Using Music as Emotional SupportPin

Using Music as Emotional Support

It’s been well-documented that music can have a very emotional effect on us. Personally, I have not been through any sort of formal music therapy, but I know there are plenty of people who have. I have, however, seen first-hand how music can change the mood almost immediately. After my in-laws both passed away last year, the first sign that we were getting back to whatever our new normal was going to be, was coming home and hearing music playing on our Bluetooth speaker. It changed the atmosphere of our house immediately.

So, when I cam across this article earlier this week, I found a lot to explain how music impacts us that I agree with.

Music enters our brains through our ears and travels a neural pathway all the way through the thalamus to the hippocampus and limbic system, which is the center for our emotions. Music has a direct path to our emotional circuit board. That’s exactly why music is used so powerfully in movies to impact an audience. That’s also why so many people choose songs that define their relationships to incorporate into weddings and funerals, both highly emotional ceremonies.  It makes good sense that psychology would introduce music into a clinical setting for patients dealing with the emotional upheaval of grief and loss.

It’s true. music can have a direct impact on how we feel at any given moment in time. In these times of anxious news about the COVID-19 virus, I find myself playing more music in the background of my work day, just to try and change the mood. Maybe it’s just a distraction, and doesn’t change anything, but it makes me feel better, it helps me find some enjoyment in my day-to-day, and in the best cases, a song can inspire me to keep going.

This also serves as a good way to mention something I’ve started doing over on Instagram, sharing some of these songs that inspire me as stories, on “Music Monday”. I’m not going to promise that I’ll do one every Monday, or that I won’t run out of songs, but for now, it seems like finding some inspiring music to help us all get through the day can’t hurt anything.

For example, this past Monday, I shared a Frank Turner song titled “Get Better“:

I’m trying to get better because I haven’t been my best
She took a plain black marker, started writing on my chest
She drew a line across the middle of my broken heart
And said, come on now, let’s fix this mess
We could get better
Because we’re not dead yet

Feel free to follow, and if you have a song that inspires you, share it with the rest of us!

 

Similar Posts

  • What you don’t see

    Someone recently sent me an email and talked about how “brave” I was to have this site out here, and how strong I must be to own what happened to me the way I do on here. My response, other than being very humbled and honored, was to tell this person that it’s not as…

  • So, How Are You Doing?

    But, that’s not what I want to talk about today, because, frankly, I think we’re all talked out on the subject, or at least I feel like I’m all talked out right now. If you don’t realize that anxiety and other mental health issues are sitting heavy on all of us this year, I don’t know that there’s anything I can say that will convince you of it. I want to talk about some good things, because, why not? I want to appreciate the following:

    No matter what happens with the election, the sun rose today. It will set tonight, and rise again tomorrow. And I am here to see it.

    I am thankful for the many friends and family members we’ve been in touch with in the last few days, even if it’s just to text and say “WTF”?

    Laughter, because sometimes there’s nothing else to do but laugh, and it’s good for you.

    You are here, reading this. You’re Alive!

    Hope, that as long as there is a tomorrow for any of us, there is hope in the fact that things are always changing in the world, and in our lives.

    Love. For each other, and ourselves.

    Nature.

    The technology that lets us all check in with each other, across the world, at any time.

  • Re-learning how to live

    I’ve talked a bit here about how much depression, especially the dissociative disorder I suffered from, is similar to alcohol or drug abuse. No, obviously there are big differences but both are the result of self-destructive behavior and act as a coping mechanism. My response to pain, suffering, stress, etc. was to dissociate, turn the…

  • How to Protect Kids from Predators Without a Need For New Laws

    It’s something I’ve advocated for over the years but today I came across a quote on Cecil Murphey’s blog that sums it up perfectly: Looking back, I now know she chose me even before she talked to me. I’m sure she spotted the longing in my eyes and the loneliness that I projected out of…

  • To the Class of 2020

    I’m sure you’ve all seen the Facebook “thing” going around asking folks to post their Senior pictures to show support for the kids who are going to miss out on prom, and graduation, etc. this Spring due to the virus lock down. I’m sure many of you have also seen some posts questioning why sharing…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)