Meetings > Meeting Notes > February 21, 2010
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February 21, 2010
When I invited a woman from Tucson to speak to our group last month, I did so on the assumption this would be an alternative way of healing that we as a group had not yet investigated. That turned out to be the tip of an iceberg of what I learned that Sunday.
The woman’s name is Tryshe Dhevney. She teaches people how to heal themselves by making verbal sounds. Like everything profound, the process she taught us was simple. It consists of using the voice to balance the seven chakras: A different tone, note, and visual image for each level, moving from root to crown chakra.
There were 25 of us that day. We had run out of chairs, but nobody left even though there was standing room only. She took us through initial exercises of breathing, then breathing with sound, then chatting with another person, each doing so with tongues sticking out of our mouths. Pretty kookie, you say, but those exercises were the precursor of the final experience, toning to the chakra levels.
All of this would have seemed far kookier had we not been introduced initially to Tryshe’s own healing story. In May of 2000, Tryshe was told by doctors that there was no longer anything they could do to treat her hepatitis C and liver disease and she was advised to "get her affairs in order." Five months later, doctors were mystified when tests revealed that she was disease and virus-free. Tryshe had healed herself through the power of toning.
Now, she leads workshops nationwide designed to support others to generate their own healing tones that allow optimum health and well being. In Tucson, she recently celebrated the ten-year anniversary of complete freedom from liver disease and any active hepatitis C. Her doctor now claims she is "cured." Tryshe Dhevney's website: www.soundshifting.com. She has agreed to return to Portland 'ere long.
Mary Lansing

