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Do you like the title of this article? I do. Are yousurprised that drumming helps to relieve the symptomsof Parkinsons? I am not. I must make a confession before I tell youmore. I have been a drummer since I was in elementaryschool. Much of my time in high school was spentplaying in bands and orchestras. I still love to drum on anything - chairs, tables, walls and of course drums of all sizes and shapes.The purpose of drumming is to have fun and feel better. Drumming fulfills both aspirations effortlessly. Everyone becomes young again.The drum is a powerful force in healing. It:Releases stressEnergizes the spiritHeals troubling emotionsReleases angerCreates euphoria It is hard to beat this list, eh? The bodys abilityto heal is boundless. Drumming is a fundamental way to support this ability. Dr. Connie Tomaino has found that listening to drumming gives people with Parkinsons better controlover their movements and helps to improve their gaitin stressful situations. Dr. Tomaino, DA, MT-BC, usesdrumming in her work with persons with Parkinsons.Here is her report:I once worked with a young person with Parkinsonsdisease who had trouble initiating movement. Iexplored different rhythm patterns with him. We thenmade a cassette of different kinds of African drummingthat he seemed to find very stimulating and helped himget moving.Anytime he had to walk across a street,whereas in thepast he may freeze, he would put on his headphones andlisten to African rhythms to get to the other side without freezing in the middle of rush hour traffic.http://www.remo.com/portal/pages/health_rhythms/library_article9.htmlWhat is Drumming?You do not have to just listen to drumming. You candrum yourself. Drumming is stress free and fun bydesign.No musical ability is necessary. No talent is required. No sense of rhythm is necessary. No musicaltraining is a prerequisite. The only requirement is to have a body. Everyone meetsthis requirement. Right? The only agenda is to havefun. Everyone is qualified to participate. Any type of drum will do. Bongos, bass drums, snaredrums without the snare, tympani, hand drums, Africandrums - you name it. If it sounds like a drum it is a drum no matter what it looks like or how it ismade. You can drum alone or in groups. If you drum with others, someone in the group can volunteer to maintaina steady beat - often like the beat of a human heart.Everyone else in the group then beats away on theirdrum to their hearts content with whatever beat callsto them.Some people make simple beats that are meditative.Others are show offs. It is not the beat per se thatmatters. Whatever way you drum is the right way foryou. The room rocks.Let no one convince you otherwise. You may be one whodoes not like to keep the beat. Good for you. Go forit. It is fun to sit around in a circle and drum together.Even if you are not drumming yourself, it is healingto feel the thump of the airwaves. The thumbs crawlunder your skin and sit on the lap of your soul. What you get in return for having fun by just sittingin the group is euphoria. What other remedy forParkinsons can beat that? You also receive the welcomebenefit of dopamine. Who could use a little moredopamine today? Why Drumming Helps ParkinsonsThere is a marked tendency for persons with Parkinsons to be hyper-vigilant. Mental activity isusually turned up to the top notch.Hyper-vigilance is a good trait. It is one reason whypeople with Parkinsons succeed in whatever theychoose to do. But hyper-vigilance also takes a heavytoll on the human body which has a foundational need for rest and relaxation. The body was not designed to pump out adrenaline 24-7 without registering loud complaints. You know thestory. People who are always working and never playinghave health problems. People who are hyper-vigilant also have a much greaterchance of having no alfa brainwaves. Zero. Drumminghelps to jump start this deficiency by inducing alfabrainwaves at 8-12 cycles per second.The alfa state is that delicious, relaxed place thatever so gently nudges the body into a state of purerelaxation, the place where dopamine is manufactured. The hyper-vigilant person has difficulty producingdopamine because they rarely experience this state. I suspect that what happens in transcendentalmeditation is similar to what happens with drumming.Twenty minutes (or so) of a 30 minute transcendentalmeditation are spent floating in the alfa state. Stress and trauma are embodied by a disconnection fromthe earth. One good way to survive stressful circumstances and trauma (especially when we areyoung) is to disassociate from ourselves and from oursurroundings. We yank our roots up from the earth andlet them flop about in thin air.Drumming helps to connect you back to the earth. Drumming calls you back to the embrace of mother earthwhere it is safe and exciting to be alive. Drumminghelps you accept everything and everyone - includingourselves - just as you are.Drumming invites the body to relax and unwind. Resultshappen when you start. You do not have to wait weeks ormonths for the therapy to take effect. Pretty neat,eh? Testimonials tell us that drumming helps people withParkinsons. We have no formal research to indicatethat it helps but I say why even bother. Why not give it a try and find a drum today? You canoften find great drums at garage sales for a few dollars. It certainly cannot hurt you. It is bound to be fun. You may laugh while doing it. When you have fun and laugh ... you give yourself the best dose of dopamine that exists. It is all natural and entirely free.So be honest with me here. Do you think this is a silly idea? If you do, please take this opportunity tolaugh at me. That will do you some good for sure!As for myself, I am always on the lookout for a gooddrum to beat. Euphoria is calling me. Robert Rodgers, Ph.D.Parkinsons Recovery
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