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BOWLS AND BELLS

The sound as Inner Space

Unlike sounds that organize time or create an environment, singing bowls and bells generate a sense of inner space.
They don't set a rhythm or fill the environment, but rather open a resonance that is perceived more as depth than as a sequence.

Their sound is not followed.
It is inhabited.

RESONANCE AND VIBRATION

These sounds are characterized by their ability to sustain a vibration over time.
After the initial impact, the frequency expands and transforms, generating a sense of continuity that does not depend on repetition.

Unlike other styles, here the focus is not on the pattern, but on the resonance.

Therefore, this type of sound is commonly used to:

  • facilitate meditation
  • generate a sense of inner space
  • reduce mental activity
  • accompany states of introspection

DEEP LISTENING

The perception of these sounds is not linear. They do not advance, they do not evolve in a clear way.

They expand.

This quality fosters deeper listening, where attention is directed not outwards, but inwards.

BETWEEN PULSE AND SILENCE

Bowls and bells occupy a unique place within the system:

  • they don't organize time like the pulse
  • they don't create an environment like nature
  • they don't neutralize like white noisenco

They create space

A space that can feel more open or denser, brighter or deeper, depending on the type of resonance.

SOUND AS PRESENCE

In Pusonome, these sounds are not used as a reference or structure, but as presence.

Each resonance opens a distinct space:

  • more sustained or more focused
  • more enveloping or more defined
  • more internal or more expansive
The choice doesn't depend on a rule, but on how each person perceives that space.

It's not about following the sound,
but about letting it resonate.

Note on frequencies and their meaning

Throughout history, different traditions have attributed specific meanings to certain frequencies or sounds.
These interpretations are part of a way of understanding experience that, for many people, is meaningful, which is profoundly valid and respectable.

At Pulsonome, we focus on another, complementary approach: observing how the rhythm, frequency, and structure of sound influence perception and internal state.
Rather than establishing universal meanings, which we don't deny, our goal is to propose a direct exploration: listening, perceiving, and recognizing what happens in each case.

Because, beyond any interpretation, the experience is always personal.