The blog
Understand energy practices, demystify common misconceptions, share experiences.
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How Tibetan singing bowls affect the nervous system — what science says
Far from esoteric clichés, the impact of Tibetan bowls (or singing bowls) on the body is a physical reality. Sound vibrations are not a metaphor: they concretely alter our physiology. Here's how science explains this phenomenon in 4 key points. 1. Mechanotransduction: sound that massages cells The body…
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Bloodline magnetism: what does that really mean?
The notion of «lineage magnetism» or «family gift» frequently comes up in energy practices and within the circles of fire-cutters or traditional healers. Often shrouded in a veil of mystery, this transmission can nevertheless be explained in a much more rational way when one intersects the human sciences, psychology and the...
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3 signs your energy is sending you a message
Here is a structured development around the three signs your energy is sending you a message: 1. Unexplained fatigue: The internal battery's warning signal This type of fatigue makes no sense at first glance. You've had your eight hours of sleep, your workload has remained the same, and yet, from…
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Therapeutic tuning forks: the precision tool of sound therapy
While Tibetan or crystal singing bowls surround the body in a true sound «bath,» therapeutic tuning forks act as the scalpels of sound therapy: they offer a targeted, surgically precise intervention on specific anatomical points. Here's everything you need to know to approach your first session in...
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Mediating when you're «too much in your head» - where to start?
This is one of the biggest misconceptions about meditation: the idea that you need to «clear your mind» or «stop thinking.» For an analytical, hyperactive, or very cerebral mind, this instruction is a double penalty. It generates frustration and gives the impression of «doing it wrong.» Yet, having a particular mental profile is not a flaw...
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Professional retraining: what twenty years in IT have taught me about human energy
A look at the transition from systems engineering to life engineering — and what these two worlds have in common. After two decades spent designing, optimising and troubleshooting complex IT architectures, I decided to take a different path. I left lines of code, servers and data streams for…
