Music and Mental Health
There is music all around you. In stores, elevators, movie soundtracks, video games, and more. The music is playing, but often you don’t hear it. Your mind does, but you don’t pay attention. Sometimes, you even listen to your own playlists or music services without really knowing what you are listening to. Music can impact our mood for better or for worse. The question is, can you hear the music? Do you know what you are listening to?
You pay attention to what you put into your body when it
comes to food. Many people read the labels on the products they use for
cosmetics and grooming to see if they are healthy or not. You probably pay
attention to the over the counter and prescription medications that you put
into your body, because you want to know what is going in your body and how it
will affect you. But how often to do you pay attention to the music that is
going into your mind? Do you know how that music is going to affect you?
You have probably noticed at some point that listening to
your favorite music puts you in a good mood. Music can put a smile on your face,
maybe even make you feel like dancing. Or perhaps you have noticed that if
there is music you specifically don’t like, it can make you irritable, or want
to turn it off or get away from it. Those are ways that music can impact your
emotions and your current mood, how you feel in the moment.
According to a new
report from the Global Council on Brain Health (GCBH), an AARP-founded
working group of scientists, health care professionals and other experts. Their
latest report, “Music on Our Minds,” highlights research showing music's
positive effect on emotional well-being, including improving mood, decreasing
anxiety, and managing stress.
"There are so many mechanisms that explain the powerful
impact that listening to a piece of music can have,” says report contributor
Suzanne Hanser, president of the International Association for Music &
Medicine (IAMM) and a professor of music therapy at Berklee College of Music.
Research shows that music can have a beneficial effect on
brain chemicals such as dopamine, which is linked to feelings of pleasure, and
oxytocin, the so-called “love hormone.” And there is moderate evidence that
music can help lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol.
If you are unhappy, try listening to or making music to
improve your mood or relieve feelings of depression.
Dance, sing or move to music. These activities not only
provide physical exercise, but they can also relieve stress and build social
connections — and they're fun ways to stimulate your brain.
While listening to music that you know and like tends to
cause the strongest brain response and dopamine release, try listening to new
music. Unfamiliar melodies may stimulate your brain, while providing a new
source of pleasure as you get used to hearing them.
Make music yourself! Music making includes singing and
playing an instrument. Learning to play a musical instrument can offer a sense
of mastery and self-esteem, while enhancing brain activity. Singing may be the
simplest way to get started.
Music, with its many positive effects, can have some
negative impacts on human behavior and emotions. I love listening to music, I
mean, who doesn’t but we need to also look at the not-so-positive side of
music.
At this point, you must be aware of the benefits of music as
well as how music
therapy can help in better psychological health. However, in these
studies, it is recorded that not all music can have positive effects or can arouse
pleasant emotions.
Listening to aggressive music or music with violent lyrics
can induce feelings of hatred, and aggressiveness, and can also trigger
the fight-or-flight
response. These feelings are directed at others.
Another interesting result that this study produced was
the reaction to one’s behavior. The participants reported
feeling ashamed of their negative and aggressive reactions to music. This
response suggests that music, in any way, is seen as a pleasant experience, and
when there’s a negative reaction to music, it is automatically considered
wrong.
Obviously, if you are feeling depressed already, it is
unlikely that you are going to listen to music that is uplifting or happy. If
you are experiencing anxiety, you are unlikely to choose soothing, relaxing music,
because that is the opposite of how you are feeling. You are more likely to
choose music that matches where you are at emotionally. If you are already in a
negative mindset, or worse, already depressed, you are more likely to choose
music that you can emotionally relate to, music that brings you down harder.
Human beings can be a little bit self-punishing that way.
Likewise, you can make conscious choices to improve your
mood. There
is research which shows that making choices of music that is more
uplifting when you are depressed can improve your mood. Not just your emotional
state at the time, but your actual mood. As in if you are depressed, you can improve
your mood level, not just in that moment, but longer-term. Instead of reaching
for all those angst or depressive songs when you are down, you can reach for
music that has a better beat, happier lyrics, and help pull yourself out of the
nosedive that is depression. Music can be very powerful.
Music, so ever-present in our lives, can influence how we
perceive the world around us and the people around us. While music can help
express our emotions that we can’t name, it can also trigger a response that is
not-so-pleasant.
What you listen to matters a lot. What we choose to listen
to can mean a lot. If you keep listening to music that produces emotions like
melancholy, sadness, guilt, and similar strong emotions, then you’ll keep
feeding your mind negativity.
Music can bring positivity to our lives but listening to music
has negative effects that we should not ignore. Be mindful of what you listen
to. There’s still more research needed to prove the negative effects of music.
Your goal is to enjoy the music and bring positivity into your life and to
those around you.
Always remember that music is a powerful weapon, and we need
to know how to use it to our advantage.
- Yukta Gandhi


Loved it..πmusic is everything
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeletewell articulated
DeletePerfect
ReplyDeleteπ
ReplyDeleteππ
ReplyDeleteSuperb content
ReplyDeleteWow great ππ
ReplyDeleteLove hormone,π
ReplyDeleteawesome work
ReplyDeleteMusic has indeed helped me a lot, such a good topic and article!!
ReplyDeleteGood work and very well explained
ReplyDeleteVery well explained
ReplyDeleteVery well articulated! indeed i feel the same, when I'm gloomy i do tend to choose sombre music however I should really pick peppy one! Thanks for bringing it up
ReplyDeleteGood train of thought and good research done on the topic,clearly you have a mind of your own!
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed reading this piece! Keep up the good work!!
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