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Sound Healing,A Spa for Your Brain -- DAI Soft Opening


Close your eyes. Picture yourself in a quiet, gentle, and safe space.


Here in the heart of Silicon Valley — this relentlessly spinning hub — you can finally let your guard down completely. Starting with the first chime of the singing bowl, you are not hearing sound. You are feeling it.

Deep, sustained sound waves wrap around you like ocean swells.


Vibration passes through your skin, ripples through every cell, as if your brain were receiving a deep-tissue massage. Tense shoulders release without your noticing. Shallow breaths grow long and full. The loud, unstoppable chatter in your mind is gently washed clean by an invisible pair of hands.


Some feel the body become light as a feather, floating in midair. Others feel an unprecedented grounding — deeply rooted in the earth.


This is not listening to music. This is a sensory immersion experience that uses physical vibration to shift the nervous system from high-alert fight-or-flight into deep restoration.


This is the magic of sound healing.



A Master of Sound Whose Path Stretches from Hollywood to the Himalayas

True sound guidance never stops at surface-level comfort. Behind it lies rigorous discipline and deep cultural grounding. What strikes me about Professor Cecilia Wu is the rare convergence of her training — industrial precision and contemplative depth, held in the same pair of hands.


Professor Wu directs the Master of Science in Recording Arts program at the University of Colorado Denver. She has served as music producer, senior consultant, and publishing director at Universal Music, EMI Records, and Apple. She brings an exacting command of both the technical standards and the emotional resonance of sound.

But her exploration extends far beyond academia and industry.


At the core of Professor Wu's research is the intersection of music, technology, and human consciousness. She has traveled deep into Tibet, Nepal, and Bhutan on multiple occasions, using field recording to capture and preserve ancient contemplative soundscapes. Her documentary Sound of Nangqên has screened at electronic music festivals and research conferences around the world.


Professor Wu was personally invited to design and implement the Embodied Sonic Meditation Workshop for the Royal University of Bhutan — an ongoing teaching collaboration that bridges the furthest possibilities of sound into the profound territory of consciousness transformation.


I have witnessed what happens when someone with this depth of training holds space for a room. It is not performance. It is transmission.


March 28 · Follow the Sound into Stillness: A Deep Recalibration of Body, Mind, and Energy


After a week of tension, join us on Saturday evening. Under Professor Wu's guidance, plant a moment of clarity into the middle of your busy life.


This practice, rooted in classical Tibetan tradition, calls for deep sensory engagement. Professor Wu will introduce specific breath-work, grounding, and centering techniques — guiding participants to use the physical vibration of sound to transform listening into spontaneous, active participation.


This is about reclaiming something high-pressure living strips away: presence, embodiment, and agency. The simple capacity to be here, fully, in this moment.



Bring Food, Make Friends: Community Potluck 🥗


Singing bowls help you relax, and good food makes you happy. Don't rush off after the experience — stay and share a meal together. Everyone is invited to bring a dish or your favorite snack. Whether you want to talk about what you just felt, meet some new people, or simply enjoy a lively dinner, you are warmly welcome here. There is no simpler happiness than sitting together, sharing good food, and laughing with one another.



 
 
 

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