| Children of the New Earth Magazine,
published in Fall 2004 · VOL. 2, ISSUE 4
The Mozart Effect - Metamusic, Memory, Sleep & Quantum
Learning
by Barbara Bullard, M.A.
THE NATIONAL SLEEP Foundation, in March of 2004, conducted the largest
poll thus far that illuminates a growing problem: “our children
have poor sleep habits for which they pay a high price and their
parents or caregivers lose an estimated 200 hours of extra sleep
in a year due to their child’s nighttime awakenings.”1
From elementary school through high school and beyond, a great many
of our children are chronically sleep-deprived. In studies of elementary
school-age children, nearly 40% showed some kind of sleep problem,
50% of adolescents reported at least occasional difficulty falling
or staying asleep, with up to 13% experiencing chronic and severe
insomnia. Clearly, the amount of sleep most teenagers get is insufficient,
with the average getting under seven hours, and with only a mere
15% sleeping the suggested eight or more hours on a school night.
Wreaking havoc on their health, academic performance, and behavior,
sleep deprivation is one of the primary causes of instability in
youth, and it is important for parents to become aware of the healthy
techniques available to promote better sleep patterns in their children.2
Much has been written about how sleep deprivation can be harmful
for the adult population, but sleep deficit can have an even greater
impact on the young because of the crucial effects it has on development
of the brain, affecting concentration, attention and mood.
Pediatric research findings are rather startling in this regard:
“Poor sleepers reported being significantly more depressed,
without energy, tired, tense, moody, stressed, irritable, and less
alert than good sleepers. They are more likely to display Type A
behavior problems at school and at home. Interestingly enough, they
were also more likely to have a negative self-image.
Even 20 fewer minutes of needed sleep may significantly affect behavior
in many areas. One study showed that students with C’s,D’s
and F’s got about 25 fewer minutes of sleep and went to bed
an average of 40 minutes later than A and B students.”3 It
is clear that persistent sleep problems have been associated with
many learning difficulties throughout the school years.
In the 2004 National Sleep Foundation poll three out of four parents/caregivers
said they would change something about their children’s sleep
habits if they could. Early intervention is crucial because research
has found that most children do not “grow out of ” their
sleep problems: rather, the sleep problems of childhood tend to
get “wired” into the brain and to persist into adulthood.4,
5
In the NY Times bestseller, Secrets of the Baby Whisperer–how
to Calm, Connect, and Communicate With Your Baby, Tracy Hogg notes:
“What a good many people don’t realize is that babies
need parents’ direction to establish proper sleep habits.
In fact, the reason so-called sleep problems are so common is because
so many parents don’t realize that they, not their babies,
must control bedtime.” 6
"Music is the only input that naturally synchronizes the brain,
different musical backgrounds can be used throughout our lives to
help the brain achieve any desired state."
TV’s, computers and sleeping problems
How do we accomplish this very important task of helping our children
get enough quality sleep? The most important first step is to monitor
the amount of exposure to mass media, such as television, video
games, and computers throughout the day. The American Academy of
Pediatrics and the American Psychological Association would recommend
that to keep TV watching to a healthy level, parents need to set
definite agreed-upon limits to how much and what children can watch,with
children under two NOT watching television at all. This may involve
a struggle for the parents to monitor the time spent on television
and computers as a child becomes older, but it is well worth the
struggles in the long run.7
Television in the bedroom
It is obviously important to control the timing of any exposure
to mass media, but the most important time is just before bedtime.
Dr. Judith Owens, Director of the pediatrics sleep disorder clinic
at Hasbro Children’s Hospital, states:“The children
who have the most difficulty sleeping, resist going to bed and wake
up most during the night, are the children who watched television
just before bedtime… Television viewing around bedtime is
not a benign influence since a television in the bedroom was the
most powerful predictor of overall sleep disturbances. Twenty percent
of the children studied had a television in their bedrooms.”8
Monitoring the amount of television time is crucial in early brain
development but does not end there,A study published in The Archives
of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, found that three hours or
more of television viewing each day at age 14 was associated with
difficulty sleeping in adulthood. Sleeping habits would improve
in cases where the adolescents cut their viewing time to an hour
or less each day by age 16. Therefore, it seems obvious that the
first step in helping your child’s sleep hygiene is to turn
off the television and limit computer usage at least one hour before
sleeptime.
Importance of routine
Dr. Jodi Mindell, of the Sleep Disorders Center at the Children’s
Hospital of Philadelphia, says that other major factors contributing
to bedtime battles include putting your child to bed too late, failing
to create a regular bedtime routine, and giving your child mixed
signals about going to bed. “There’s a window of opportunity
in which your child will easily go to sleep. Once you go past that,
they are overtired and they will fight sleep.”9
No matter how much your child fights the need to sleep at an established
proper time, it is crucial for him or her to get enough quality
sleep so that the body recharges the nervous system and the brain.
It is important for us to remember that children, as a rule, need
much more sleep than adults. Their growing bodies need this time
to create and benefit from the release of human growth hormone,
which is secreted at night during deep sleep stages. It has been
found that children who sleep poorly for prolonged periods often
fail to grow at normal rates. Dr.Mindell recommends that babies
and toddlers get 10-12 hours of nighttime sleep, children in elementary
school get 9-11 hours, and adolescents need 9 1/4 hours on average.10
As pro-active parents, we need to help our children develop their
own sleepinducing strategies. We cannot force them to sleep, as
trying too hard increases the adrenaline, and a tired child becomes
a cranky child. Instead, we must gently facilitate their process
of discovering patterns that allow them to “surrender”
to their body’s own innate sleep needs. As you discover the
patterns together, it is important to maintain the routine as much
as possible.
‘Winding-down’ activities
In developing a bedtime routine, subconscious signals to the child’s
body and mind are established that encourage them to prepare for
and surrender to sleep needs. A reminder about 15 minutes before
starting the bedtime routine is a good way to get them to start
wrapping up any stimulating activities they may be involved in.
This should be done roughly an hour before the desired bedtime.
Then begin switching into more quiet or relaxing activities to help
the body and mind of the child to calm down, including warm baths
or showers, brushing teeth,moving into a quiet bedroom and telling
the child a story or reading a book. Of course, the content of the
book should not be scary or violent since the topic of the book
will influence the dream states as the child goes to sleep.
Food and drinks to avoid before bedtime
Another factor is to keep close tabs on foods and drinks being consumed
within the hour before sleep.All children should avoid drinking
sodas and eating spicy foods, sugars, candies, and chips, etc.,
in pre-bedtime hours.Any foods with caffeine, such as colas and
chocolate, need to be tapered off after dinner. Foods that help
your body produce serotonin (an important neuro-hormone involved
in sleep), such as fruit and carbohydrates, can help induce sleep.The
oldtime suggestion for your child to drink warm milk is also helpful
to induce a relaxed mode.Helping your child learn to do slow, deep,
rhythmic breathing is also helpful as they get into bed, this time
may be combined with prayers and affirmations.
The National Sleep Foundation also has two wonderful resources for
parents concerned about sleep-education for their children: Time
to Sleep with P.J. Bear, is a colorful comic book that helps children
ages 7-10 and their parents to explore the important benefits of
sleep and its relation to their health, safety, and learning.
The Children’s Sleep Diary, allows schoolaged children to
have fun recording their sodas, their bedtime routine, hours of
sleep and amount of energy for seven days and nights. This Diary
contains a full page of tips and facts to help children establish
their own lifelong positive sleep habits.11
‘Designer’ music helps synchronize the brain
All of the above suggestions make logical, as well as intuitive
sense.However, looking again at the impact of our media-saturated
world, it may become highly beneficial to also add a sonic environment
that is conducive to enhancing deep sleep patterns in the child’s
bedroom. There is so much ambient noise in a modern household, that
it is effective to provide an appropriate musical background in
the bedrooms to shut out other household noises that might interrupt
the child moving into sleep.
Many children cannot fall asleep if there is too much noise or too
much quiet around. Children all too often get in the habit of listening
to their favorite rock and roll CD’s or the radio to fall
asleep with. This is completely contradictory to what they should
be using because this type of music over stimulates them. This often
leads into sleep cycles that are filled with too much non-REM sleep
and can leave them feeling groggy and cranky – even if they
had enough hours of sleep – it was not the desired cycles
of sleep.
The Mozart Effect
Ever since the popularity of Don Campbell’s The Mozart Effect,
many companies are advertising sleep music and lullabies for the
sleep needs of younger children. Sleep specialist Don Campbell suggested
a few compilations to facilitate sleep. Two popular sets are entitled,
The Mozart Effect-Sleep Lullabies for Children, and Music For Babies-
Sleepy Baby.12
It is important to understand that any music used to assist babies
and children into a sleep state must be slow, melodic, with rhythms
and instrumentation that help their heart rate and brainwaves slow
down through the process of entrainment. Many recordings of nature
sounds of ocean waves and forest sounds have also been found to
be helpful.
Outgrowing lullabies
Although children will soon outgrow the use of lullabies as an aid
to sleep – and because the sleep crisis is so rampant –
science and musicians are collaborating in the creation of “designer
music,” – music specifically crafted to enhance the
relaxed and sleeping brain. Renowned sound researchers like Alfred
Tomatis and Don Campbell have documented much about the healing
aspects of certain sound environments and their effect as being
nutrients for the nervous system.12
Because music is the only input that naturally synchronizes the
brain, different musical backgrounds can be used throughout our
lives to help the brain achieve any desired state.
In a previous article, titled “Opening the ADD MIND with Metamusic™,”13
I discussed my collaboration with the Monroe Institute of Virginia
to create musical backgrounds embedded with multiple layers of Hemi-Sync™
beta-harmonic brainwave patterns that open the hemispheres of the
brain to greatly enhance learning and memory. Once again I would
advocate the use of hemi-sync™, although, when used as a sleep
aid, there are some key differences that should be understood in
the underlying brainwave patterns.
What initially led me to The Monroe Institute 16 years ago was its
foremost reputation for the creation of Hemi-Sync™
sound environments that profoundly facilitate the listener into
organic deep sleep cycles, which facilitate the homeostatic healing
states of the body.
My work with AIDS patients and children hospitalized with life-threatening
illnesses led me on a search for sound treatments that could help
them achieve deep sleep and assist their brains to release into
the recuperative levels of deep REM sleep, despite their illnesses
and pains. I have witnessed the rigid muscles of a four-year-old
who had nearly drowned relax back to their previous state within
ten minutes of listening to Metamusic™. I have also
seen dozens of hospitalized patients reduce their use of pain and
sleeping pills by more than half, using both Metamusic™
and Hemi-Sync™. Witnessing these effects convinced
me that Metamusic™ from the Monroe Institute was
‘more than music’. Embedded underneath the music are
multiple layers of brainwave patterns of synchronized Alpha/Theta
and then Delta patterns, entraining and gently leading the brain
to deep relaxation and eventually sleep. The synergy of the Hemi-Sync™
patterns with the music designed for sleep can be most powerful.
Due to its success, hemi-sync ™ has been a common tool used
in many sleep disorder clinics for decades.
Thestages of sleep children most benefit from
To more fully appreciate why Monroe’s Hemi-Sync™
CD’s are so effective in facilitating deep sleep states, let
us turn for a moment to consider what type of sleep we are seeking
for our children and where exactly a sleep deficit harms them. “Embedded
underneath the music are multiple layers of brainwave patterns of
synchronized Alpha/Theta and then Delta patterns, entraining and
gently leading the brain to deep relaxation and eventually sleep.”
In normal sleep cycles, we spend 80% of the time in deep delta brainwave,
non- REM sleep, punctuated every 90 minutes by REM sleep - rapid
eye movement cycles where the brain is quite active and in a dreaming
mode.Generally speaking, in non-REM cycles the brain is stimulating
a major immune function, with the emphasis being on the central
nervous system’s need to repair and restore itself. This is
why children naturally sleep more when they are ill. Deep sleep
stages help to heal wounds and fight infection; whereas during REM
sleep cycles there is a major preservation, or anchoring in, of
new learning from the day.14
Supersleep – the key to health and learning
J. Alan Hobson,MD, professor of psychiatry, at Harvard Medical School
calls REM “super sleep,” because of it’s importance
to health and integration of remembering any information learned
that day. Newborns spend almost 50% of their sleeping hours in REM.
Many researchers theorize that newborns need the large amounts of
REM sleep for their intense brain development. REM sleep cycles
then begin to decline to about 25% in adolescent and adult sleep
needs, but REM seems to still be crucial for integration of new
learning. If the REM cycles are disrupted no new learning takes
place. The longer we sleep, the longer the duration of the REM stage,
which peaks in the last third of the normal sleep pattern. The less
sleep we get, therefore, the more we lose the crucial REM cycles
in the important final two hours of sleep.15
After decades of research I can think of nothing better to help
nurture the desired sleep environments than to begin playing the
following Hemi-Sync™ CD’s in the bedroom to
facilitate sleep. Personal favorites of mine that are designed to
help children drift off to REM sleep more readily include: Sleeping
Through The Rain, Cloudscapes, Midsummer Night, Into The Deep
and Transformations.
Storytelling
In most situations, the gentle sonic background will naturally lead
children to deeper sleep cycles. If the child prefers to be led
to sleep with storytelling, I recommend two newly designed CD’s:
JoyJumper which relates the 40-minute tale of a girl who
just does not want to go to sleep and Robbie the Rabbit
in which a rabbit takes the child on a fascinating, sleep-enhancing
journey to the calming magic of the forest. Children under 10 who
have been experiencing these two new CD’s really love hearing
these stories as they slip into sleep. I highly recommend them,
especially for nights where “extra measures” are in
order.16
Everything that has been discussed above also applies to the majority
of adolescents and adults suffering from sleep-deficits. My family
and I use Metamusic™ regularly in our bedtime rituals.
Fortunately, there is a far wider selection of Metamusic™
available for adults.
Personal favorites of my family, other than those mentioned earlier,
include: Higher, Inner Journey, Ascension, Journey to the other
Side, and Deep Journeys. There are also many wonderful
choices for adults with more profound sleep needs who prefer a sleep
induction ingredient. These have similar crafted Hemi-Sync™
brainwave patterns but with guided sleep induction. Scott Taylor,M.D.
creator of Sleep Better Workshop, specifically recommends
the following CD’s from the hundreds available from the Monroe
Institute to facilitate sleep: Deep Ten Relaxation, Restorative
Sleep, Sound Sleeper, Supersleep, Catnapper (for 30-minute
daytime “power naps” that induce a REM cycle) and TimeOut
for Sleep - a multiple sleep CD which has all the desired sleep
cycles,which has been found to be especially helpful for those with
chronic fatigue syndrome, Fibromyalgia and other illnesses that
have sleep disruption components.16
Creates new neural pathways
So – aside from all the health habits that can be established
for solving bedtime battles, the Hemi-Sync™ and Metamusic™
creations of the Monroe are excellent holistic sleep-aids. Not only
do they promote more restful and efficient sleep during use; they
also create new neural pathways that train the body and mind to
be able to induce its own natural sleep state. Thus they do not
become a crutch, but rather, are tools for better health, vitality,
balance, and empowerment.
The more researchers investigate the sleeping brain, the more clear
it becomes that sufficient sleep is a necessity for our children’s
health, not just a luxury. Studies of the neurological, chemical
and electrical activity of the sleeping brain show that even minimal
sleep loss or disruption can have profound and detrimental effects
on cognition, mood, performance, productivity, general health, learning,
and the immune system.17
May all of these bedtime rituals help you and your family sleep
well tonight. Sweet Dreams.
Bibliography: 1. www.sleepfoundation.org
2. Owens. J. Sleep Habits and Sleep Disturbances
in Elementary School-aged Children, Developmental and Behavioral
Pediatrics, Vol. 21. No.1, February 2000, pp.27-36. 3.
Morrison, Dianne et.al. Sleep Problems in Adolescence. Journal of
the American Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry. 31:1, January
1192, pp.94-99. 4. www.Sleepfoundation.org (Ibid.)
5. Ramos, T., The ABC’S of Sleep, Sleep Review,
September 2002, Abed.com 6. Hogg, T, Secrets of
the Baby Whisperer-How To Calm, Connect, and Communicate With Your
Baby, Ballantine Books, 2001 p 168. 7. Israeloff
R., Sleep-Loss Blues, Working Woman, Sept 1990 p. 196. 8.
Maas, J., Perchance to Sleep, Cornell Magazine Online, Jan. 1999,
Vol. 101. No. 4. 9. Kirmil-Gray Kathleen, et.al.
Sleep Disturbance in Adolescents: Sleep Quality, Sleep Habits, Beliefs
About Sleep, and Daytime Functioning. Journal of Youth and Adolescence,
Vol 13. No. 5, 1984. Pp. 375-384. 10. Labarge L
et.al. Development of Sleep Patterns in Early Adolescence. Journal
of Sleep research 2001, 10, pp. 59-67. 11. Study:
Kids’ TV, computer Habits Start Early CNN News 10/28/03 ,
and Owens, J. Dr. TV at Bedtime is Associated with Sleep Difficulties
in Children. www.brown.edu. 12. Mindell. Sleeping
Through the Night: How Infants, Toddlers, and Their Parents Can
Get a Good Night’s Sleep, 1997. 13. Mindell,
ibid. 14. www.sleepfoundation.org/2004presskit/kidsmaterials.
cfm. 15. Campbell, Don, The Mozart Effect, Music:
Medicine of the Future. 16. Opening the Learning
Door in the ADD Mind With Metamusic, Children of the New Earth,
vol.2, issue 2, Spring 2004. (for more articles referring to Remembrance,
Einstein’s Dream, Indigo: For Quantum Focus and Season’s
at Robert’s Mountain visit www.DNAMusic.com). 17.
Wall. S. To Sleep, Perchance to Know, 2000 Second Web Report, hhttp://serendip.brynmawr.
edu. 18. Hemi-Sync™ CD’s may
be purchased from www.hemisyncforyou.com. 19.
Taylor. S. Special Tapes Put People Into Deep Sleep, Free Press
Accent 7/17/96. 20. Harriett Griffey, Sleep Well
Tonight, Sterling Silver Pub. 1998 has a wonderful compendium of
other sleep strategies and is well worth the read.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Barbara Bullard has been Professor of Speech
Communications at Orange Coast College for thirty-eight years, and
is currently Chair of the Dept. She has been nominated five times
since the 90’s for Faculty Member of the Year at the college
and received the prestigious NISOD Teaching Excellence award for
Innovation from the University of Texas in 1994, 1999, and 2000.
In 2000 and 2001 Barbara was a Master Presenter at the NISOD Conference
speaking on ‘Music and METAMUSIC in the Classroom.’
She was selected for Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers
in 2002, and has been a professional member of The Monroe Institute
since 1989.Her most important achievement is that she is the proud
mother of three self-described Indigos. The above article is based
on her presentation at the 2002 Monroe Professional Seminar. Barbara
has co-authored a book, Communicating from the Inside Out, (B. Bullard
& K. Carroll, 1995) outlining quantum-learning strategies with
music. For more information on Barbara’s work with quantum
learning strategies visit her web site, www.DNAMusic.com or contact
her at Remembrancemusic@aol.com.
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