Grief 2 Growth
"Transform your grief into growth with Brian Smith, an empathetic life coach, certified grief educator, public speaker, and author who has walked the treacherous path of profound loss. Grief 2 Growth unravels the intricacies of life, death, and the spaces in between, offering listeners a new perspective on what it means to be 'Planted. Not Buried.'
Join Brian and his compelling guests—bereaved parents, life coaches, mediums, healers, near death experiencers, and experts in various fields—as they discuss topics like survival guilt, synchronicities, and the scientific evidence supporting the existence of the afterlife. You'll come away with actionable advice, renewed hope, and the comforting knowledge that love and life are eternal.
One of the most powerful ways we know what awaits us and where we came from is Near Death Experiences. Much of Brian's knowledge is derived from extensive study of this phenomenon, along with interviewing dozens of near death experience experiencers.
Brian knows the soul-crushing weight of loss; his journey began with the sudden passing of his fifteen-year-old daughter, Shayna. It's not an odyssey he would have chosen, but it has been an odyssey that has chosen him to guide others.
Grief 2 Growth is a sanctuary for those grieving, those curious about the beyond, and anyone eager to explore the fuller dimensions of life and death. Each episode delves into topics that matter most—how to cope, grow, and connect with loved ones in the afterlife. If you ask: “Where did I come from? Why am I here? Where am I going?” this podcast is for you.
This isn't about forgetting your loss or simply 'moving on'; it's about growing in a new direction that honors your loved ones and your spirit. It’s about finding joy and purpose again.
Grief 2 Growth is more than a podcast; it's a community of souls committed to supporting one another through the darkest valleys and highest peaks of human existence. Listen today and start planting seeds for a brighter, more spiritually connected tomorrow."
Grief 2 Growth
🎙️ Healing Grief Through the Power of Sound with Jeralyn Glass EP 403
Episode Summary:
In this powerful episode, Brian Smith welcomes internationally renowned musician, author, and sound healer Jeralyn Glass, who shares her deeply moving story of loss, healing, and transformation. After the sudden passing of her only child, Dylan, Jeralyn turned to the healing power of crystal alchemy singing bowls, blending her expertise in music with the transformative science of sound. Guided by Dylan’s presence and love, Jeralyn found a way to transform her grief into purpose and now helps others heal through the universal language of sound.
✨ Key Topics Covered:
- Jeralyn’s career as a celebrated opera singer and her transition to sound healing.
- How the loss of her son Dylan shaped her mission and deepened her understanding of love beyond death.
- The science behind crystal singing bowls and their unique vibrational healing properties.
- Stories of healing and transformation through sound medicine.
- Practical ways to incorporate sound healing into your daily life to soothe grief, reduce anxiety, and connect with higher frequencies.
💡 Why You Should Listen:
If you seek comfort, hope, and a new perspective on healing from grief, this episode offers a unique blend of personal storytelling, science, and spirituality. Learn how sound can be a bridge to connection, healing, and love that transcends time and space.
🔗 Resources & Links:
- Learn more about Jeralyn Glass: Crystal Cadence
- Discover the Crystal Sound Healing Oracle Deck: Crystal Cadence Shop
- Listen to Jeralyn’s music: Pentatonic Visions Album
- Explore Brian’s community: Grief 2 Growth Community
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Can't wait to hear from you!
I've been studying Near Death Experiences for many years now. I am 100% convinced they are real. In this short, free ebook, I not only explain why I believe NDEs are real, I share some of the universal secrets brought back by people who have had them.
https://www.grief2growth.com/ndelessons
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Brian, All right, welcome back to grief, to growth, where we explore life's deepest challenges and the wisdom that helps us to rise above them. I'm your host, Brian Smith, and I'm here to guide you on this journey of self discovery, resilience and transformation. To all of our new listeners and those of returning I thank you for joining us. This podcast is dedicated to help you navigate grief, define growth and unlock a deeper understanding of the world around us. Today, we have a truly special guest. Her name is Geraldine glass. Geralyn is an internationally acclaimed singer, musician and Hay House author who's devoted her career to the power of sound healing with inner rich background, perform with a warmer rich background, performing on Broadway opera and concert stages worldwide. Geralyn brings a unique approach to healing, blending her experience in music with a transformative science of crystal and sound, she's created platforms like the sacred science of sound and the crystal Caton sound healing studio, where she curates and trains others in using alchemy singing bowls to help facilitate healing and transformation. In our conversation today, Geraldine will share how sound frequencies can support us through difficult life experiences like grief, illness and emotional pain, and how music and sound can nourish both the body and the spirit, we'll learn more about the inspiration behind our journey, your stories of transformation through intentional sound, and discover ways to incorporate Healing frequencies into our everyday lives. Join us as we dive into the world of sound medicine and discover its potential to soothe, to connect and elevate and remember to keep this conversation going. Connect with us at grief to growth.com/community. And if you're watching us on YouTube, make sure you hit like and subscribe to get future episodes. And with that, I want to welcome Gerald to grief to growth.
Jeralyn Glass:Thank you so much, Brian. I think I'm in the right place. Yeah,
Brian Smith:it's great to have you here today, and I'm really looking forward to getting into the subject of sound healing, so I just to get started. Tell me, how did you get started with sound healing? Oh, gosh.
Jeralyn Glass:So I've been a professional musician my whole career, since I'm 19. I started on Broadway, and then I got led into classical music. So I eventually moved from New York to Germany, where I lived for many years and enjoyed a wonderful career singing opera and concerts. I became a professor, and I love teaching, also teaching singing. So I had discovered the crystal alchemy singing bowls, which are fairly new instruments. They emerged in the year 2000 so I discovered them around 2006 and I bought a set of seven, so knowing briefly that each note of the seven corresponded to a, chakra, C, D, E, F, G, A and B, and I brought them home to Germany, and I started playing them for my students and my family and my friends. But it was more like an instrument, because I had heard many, many instruments in my career, but I had never heard anything so pristine, like the sounds of the crystal singing bowls I had worked with, the metal singing bowls, the Himalayan singing bowls, and I loved those, and I used to use them like I'd put one on my belly and I'd tone with it and help me prepare for performances, just like a meditation. But the crystal singing bowls were something very, very different. And at that time, about 18 years ago, I was not I was not trained as a sound healer. I was a musician. I knew what it felt like to be a singer and to feel that our body is our human instrument. So, you know, I would have to project sometimes in 3000 seat theaters, over 100 piece orchestra with just my two little vocal cords. So you have to train to be like a vocal athlete. So I understood, I would say, the deeply spiritual power of music. But it wasn't till nine years ago, when my my only child passed, he was 19 years old, that music actually really became a medicine. Brian, like it was, you know, as you know so well, like, there's no pill that can help you with the grief, not really, you know, I wish there was, and I wished that there had been a pill that that would have brought my son back, because I would have taken that immediately, right? But it's like I recognized, oh, boy, you have to be able to dive into these feelings that we just go, I don't, I don't want that No, please don't give me that one. No, no, right? And music became this safe container, and that opened this whole world to sound healing and music is medicine.
Brian Smith:Wow. So tell us about your son.
Jeralyn Glass:Oh, this is him. He's my big Angel. Now, his name was Dylan sage. And Dylan means born of the sea, and he was really like a water baby when I was pregnant, we swam with wild dog. Friends. And then when he was a little boy, we swam twice with wild dolphins. So he really, yeah, he, he stole my heart from the very beginning, and then, you know, my heart was shattered. And yeah, Dylan, he, he knew the singing bowl since he was about seven, and and he loved them. He was like, Mommy, bring me to bed with my with my sound blanket. And he loved to play them. He loved to have me put them on his belly and say, give me my sound tickles. But he had a very interesting experience with them. Brian, when he was 13, I had created a Children's Foundation in Germany that was called kids for kids World Foundation. And the whole concept was to train young people in theater, dancing, singing, playing instruments, and then we would put together an original show every year in Munich and and also we took it on tour. And with those shows, we raised about $35,000 every year to support music therapy. So we created our own music therapy program, and then we worked with an organization that was called tabaluga in the south in Bavaria, where children, 80 children were living. So the whole idea was kids could express themselves creatively through music and dance and the arts, and then that energy that they were putting out helped other children in need. So it was a win win for both. And when diligence turned 13, many of the students in the productions entered a national musical contest in Germany called jugendsiat, and he entered it in voice, and it was in the field of musical theater, so he had five songs, a choreography and a monolog, and he made it to the semifinals. And a week before his semi final audition, he was like, Mom, mom, something's happening, and his voice had started to shift. I don't know how it was for you when your voice shifted, but at that point in time, as a professor, I had never guided a young man through a voice change, and many of my colleagues said, it's fine, you know, just make sure his voice stays open and make sure that he feels comfortable. And so we actually worked with the singing bowls because he knew them so well. So he picked a little, a little Citrine singing bowl that was a G note. And in the chakra system. In the Western system, the G corresponds to the throat chakra, and Citrine corresponds to your solar plexus chakra, which is about courage and confidence and your self esteem. Now, I didn't put two and two together at all at that time. You know, it was just like, okay, he used the bowl and I'd have him do things like, ah,
Unknown:ah. Ah, you
Jeralyn Glass:know, to make sounds to release his job, because you want to keep the throat very open, and the larynx is changing. It's growing much bigger. There's much more blood rushing to the throat of a young man. And so we worked at the singing bowls, and that was one of my first experiences, that they helped to ground him in confidence and helped him to keep his voice open. And he stood up to sing his audition, and he said, my name is Dylan, and since one week, I'm no longer a soprano, and everybody laughed. And I was like, wow, this is crazy. Like it could be so vulnerable for him. But he was very constant, confident and very funny, right? So that was one of my first experiences. So he he was a great athlete, he was a football player, a track star, a ski racer, and he loved music. He played the guitar and the piano and he sang, and, yeah, yeah. You know, I think that when we deal with death and an untimely death, I think nothing really prepares you for that, like there was no way that I was prepared for that, and we were so close in life. And on the night that he died, he I walked down to the ocean there, where I live, in Southern California, and I saw this huge shooting star, Brian. And like, I grew up in LA, like, I've never seen a shooting star in the city. I've seen it in the mountains, but there was this huge shooting star that just crossed the la base and landed in the mountains behind LA and then I heard his voice, Mom, you know. And he was big, you know. He was 230 pounds and six foot three. He was like, Mom, it's like we always talked about, and he was referring to the times I'd bring him to bed with the bulls, and we'd pray and we'd meditate, and he said, I'm home. I'm with God. And it's like, oh, like, I mean, you can imagine, there's the shock of, did my child really die? And his death is really final. And wait a minute, what is happening here? And then the precision that I knew I heard his voice, and I knew I saw that shooting star that actually looked like this big, upside down smile, which he had. Such a great smile, right? And that began Brian, this, this world that I've entered into since nine years of really profound communication and understanding that we're made of energy, that energy gets compressed into this human form, and we are sound vibration, we are light, and there is a bridge, and music, for me became that bridge to reach him and to understand that love is truly eternal, and love defies time and space. And it's been, it's been a wild ride, you know, and I know the listeners, you know when, when you go through grief, it's just like you have to find your own way through it. You know, there's not a there's not a one way that says, Do this, this and this, and you'll feel better. It's such a personal journey. So he's, you know, and I came to realize that I understand that we had a soul contract and that he was going to go before me. Now I didn't remember that, but I was told that by a psychic, you know, she pulled me out of a group and said, Somebody in here lost a child. I raised my hand, and she said, you know that he was never going to live a long life, and every hair stood on end because something in me recognized, oh my gosh, she's right, you know. And she said, if it wasn't at 19, it would have been at 22 he never was going to live a long life. And, you know, I tease about it now, and I say, you know, son, I don't remember signing that soul contract with you. And when I see you again, you and I are going to have a little talk about that, you know. And he laughs. I can feel him laughing, but it's like when we recognize there are things that are bigger than us and bigger than the plans that we have in our life, and we can accept those, we can begin to heal. And I think music is just it's a language everybody understands, because there was so much that I could not put in words. I was in talk therapy. I tried to talk it through, but I couldn't talk through the grief. And it wasn't until I started playing the bowls and really playing them, that I began to keen and groan and make sounds that never came out in talk therapy. It was the grief was going Knock, knock. Lady let me out. You know, there it was in training with the crystal singing bowls. And sometimes Brian the sounds of the bowls sounded like nails on a chalkboard, and I recognized they are reflecting my grief.
Brian Smith:Wow, wow. Thanks so much for sharing that. So when you had that experience of the shooting star and hearing Dylan's voice, was he with you physically when he passed, or was he somewhere else? No,
Jeralyn Glass:he was somewhere else. I got the news, you know, and it's just like you get that phone call and you go, I don't think so. Not my life, not my son, not No, I don't think so. Boom, right? And I write about it in my book, sacred vibrations, you know? And it was a very, it was a very vulnerable, as as you all can understand time and moment, because not long, maybe two hours or three hours after the call came, you know, there's been an accident, and I got a call from an official that said, What do you want to do with his remains? And it was just like, wait, what? Yeah, don't go there with me. Not yet. Like, and that's what I mean, like, I think, in our culture and in our lives, we don't talk about death so much. I mean, obviously, if it's an older person you know. And in the grief therapy we talk about, when you lose a parent, you lose your past, when you lose a partner, you lose your present, but if you lose a child, you lose your future. And Dilma has made it very clear to me, Mom, you didn't lose your future. We just have another future. And it's just, I guess, in our lives, you know, it comes down to, can I accept what shows up for me? Can I accept it? Can I embrace it? Can I live with it? Can I work to heal it? And once again, I come back to music being the language that I knew so well. You know, I sang in so many different languages. Didn't matter, you know, if it was Italian or French or German or Czech or English Spanish, it doesn't matter, because people get it. They get the vibrations of what's in the music. Yeah, it's
Brian Smith:Wow. Well, thanks. Thanks so much for sharing that, and I'm sorry for your loss. I know I can, I can relate to what that feels like, that sudden, lost my daughter was 15. So, you know, you have that, that vision of their future, and it was, it was just a sudden. It was like she went to bed one night and didn't wake up the next morning. So that feeling of disbelief, that feeling of shock, I can relate to that. Yeah, it's really interesting to me, because I love music. I mean, like, there was a show, was it called soundtrack of Zoe something? There was a show a few couple of years ago. This girl, when she having emotions, everybody in her mind would start singing and dancing, and that's how my life is. It's like I have an emotion, I have a feeling, and a song pops into my head. So I understand that relating to music and really feeling it deeply. But to go from that musical career to this very specific where it's the sound and and So explain to me the the crystal in nature, or crystal sound bowls, or say, metal sound bowls. And when we were, before we started recording, you mentioned something about 432, megahertz. So what is, what does that mean?
Jeralyn Glass:Yeah, there's, like, I teach over 120 hours of training, like, there's, there's so much depth in this world, you know. And I, one of my students was a well known therapist. And she was like, Geraldine, I couldn't imagine what you could possibly teach me. You know, you tap the bowl, you tap it over here, you swirl it, you swirl it this way, like, what else is there? And she said, my mind is just blown, because I think there really is more and more emphasis now on music as a medicine. I was privileged to speak in Washington, DC last year at a conference music as medicine, with the Kennedy Center, the National Institutes of Health and National Endowment for the Arts and the Renee Fleming Foundation. And they had never heard the crystal singing bowls before. So it was some of our leading scientists, medical, medical doctors, music therapists and researchers, and, you know, there's a lot being done with dementia, with Parkinson's, with cancer, with hospice, with PTSD, with anxiety, there's just with pregnancy, there's there's so much. I mean, it's music, as you said, you know, and and yet, me as a musician, I have albums where I've put the bowls in songs, you know? And so that's a whole kind of different thing the bowls are holding. I'm gonna just name it, a sacred space that brings another kind of instrument that's very ethereal. And I'm gonna say that when you hear the sounds of the bulls, your mind goes, Oh, wow, that's music. Oh, you know, so like, if I, if I tap this for you, just to so if you hear this, oh, wow, that's music that's cool. Right in the in the moment that you hear this sound, for most people, the mind becomes still, the mind begins to focus. And in that moment when the mind is focusing on the sound, you drop down to deep in your body. So we can say that You come pretty easily from your conscious mind to your subconscious mind, and that's really where, where healing can happen. Like you know, you drop in your body. So with the singing bowls, they, as I said, they're relatively new instruments. And being crystalline and pure quartz, they can be received quite easily by our own bodies, because our blood and our bones are quartz, like in structure. So again, like I love the metal singing bowls. I had a set of them. Dylan loved them too. We had those since he was I had it before he was born. But when I heard those, it was like was something so different and so beautiful, and it reminded me of sounds that I knew I can't explain it, just it was familiar to me, those sounds, and they felt very comforting. So the bowls, if, if you think about them as instruments, they can be tuned as music can be tuned. So normally today we tune to 440 hertz is the A note. So all the orchestras, most of all the pop music, and everything that you hear today is, is has the tuning of 440 hertz with the singing bowls, I can work with bowls that are tuned lower. So in this case, the A is 432 hertz, and that's the set that I I prepared today for for us to share. Now, what makes them unusual is that the pure quartz is fired at high temperatures, and then it's infused with substances, alchemies, precious gemstones such as emerald or Ruby, Earth substances such as frankincense or charcoal, minerals from the earth, such as vanadium, or precious metals such as gold and silver. So those get infused and fired at high temperatures, and then quartz being an amplifier, a transmitter and a receiver when you hear the bulls, those elements are also being amplified. So, you know, at the beginning as a professor, I was like, wow, these are really cool. But it was like, okay, and when I got into it, it's like, no Jerome, there's, you know, because there's a lot of talk about woo, woo. And, you know, it's kind of out there, etc. But. In the meantime, now there's more and more science that is being put behind what sound really does, and it is truly very different if you play a platinum platinum bowl or if you play a Ruby bowl. So like this first one here is a Ruby bowl. Ruby has the elements, let's say of nobility. Red connects with the Root Chakra. There's an aspect of Ruby that's very much about transformation. And again, Ruby has been revered for years and years and years as a beautiful stone. So it's different if I play that than if I would play a platinum bowl. People will probably feel different things. But important understand is that with the singing bowls. It's not again like grief. It's not a one size fits all. You might say, Geraldine, I love the sound of that red bowl. And somebody else might say, Oh no, I love the brown bowl, you know. So it's very personal, just like our tastes and music are, wow,
Brian Smith:that's really it's really fascinating, because I really didn't know that there were, I thought like a note was a note, A is A and B is B. So that's not true,
Jeralyn Glass:no. And you know, when I was singing opera at the, for example, at the Zurich opera, we did a Scarlatti opera, and it was with a Baroque Orchestra, so that the A was tuned down. So, for example, the notes that I knew so well in my throat, let's say an F note was lower than I knew it. And I remember thinking, Oh, wow, this feels this feels good. It's different. It's kind of warmer. It's it's not as brilliant. And the whole, the whole story about tuning is very interesting. There was, there became a standardized tuning for music in 1939 and more. Because, let's just say, a violinist came from Japan to play in London, or, you know, a soloist came from Germany and came to play in New York, they'd have to be able to tune to a standard kind of tuning. So that was set in 1939 as 440, hertz for the A note. But imagine, before that, musicians just got together, and maybe they played together and tuned together, right? So since that time, we do use technically 432, the lower a note. Then there's another tuning that's used quite often now, that's 528, hertz. So that's a higher tuning. And you know, you can't say one is better. Once again, it's really different for each person, but all of them are unique, and all of them bring different elements. So like when I'm working with people with grief, or when I'm working with cancer patients or hospice patients or veterans, I'll switch it up. It's not that I go in with one tuning and say, This is the be all and end all, not at all. Each bowl orchestras is unique.
Brian Smith:So you said you started playing the bowls as an instrument, and then you were working with Dylan, you found that they could be used as sort of medicine. And how did it evolve from there into becoming what it is now?
Jeralyn Glass:Gosh, sometimes I look at my life and I just go, how did that happen? I think you know, in those moments, as you know so well with your daughter, like it's just like, how do you how do you make sense of anything? How do you put your life back together? But you can't put it back together because it's never going to be what it was, right? And it's sort of, it's like it just happened step by step. And there was a moment where it was pretty hard for me to get up out of my bed, and I just made the decision that if I didn't do something to help other people, I would probably never get up out of my bed. And so I made a call to the cancer support community, which is a local organization that offers alternative ways of health and wellness to cancer patients and their families, and I said I'd like to offer a crystal singing bowl meditation. And they were like, great, we've never had that. We've had the middle singing bowls and gongs, but what's the crystal balls? And so Brian, if you could imagine at that time, I've never led a meditation. I I'm still deep in my own grief, and I wrote myself a script, and I came with my set of bowls, and I started playing, and I created really a sacred circle. I was about 25 cancer patients, and we talked and shared, and I felt like, wow, this is a group of people that know and understand what I'm feeling without having to speak any words about it. They understood what this kind of serious seriousness is about and I started playing the bulls, and it grew into such a relationship of love and friendship, and I've been doing it for nine years, and they helped me to learn my craft. And there I laugh. Now, you know, there came a moment where it's just like, Okay, I'm glad I have my. Script so I can make sure that I do things accurately and with integrity. I'm glad their eyes are closed so they don't see that I'm, you know, using my notes. And at one point it was just like Gerald, just let the script go, like, open your heart and work, open your heart and allow everything you know about music and everything you know about healing to come through. That was a big moment that was, that was a big moment to really trust like you are where you're supposed to be. No, you don't plan that your child leaves before you, but you are where, just like what you're doing. I'm sure you didn't plan that, right? Absolutely not. And it, it grew out of a deep desire to help yourself and help others. Yeah,
Brian Smith:so you, you mentioned, we touched on Soul planning a little bit, and you mentioned that Dylan is your big Angel. So do you feel like he's your partner in what you're doing now?
Jeralyn Glass:Yeah, absolutely. I mean, he was big in life, you know, and we were very, very close, but he's bigger now. And there's things that I write about in the book, like, for example, there's one story that's incredible to me. It was a few years ago at right, in December, at before Christmas. And I do consultation. So I help people put together, singing both sets for themselves. And I had a woman on the screen that was in another state, and she was sitting in front of this beautiful Christmas tree with purple and turquoise balls. And so we were talking about, perhaps, what notes, what area of her body she wanted to work in. And I hear him, and he comes most often on my right side, Mom, go get her the purple bowl. And I knew exactly what he was talking about. I was like, No son, I decided to keep that bowl for me. He's going, Mom, go get her the purple bowl. And don't even think of bowl. Hoarding. That bowl is for Brenda, right? So, okay, I go get the bowl. She loves it. So then further on the in the consultation, he's like, Go get her the small D note. I'm like, and the small C note. No son. That's really in my private collection. He's like, No mom that belongs to Brenda. So those two bowls went to Brenda and we built her a little set. And a couple of years later, she called me crying. She was right before our level two training, and she said, Gerald, you won't believe what happened the table that I had my bowls on. I was ready to do a presentation to some of my clients. I heard this huge crash in the other room, and the bowl shattered, except for those two bowls. Oh, wow, those two bowls were sitting on the top of all the shards, and it's like, Brian, you can't make that up, you know. So we eventually built her another set based on those two bowls. But I understood, and she understood what those two bowls were about and why they fit her work and her so perfectly, and they did not. I mean, that was a miracle that they did not break.
Brian Smith:Wow. So when people get started at this, because you talked about consulting, you talked about sets of bowls. Do people usually start with one bowl? Do they buy a whole set? I assumed, I assumed that they probably came in sets, but it sounds like you mix and match them. Yeah,
Jeralyn Glass:they're one of a kind. So what you see on the table, it's all one of a kind, and I'll feel into who I'm working with. And you know, what do they need? So for example, I work with Janae Iko, a singer who's doing beautiful work, and she's integrating the bowls into her music. She This is a whole different thing, but as a musician, she loves to sing in particular keys. So she loves the note of E, and that's where we started. So for example, she did the triggered protection mantra, which was just her and her voice and three bowls. And we worked with that E as the basis to it, because that is the note that she just absolutely loves now that E also has to do with your solar plexus, once again, your power of 1000 suns in your belly, and your self esteem and courage and confidence. And that fits so perfectly with her. I write a little bit about that kind of individual work in the book, like because, you know, and since we've done other things depending on what song she has to sing. But if someone comes to me and they're a musician, then we'll talk through keys. And for example, I work with Victor Wooten, who's an incredible five time Grammy Award winning bass player, and he can play in any key. So he's not a singer, right? So with singers, you want to find keys that musical, keys that really feel good to their voice. Victor can play in any key. So, like we did a piece called bowls and bass that's in the key of E flat. So it really depends. Very individual, you know, are you working with children? What is it? And it's, again, this whole path of self expression, self discovery, moving through grief. Moving through physical pain or illness is very, very individualized. And each of those bulls, there's over 600 bowls here in the studio, they're they're one of a kind, that each one is a unique piece of Sonic art. And I think that's the thing that helped me so much, especially working with the bulls, was what Soothes my soul right now. Do I like that? 432 hertz tuning? Do I prefer to play with music today and then I have other instruments that I sometimes play with, so then they're all in tune. It's it's really a beautiful, creative journey to discover what feels good. So sometimes people start with one bowl. It also depends on, on the budget and what, what's in your budget, because they're, they're not inexpensive, and, um, and then we put sets together. But you can also just sit, you know, you could sit with one bowl, for example, if I chose, let's just say I chose this bowl, and I might want to just work with a hum. So I might want to do and feel my voice and train with the sound of the pool, it's very comforting. I might want to do something like ah. So there were times like when I first worked with the grief, where I just made sounds like that, and it blew my mind, because they were they were keening, they were groaning. They were sounds that you don't express when you talk. And they weren't music. They were just guttural sounds of pain. But the bowl, by playing the bowl, it and I used, used one single bowl at the beginning. By just playing that one bowl, it became like, it became like my best friend in that moment, it was hugging me. It was going, Gerald, you're okay. Let it roar, you know. Let it express that. I'll never forget when I after he died, and I first started working with it was one bowl. It was Selenite, which is that crystal is about grounded white light. And I groaned for like 50 minutes just playing that again and again and again and again. And then I got up, went to the bathroom to wash my face, and there was light in my eyes. So I was like, okay, and And besides that, I I felt my son's presence. So when I started that,
Brian Smith:you mentioned Selenite. Oh my gosh. I hold this when I'm doing my interviews. I just got this in Arizona a few weeks ago, and it feels really good in my hand. So I just hold it when I'm doing my interviews.
Jeralyn Glass:It's a palm stone. So you know, our card deck, which I had shared with you before we started, we made a special edition, and it comes one of the versions of it comes with a Selenite palm stone that has the Flower of Life carved on it. Oh, wow. It's, it's just beautiful, that Selenite is. It's grounding, it's, it's a bridge heaven and earth. It's cleansing, it's clearing. It's, it's, um, it's a very special stall, and that was the first bowl that I really started to express the grief with. And then I saw there was light in my eyes, and I I felt this. I felt Dylan's presence in the room. When I started like I felt he was guiding me. There was like a Selenite ish, like sort of Misty white presence in the room. So I felt safe. And I think when we go through grief, one really important thing is that you feel safe, because the feelings are so huge that you've never, you never felt anything like that before,
Brian Smith:right, right? Yeah, it's interesting as we talk about grief, and you mentioned going out and helping other people, because, you know, there are, there are no stages of grief that are set, and they don't go in a particular order, but there's some things that we generally kind of experience or go through, and for a lot of us, like maybe the final step is helping others. But it's interesting for you. It sounds like they came pretty early in the process, and that kind of drew you, drew you out. Yeah,
Jeralyn Glass:I remember that I had one moment where I just thought I can't go on. And I had a moment where I thought I'm gonna go in the kitchen, I'm gonna get my kitchen knife and I'm gonna end it. And then I was just like, Geraldine, what are you doing? And I called my mom, and she knew exactly where I was. I didn't say her those words, but she knew exactly where I was, and she just said to me, if you take your life, I'll kill you first. And it was just it was so sobering. I never fell to that level of despair again after that. But it was just that moment that the grief is so huge and overwhelm. Becoming, and you know you can't change the fact, and it's like so you're you're helpless, and you're, yeah, but I never fell that low again.
Brian Smith:Thank you. I appreciate you sharing that. I think it's important that we share all those emotions that can be, I guess, maybe shameful for some people I've I have felt that. I felt it getting a knife or driving my car, you know, off of a bridge or something. I've gone through that. And I remember when I was early in my grief, and I was listening to a podcast, and one of the reasons I do what I do, and I heard a mother who had lost her daughter, and she talked about feeling like stepping in front of a bus and just her saying that made me feel more normal. And I think a lot of people hold that feeling in shame, and think I shouldn't feel this way. But when you lose a child, your son was technically over 18, but I would say it's still a child and a teenager. As a parent, you know our job is to protect them. It's to be with them. And you know you want to, you want to be where they are. The pain is so intense you don't feel like you can take it. And you know that, as you said, this is not going to change. This is going to be this way. Quote, forever. So those feelings combined can make you feel despondent.
Jeralyn Glass:Yeah. I mean, it's, it's huge, it's huge. And, you know, I don't wish that on my worst enemy. I just it's, it's so big for a parent, and yet, there is healing possible. And I see it in my I saw it that first night when I played the bowl, and then I saw light in my eyes and joy. It was like, Wait, this is this what's happening here, you know, like and Dylan communicating with me Brian, like it was also when I would fall into that really deep space I couldn't find him, and then I'd start to panic. And when I was able to lift myself out into some version of hopefulness, he communicated with me. So in my book, I tell all kinds of stories of the sides, and there's a film that we made that's a 20 minute film that comes with a book that you see all the different pictures and videos of the signs. It's It's pretty. It's been such a comfort to me, and I want to make people understand that that is definitely possible for all of us, that death doesn't mean they're gone. I mean, he's he's as I mean, just like the story I told you, not like, Mom, go get that for Brennan. It's like, son, leave me alone. You know, it's like he just he, he's become, sometimes, my my angel boss, and we laugh about that, because, again, he was a very big and strong kid. But there's such a humor in all of it and such a love in all of it. And I know that he's helping me to help others. God, I wish it were different, you know. But again, as as I've learned, it wasn't our destiny, and I have to be able to accept that, and I have to be able to really embrace that and understand there's a bigger picture to our lives. And you know, I will see him again, and I feel him now every day of my life. I was just telling someone who was really in deep grief that there came a moment and she didn't lose a child, she lost actually a limb. And, you know, her life changed without that limb, you know, and she became an amputee. And we were just talking about the moment where you recognize, I could feel Dylan so strongly, and I recognized, oh, my goodness, he's imprinted in my heart forever, like he's, he's here, he's, he's a part of me. And so we were talking just about that body part. It's always a part of her. You know, it's important that we can, that we can embrace the loss in a way that we can integrate, that it can up level us. But because I'm thinking, there's one of our hospice doctors here that talks about there might not be a cure for everything Brian, there might we might not, you know, it might not be our destiny, and there might not be a cure for everything, but everybody can heal. Yeah, I think that's so profound to understand, like we can we can heal, we might not be able to cure, and we don't know the bigger picture of our lives.
Brian Smith:I think that's so important. And as you said that, I've reminded of two things. I have a friend who passed from cancer, and she went to see a healer, and then it was few weeks or months later, she she passed. But you know, we're like, she healed Brenda. She Brenda healed. She she had a lot of trauma that she got through. She didn't really accept herself as she was. She did all that before she before she transitioned physically. So she did heal, and I interviewed. A doctor, it was Brad Stewart, and he talked about that. As a doctor, you know you're trained that you have to cure people, and you we can't always cure everything with the body, but understanding, understanding that you have, and understand that I have, that there's a bigger picture, that there, there was rebirth planning. I blame my daughter for that. So I plan on a talk with her when I see her too. But there's, there's that, and there's also this bigger picture that we don't, we don't understand. And when people sometimes hear this, they think, Well, do you sing? It's my fault that my my child, died so I could, so I could have this. And now I feel guilty. It's, it's not that at all, because even though they're sacrificing some time here on earth there, we're all in it together. We're all cooperative going through this, right? So they've got their role. We've got their role to play. We've got our role to play. And I kind of jokingly say my role is the harder role. I have to stay here and this place is hard. So our kids are still with us. They still care about us, they still love us. And what I love about talking to someone like you that's further along in this journey is I think we can give hope to people that are early on, because we we know that feeling of having no hope at all.
Jeralyn Glass:Yeah, again, I don't wish it on anyone, but when people are in that situation, there's I just know that sound can embrace you and hold you and help you. But again, there's no words that anyone can say. It's such a personal journey, and I could feel it happening with me inside myself. You know that again, there'd be great despair, and then I would be able to bring myself higher. And then, like there was one situation where I fell asleep and I was dreaming about Dylan, and I could feel him. I could smell his cologne. He loved, you know, different kinds of Cologne. I could smell his cologne. He was talking to me. He was comforting me. We were laughing and and then I drifted back off to sleep again. And it was so real Brian, that the next morning, when I woke up, I jumped out of bed and I ran to his room. I was like, Oh, he's there. I this whole thing was, I had dreamed it, you know, he's not dead. And it was like, What did you do? And I dragged myself back to my own room. I sat down, and then I looked at my nightgown, and there was a white feather embedded in the thread of my nightgown. And I'm like, This is insane. I took a picture of it because I don't have anything with down in my house. I'm very allergic. And there was this white feather embedded in one thread of my night. I'm just like, Hi mom. And it was like, I think that's what they call a visitation. I wasn't sure, you know, but it was so real. I He was warm. Could smell him. I mean, it was just like, oh my gosh, he's not gone like it was. It was so instinctive to just run to his room and then to, you know, realize the ludicrous, how ludicrous that was. But there he was. Well,
Brian Smith:it's, it's not ludicrous. The thing is that for minors, thing is wherever our loved ones go, where we go. It's, as my friend Sarah Gibson says, it's just Heaven's three feet off the floor, as she puts it, they're right here next to us. And when we, when we dream at night, we we travel. We actually travel. We don't remember most of that. Every once in a while, we get a chance to bring a memory back with us. And that's, that's what we call a dream visit. So absolutely, absolutely. That was, that was a visit. Yeah. So for people, oh, go ahead. No, you go ahead. For people, I mean, we're talking about sets of balls, and we're talking about musicians and stuff. For someone that's listening now and they want to say, I want to get started on sound healing journey. Where do we start? Where's the place to start with that?
Jeralyn Glass:I think that you make a consultation with me if it's something that you want to purchase a bowl, but otherwise, like Dylan was like, Mom, you have to make this available to everybody. So we created, He inspired me to create a YouTube channel. I think we started in 217 and there's like, a big free library of over 200 pieces of music and meditations. So that's there for people to listen to, including there's three two hour loops. So if you want to just put the sound on and just immerse yourself in it, there's that. Then he inspired me to create this app. So we just soft launched it. It's going to come further out now in the market, but it's a platform where there's 20 visualizers and you can learn about the science of sound. There's longer meditations on there. There's a meditation for children. What is constructive and destructive sound like you learn from many of the pioneers in the field. And that was the other thing. I was sitting on the couch one day with my. Mom, and he was just like, Mom, we got to make an app. I'm like, son, I'm busy. It was the same thing that he did with card deck. Mom, we're going to make a card No. Son, I'm busy right now. Like, I don't want to do that. But when he gets insistent, and again, he was a, you know, he's a big kid, and when he goes like that, I know that I have to listen. And we started the app before COVID. We started the app four years ago, and it's just built and built, but it was the same idea, same with the card deck. So the deck is, is that the crystal sound healing Oracle, and each card has a QR code on it, so you can play with the cards and listen to the sound of your singing bowl. So those are two inexpensive ways for people. Three, the YouTube channel is free, but the card deck and the app for people to really listen and explore. And as Dylan said to me, Mom, you know, they got to have it in their back pocket. It's like, okay, so you know, you can try to make your mom cool. Okay, I get it like, you know, we have to stay up to date with all this technology. So those two things and then they can make a consultation appointment at our website. Crystal, Cadence, calm. I teach an introductory class that's four hours. I teach a 32 hour level one, a level two, a, level three, and an advanced retreat. So again, it's over 120 hours of training. It depends how deep you want to go. And you know, we've had all different kinds of people, from doctors and nurses and lawyers and yoga teachers and Reiki Masters. It really is, who are you and how do you want to integrate sound in your life? Is it just for you? Is it just for your you and your family? Is it for friends that you want to give sound bas to be able to give them to friends. Or do you really want to be become a practitioner? So it really depends on what you want to do, and the field and the concept of music is medicine. Like I just had a pretty incredible experience happen when I was teaching at Victor Wooten camp in Nashville. And one of the professors that was there, we did an exercise where I had everybody toning, so everybody was just making sounds with their voices while I was playing the bowls and moving a little bit, moving their bodies. And he just raised his hand afterwards, and he said, Geralyn, I'm flipped. What happened? He said, I have Parkinson's and I just experienced no more dizziness. My legs were stable. I wasn't wobbling anymore. He said, What happened? You know, so and I've had the experience with Parkinson's patients before. We're working with them with sound, and the sound stops the trembling, and then the concept is, okay, how do we go further with that, that they can integrate that into their lives more and more and more. So it just depends, you know, do people want to have a bowl themselves? Do they want to just and many people just want to work with their own prayers and their own meditations, and they use it when they get up and before they go to bed. Or again, it's, it's very individualized, and that's why I love to consult, uh, virtually, you know, just to see who's who's there across the screen from me, and what are they feeling? What do they need?
Brian Smith:Yeah, yeah, my little,
Jeralyn Glass:my little angel guy that helps me. Yeah. And you
Brian Smith:touch upon your book to tell people what they'll find in your books. It sounds like you got a lot of stories about about Dylan and you and yeah.
Jeralyn Glass:So this is the book sacred vibrations by Hay House. And this image is actually from a scientific instrument called the CYMA scope that measures and photographs what sound looks like made visible. So this is actually a small f bowl, and it has 22 of these little anti nodes. And so if you think about the beauty of this image is inherent in each crystal ball, and each one is different, like a snowflake, and those are circulating in the fluids of our bodies. And if we, you know, say that we're about 70% water in our bodies, just imagine that as you hear the sound, there's more and more coherence being created in your body. So again, like another thing with my mom, like she used to upset me very much. Just, you know, how parents can be and they say something, you feel criticized or judged or whatever. But the more I played the bowls, I just saw and felt like she's love it. There's just love between us. She could say whatever she wanted to say, and it might have triggered me in the past, but after working with the bowls intensely, it didn't anymore. The bowls helped me, I think, to just recognize we are love and to keep building that bridge of love as much as I can, you know, so in the book, it talks about, partly my experiences as a musician and how my career, I think, led me to. Uh, finding the bowls and all the miracles with Dylan. As I said, there's a 20 minute video that is attached to a QR code on page 233, of the book. I talk about the science of sound, some of the history of the crystal singing bowls. And then we created these little This is that. This is the story of the feather that I just told you, that's the feather.
Unknown:Oh, wow, wow. But
Jeralyn Glass:we created these little sound rxs. So there's little there's little stories, little prescriptions of different things that myself or my practitioners that I've trained have experienced with the bulls. And then there's different stories by musicians and some of the leading scientists. So that, you know, I want to make sure, also, as a professor, that people understand, like, this isn't Woo, woo, like there's really science and there's a whole bunch of healing happening. And you know, as some of the leading scientists have said to me, like, where is that crossing of science and spirituality? You know that partly is where what music is. It crosses because music uses a particular structure. There's the theory of music that I'm working with, and then there's, as you know, Brian, there's the ineffable, there's the miracles, there's the
Brian Smith:the spiritual side, yeah, well, I what? I would say, that the supernatural is just what we can't explain yet. I don't, I don't know that that fine line between what's supernatural, you know, if you think about if you went back to ancient societies and you showed them technology we have today, they would, they would say, That's magic, right? That's, that's impossible. You can't you can't communicate wirelessly, you can't see an image on a screen of someone who's 3000 miles away. And we say, No, that's, that's easy to do, and we can explain how it's done. We know exactly how it's done. And I think that what we call supernatural now is just what we don't really understand yet. And part of that is because we have this mindset that says it's impossible that if someone passes, if their body stops functioning, then their brain stops functioning, and therefore they're no longer conscious, so they can't communicate with you. And that's the blinders that we put on as a society. So once we open our minds up to the possibility, then it all becomes, you know, I think, really clear to us.
Jeralyn Glass:I mean, I remember the moment, and I was very terrified, because as a child, when my grandparents or great grandparents passed, we didn't, it was sort of kept from us, right? So I never experienced what death looked like, and I was terrified to experience it with my son, but, and I write about it in the book, that it actually became one of the most beautiful and touching moments of my life, because we're all going to go there, and it's, it's important not to be afraid of that. And, you know, just being able to connect with his body, and I washed it and, I mean, it was just, it was a beautiful and sacred moment of parting, but he wasn't there. Brian, yeah, it wasn't there. I mean, it he was, but he wasn't and then when he started communicate the night he died with the shooting star, was just like, Wow, there's so much beyond what. You know, we want to try to track with this and this just this, can't do it.
Brian Smith:Yeah, exactly. So these experiences can, can open us up to these possibilities. And you know, people have asked me and if would you be doing this if your daughter hadn't hadn't passed, I'm like, Absolutely not. I was actually kind of a spirit. I was on a spiritual journey. I was studying the afterlife because I had a I had a fear of death. I had a massive fear of death when I was young, for the first 35 years of my life, probably, but when, when Shayna passed, then that, that really launched me into, like, really understanding it, right? And then having to learn, how do I heal and grow with this? And then, you know, as you were saying, it gets to the point where it's like, I don't help other people understand this, because I'm looking at these other, you know, people that are going through that and thinking, I don't want people to be living with no hope, with no understanding of you can reach out to your loved one and you can find ways to raise your vibration, to match more closely with theirs. You know that that harmony, that where we can start to resonate and feel them, and as long as we stay in a very low vibration, it doesn't make it impossible, it just makes it a lot
Jeralyn Glass:more difficult. And as I had mentioned, like that's what made me so afraid when he would I could feel him and communicate with him, and then he was gone and recognizing Geraldine, you you have a job to do, like you can't wallow in your despair and your grief, because when you do, he can't find you. Just exactly what you so beautifully said, Brian, like we have to find ways to nurture and keep our vibrational frequency higher to really be able to be the bridge, yeah, but when you're deep in grief, it's like, okay, how do I do that? Yeah?
Brian Smith:Well, that's, that's what you're helping people do. So we've talked about the book, and we talked about the apps and we talked about the cards. I assume people can find that on your website, so tell people what your website is again, please.
Jeralyn Glass:It's crystal cadence.com, and we, actually, I'm very proud of this. We, we came out with two pieces of music. One is pentatonic visions, it's an album, and the other is joy reboot. It's a song. And all that, all our music is on our website too, but so there's also lots of music to listen to. The pentatonic visions album is based on the pentatonic scale, so it's built up five and there's a lot to say about that. When I was living in Germany in 2008 they discovered these little bird bone flutes that they then trace back to 40 to 60,000 years ago. And many of those bird bone flutes were tuned to the pentatonic scale. So there's something inherent in that structure of sound. And so I it's an hour and a half the album, and it's also in collaboration with Chris Scholler, who's a beautiful, beautiful musician. And so there's soundscapes. Half of the album is soundscapes, and half of it is just bowl meditations. And then there's two spoken, guided meditations on it. So I'm really, really happy about that album. And then the jogger boot was kind of what we've talked about, the power of music to unite us. And it's based on the melody of the ninth symphony of Beethoven. So it's based on that melody, and I sang that ninth symphony many times in Germany, and I the last time I sang it was Dylan. I was pregnant with Dylan, and after he was born, first of all, he came three weeks early. And then after he was born, whenever he would cry, I'd put the symphony on, and boom, he was still as a mouse. So that was also one of my first experiences of music as medicine, being able to quiet my boy, but it's a combination of different styles of music. So there's some rap in it. There's some janavi Harrison, who's a devotional kirtan singer. She's in it. So it's how does music unify us? The piece itself, the Ninth Symphony was played when the Berlin Wall fell down in 1989 conducted by Leonard Bernstein, and the theme has become the theme of the European Union. So I feel like now also just where we're at in our country and in the world, like music has the power to unify us, and we have the ability to drop all differences when we're when we're grooving together, when we're enjoying music together, and I feel like that's going to become more and more It's important that we find ways to unify. Yes, of course, we have differences, but how do we find harmony? Because in the end, we're all human beings, right? Yeah,
Brian Smith:absolutely. Well, I'm gonna definitely check that out for myself. It sounds really interesting. Well, Gerald, we're coming to the end of our time. Thanks so much for being here and for doing this today. It's been a pleasure to meet you. Any parting messages you want to leave with the people that are listening?
Jeralyn Glass:Sure, let me just play you a short little experience.
Brian Smith:Is that okay for you? Absolutely
Jeralyn Glass:So I invite everyone to allow your breath to slow down and to deepen and to know if there's anything that's heavy in your heart, just allow the sound to embrace you, to hold you and to know that you are Never Alone. So I set an intention for healing, for transformation, and send you great, great love through sound. You. Um, thank you, Brian, so much for having me. Thank you for all that you do to help bring love and healing to humanity, and I just give everybody a big Sonic embrace. And thank you for listening today to our conversation. Thank you for allowing me to go so deep and just I treasure this. Brian, thank you very much. Yeah, it's been
Brian Smith:awesome. Great to get good to meet you, so have a great rest of your afternoon. You.