| 
			 
			 
  
			 
			
			  
			by John Beaulieu, N.D. Ph.D. 
			2001 
			
			from
			
			CymaticSource Website 
  
			
			The purpose of this commentary is to 
			inspire you to take the time to actually read this book - to devote 
			the necessary attention to develop an understanding and respect for 
			Dr. Hans Jenny’s profound scientific perspective.  
			
			  
			
			This takes some 
			deliberate and focused concentration, but in even flipping through 
			these pages you will quickly see that the experiments portrayed 
			herein, as well as Dr. Jenny’s depth and breadth of understanding, 
			more than merit the effort!  
			
			 
			I also wish to acknowledge the enormous contribution which Dr. Jenny 
			has made to the emerging fields of "Sound Healing" and "Energy 
			Medicine." Although he was a medical doctor, it was never his 
			intention that this work be applied therapeutically. Rather, he 
			wished to demonstrate the primacy of vibration and its ever-present 
			effects throughout the entirety of nature.  
			
			  
			
			Through his painstaking 
			experimentation and acute observation, he was able to articulate a 
			conceptual basis which may very well prove fundamental throughout 
			the broad reach of scientific endeavor. 
			 
			I first became aware of Dr. Jenny’s work in 1974 when I was working 
			at Bellevue Psychiatric Hospital in New York City as Supervisor of 
			Music Therapy. A fellow therapist placed a copy of Cymatics, Vol. I 
			on my desk. I remember the joy of looking at the cymatic sound 
			patterns, and the wonderful sense of "Yes!" that rippled through my 
			being. Each picture was worth at least a thousand words and I felt 
			as though I were reading volumes in just a few minutes. 
			 
			As I read the Cymatics book, I realized that Dr. Jenny was a 
			dedicated systems researcher and I found his writing just as 
			exciting as the cymatic images! My graduate studies and work at 
			Bellevue Hospital were based on applied systems theory. I also 
			studied mathematical music composition with Innas Xenakis and a 
			systems approach to therapeutic program planning. I will say more 
			about Dr. Jenny’s systems approach later. 
			 
			Having shared and taught Cymatics for over twenty five years I know 
			that many who are attracted to Dr. Jenny’s work are artistic and 
			"right brain" by nature.  
			
			  
			
			They are immediately inspired by the beauty 
			of his cymatic pictures and can sense instantly what they mean. 
			Using their imaginative capacities, they are able to extrapolate 
			broad implications to his research. 
			 
			Yet Dr. Jenny’s writings are pure "left brain" science. He sets 
			forth a thorough phenomenological study of vibration befitting an 
			accomplished physicist and systems researcher. From a scientific 
			perspective Dr. Jenny’s written words form a beautiful mosaic which 
			is just as profound as his cymatic pictures. His cymatic writings 
			are embedded in rigor and clarity and supported by exacting 
			methodology and procedure.  
			
			  
			
			He is constantly seeking to observe the 
			integrity of the whole, and to document its behavior through 
			phenomenological categories. 
			 
			I remember when I first showed Dr. Jenny’s work to a group of New 
			York composers and musicians. I started by explaining how the 
			pictures were made, in about two minutes, which was their right 
			brain theory time limit before they became restless. Next, we viewed 
			slides of cymatic photographs. Everyone said words like "wow", "far 
			out", "yeah", "ummm".  
			
			  
			
			After the presentation I asked for questions. 
			Everyone just sat there in what I took to be an appreciative 
			silence. No one had any questions, and then they went home. 
			 
			This was my first "Music and Sound in the Healing Arts" class and I 
			didn’t know what to think, so I just went along with the energy. To 
			my surprise I came home to an answering machine filled with 
			questions. I continued to get questions for the rest of the week, 
			and to this day I occasionally get questions about Dr. Jenny’s work 
			from students of that very class! Sooner or later the other side of 
			our brain says "what about me?" and wants to know. So twenty-five 
			years of hearing "wows" followed by "hows" has inspired me to write 
			this commentary. 
			 
			It is my intention to attempt to communicate the essence of Dr. 
			Jenny’s work based on years of "right brain" students’ questions. I 
			am not seeking scientific precision. If you are scientific by nature 
			and want science, I suggest that you dive right into Dr. Jenny’s 
			research. My goal is to help artists and creative people not versed 
			in science and systems theory to come to a better understanding of 
			this material.  
			
			  
			
			Through this understanding, it is my hope that they 
			will have an even greater and more balanced appreciation of what Dr. 
			Jenny has given us. 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			Dr. 
			Jenny’s Cymatic Experiments
			 
			
			 
			Dr. Jenny performed many of his experiments by putting substances 
			such as sand, fluids, and powders on a metal plate.  
			
			  
			
			The plate was 
			attached to an oscillator and the oscillator was controlled by a 
			frequency generator capable of producing a broad range of 
			vibrations. Through turning a dial on the frequency generator Dr. 
			Jenny would cause the plate to vibrate at
			 different 
			frequencies. 
			
			  
			
			Let me explain. Oscillators are devices 
			which produce vibrations. They are often called "vibrators" in the 
			popular market place. A massage device is a simple oscillator. 
			Imagine any popular electric massage device or go to most any 
			department store and ask to see their massagers.  
			
			  
			
			Turn it on and it 
			will vibrate or oscillate. Next place the massager on a bone. Feel 
			how the vibrations are amplified over your body. Touching the 
			massager to your bone is like Dr. Jenny attaching his oscillator to 
			a metal plate. The plate, like your bones, amplifies the vibrations 
			of the oscillator. 
			 
			A simple massage device creates only one vibration which can be 
			heard as a hum. The hum you hear with your ears and vibration you 
			feel from the massager are the same. In contrast to a massage device 
			which is capable of only one vibration/sound, Dr. Jenny’s oscillator 
			hooked to a frequency generator was capable of thousands of 
			different vibrations/sounds. 
			 
			Dr. Jenny could turn a dial and instantly change the vibrations 
			moving through the plate. He could observe the effect of different 
			vibrations on different substances. When Dr. Jenny watched the sand 
			or other substances on the metal plate organize into different 
			patterns, he could also hear the sound produced by the oscillator. 
			 
			
			  
			
			If he were to lightly touch the plate he would feel the vibration in 
			his fingertips. 
			 
			Dr. Jenny observed three fundamental principles at work in the 
			vibratory field on the plate. He wrote,  
			
				
				"Since the various aspects of these 
				phenomena are due to vibration, we are confronted with a 
				spectrum which reveals a patterned, figurative formation at one 
				pole and kinetic-dynamic processes at the other, the whole being 
				generated and sustained by its essential periodicity." 
			 
			
			What Dr. Jenny is saying is that one can 
			hear the sound as a wave; he calls this the pole of kinetic-dynamic 
			process. One can see the pattern the sound creates in the plate; he 
			calls this the pole of "patterned-figurative formation".  
			
			  
			
			And if Dr. 
			Jenny were to touch the plate and feel it’s vibration, he would call 
			this the generating pole of "essential periodicity". 
			
			 
			 
			
			[Editor’s Note: Although the example given here involves three of 
			our senses, Dr. Jenny stated that his objective was to make these 
			effects visible, since our sense of sight is the most 
			discriminating. He was emphatic that this "triadic nature" of 
			vibration referenced above, comprised three essential aspects, or 
			three ways of viewing, a unitary phenomenon.] 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			Dr. 
			Jenny’s Scientific Approach
			 
			
			 
			Systems Theory unites science and art in a quest for holistic 
			vision. It is a discipline where objectivity and intuition meet, for 
			one can not see the whole without this kind of vision. Dr. Jenny 
			always sought to observe the whole and to understand the behavior of 
			parts in relationship to the whole.  
			
			  
			
			He says,  
			
				
				"What is the status of the parts, 
				the details, the single pieces, the fragments? In the 
				vibrational field it can be shown that every part is, in the 
				true sense, implicated in the whole." 
			 
			
			A basic systems law is that the whole is 
			greater then the sum total of its parts. 
			 
			
			  
			
			A common metaphor used to 
			illustrate this systems law is that of a team of scientists studying 
			an elephant. The problem is that the scientists have no idea they 
			are working on an elephant. One scientist is measuring the behavior 
			of the foot, another scientist is measuring the velocity in which 
			the tail wags, and another is observing the chemical composition of 
			one toenail, etc. 
			 
			
			  
			
			These views are fragmented. Each is one publishing 
			separate papers in prestigious scientific journals in different 
			disciplines, yet they have no idea that their work is remotely 
			related. 
			 
			One day a scientist comes along and accidentally "sees" the whole. 
			She calls the whole an "elephant". 
			 
			
			  
			
			She sees the relationship of the 
			parts to the whole and how they move together. Everyone thinks she 
			is crazy and the specialists begin to fight over her idea of an 
			"elephant". More and more people begin to see "the elephant" until 
			one day "there is an elephant" and many isolated areas of research 
			are explained in a larger context. 
			 
			Throughout his writings Dr. Jenny is always requesting that we focus 
			on the whole and not get distracted by the behavior of the parts.
			 
			
				
				"The three fields, the periodic as 
				the fundamental field with the two poles of figure and dynamic, 
				invariably appear as one. They are inconceivable without each 
				other. 
				
				  
				
				It is quite out of the question to take away the one or 
				the other; nothing can be abstracted without the whole ceasing 
				to exist. We cannot therefore number them one, two, three, but 
				can only say they are threefold in appearance and yet unitary; 
				that they appear as one and yet are threefold." 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			Cymatics 
			and "Vibrational Medicine"
			 
			
			 
			Cymatics research is a "sound" example of the principles underlying 
			vibrational medicine. 
			
			  
			
			If you were to be present during a cymatics 
			experiment you would hear a sound and simultaneously see a pattern 
			forming in a substance which had been placed on a vibrating membrane 
			or perhaps a steel plate. What started out as an inert "blob" of 
			sand or water, without movement, form, or pulse, would instantly 
			transform into an animated, pulsating form as soon as the plate or 
			membrane was excited by vibration.  
			
			  
			
			All this would be generated by 
			the vibrational field created by the oscillator. 
			 
			Now let us assume that for some reason you could only "see" the 
			static aspect of the form and therefore understood it to be solid. 
			The idea of the form being generated by a vibrational field and 
			making a sound would seem preposterous. Now let’s imagine that 
			someone unknowingly brushes the sand on the plate and the shape is 
			disturbed, but then in a matter of a few seconds it returns to its 
			original shape. How would you explain it? 
			 
			The above example illustrates the basic differences between 
			conventional, materialistic medicine and energetic healing. Let me 
			explain. "Energy medicine" seeks to understand people as unified 
			energy fields or in Dr. Jenny’s words, "as wholes". Metaphorically, 
			our physical body, emotions, and thought processes are like cymatic 
			forms which are organized by underlying vibrational fields, the 
			densest (the physical), being animated by the subtler vibrations 
			(emotions and thoughts).  
			
			  
			In energy medicine, the underlying vibrational field is called an 
			energy field.  
			
			  
			
			The health practitioner seeks to 
			perceive, evaluate, and support the energy field rather than focus 
			on a specific symptom. The practitioner’s goal is to use therapeutic 
			modalities such as music, sound, touch, homeopathics, 
			acupuncture, 
			tuning forks, voice, and color, to effect and change the energy 
			field.  
			
			  
			
			As the person shifts into resonance with a more coherent 
			field, their array of symptoms may disappear as a more harmonious 
			pattern emerges. 
			 
			The idea of energy fields is both new and ancient. Physicists have 
			sought to explain the strange behavior of quantum particles through 
			the existence of a unified field.  
			
				
				"We may therefore regard matter as 
				being constituted by the regions of Space in which the field is 
				extremely intense.... There is no place in this new kind of 
				physics both for the field and matter, for the field is the only 
				reality."  
				
				(Albert Einstein) 
			 
			
			Dr. Jenny used phenomenology and 
			systems 
			theory as research vehicles to observe the effects of whole vibrational fields.  
			
			  
			
			He wanted students of Cymatics to understand 
			that the phenomena witnessed on the vibrating surface were always 
			the product of a larger field, and that any change in the frequency 
			of the vibrational field would immediately alter the phenomena being 
			observed. 
			 
			In the latter chapters of Cymatics, Vol. II, Dr. Jenny sought to 
			illustrate a connection between cymatic vibrational fields and the 
			behaviors of biological, weather, and social systems.  
			
			  
			
			I believe that 
			Dr. Jenny was not saying that Cymatics was the cause  rather he 
			was saying, 
			
				
				"look at the whole and you will come 
				to new understandings. Let these cymatic experiments inspire 
				your imagination to deeper insights into the universal 
				principles of Nature." 
			 
			
			The current environment within the 
			healing arts is one of specialization and compartmentalization. In 
			contrast, energy medicine takes a more generalized approach to 
			healing, based on the understanding of energy fields.  
			
			  
			
			When the 
			energy medicine practitioner evaluates the energy field, he/she can 
			recommend "vibrational therapies" such as music, sounds, movements, 
			colors, etc., to support a shift in the field. The result will be a 
			new energetic field in which the old symptoms can no longer exist. 
			 
			This is a "transformation" as opposed to "fixing a part."  
			
			  
			
			The old 
			energy field will still be available, yet we will now have developed 
			the ability to shift into a new field. Ultimately we learn that we 
			have the freedom to create and choose different fields. Ideally we 
			would find ourselves on a continuum of fields, always observing and 
			entering into a greater whole, a greater experience of wholeness! 
			 
			As I mentioned before, a fundamental tenet of systems theory is that 
			"the whole is greater then the sum total of its parts." Observation 
			of the "whole picture" is a discipline to which Dr. Jenny dedicated 
			himself, as documented in Cymatics, Vols. I and II.  
			
			  
			
			We can learn 
			from his dedication. We can be inspired to see ourselves as "wholes" 
			with the capability to shift into different vibrational fields at 
			any time. Cymatics, from its widest purview, ultimately teaches us 
			that we are limitless beings with immense creative and healing 
			powers.  
			
			  
			
			Dr. Jenny exhibited this in his own life - may you be so 
			moved to experience this yourself, as you explore the vast 
			implications of his work.  
  
			
			
			   |