haiti. Please visit the website to see where your donations will be used. M4M is operates under 501(3)(c) status.