But these songs that rose from the depths were like a symphony. What were they celebrating? I still do not know. Everyone was crying on the boat beautiful tears of radiant happiness. We looked at each other without being able to speak. It was an unforgettable, almost mystical experience. When I plugged in the hydrophone, I was mesmerised by the beauty of these songs, by their depth. We could hear the breaths of cetacean right next to us without being able to see them. With some crew members, we stopped our boat in the middle of a fjord. My strongest experience was during my first attempt at recording the songs of whales and orcas in Norway. It is part of alternative medicines using the therapeutic properties of sounds that include Sonotherapy (tuning fork, Tibetan bowl…) and Musicotherapy, and is based on the fact that cetaceans have developed the ability to use sounds in the liquid element to communicate between themselves, to locate their prey and also to heal themselves – knowledge that they have been transmitting from generation to generation for millions of years.Ĭan you tell us about a unique healing experience you have personally experienced while diving with orcas? Cetosonotherapy is a holistic method of care that uses the therapeutic virtues of sounds produced by cetaceans. Pierre Robert de Latour: Cetody is the commercial name of my concept using Cetosonotherapy, which is a technique to heal people. Monaco Life: Pierre, can you tell us about Cetody and Cetosonotherapy (CST)? He has combined his own experiences, knowledge, science and advanced recording devices to offer people the opportunity to feel and heal with the sound of orcas. Pierre’s facility offers this alternative approach to healing but with a twist – the sound of orcas. The technique of sound healing using instruments such as tuning forks and Tibetan bowls has been around for centuries. Pierre’s wellness facility project located in France is based on the alternative medicine known as sound therapy. In this interview, we unfold the story behind Pierre’s discovery of how orcas echolocation sounds can seemingly heal, detoxify and improve the health and wellbeing of humans as well as each other. Through these amazing experiences, he has been fuelled to create a unique method of healing called Cetody. After so many years working and diving with orcas, Pierre started to realise the healing benefits of their sound waves. When they move through the water their vocalisations actually change the shape of the water. They have magnificent structured bodies and can travel at speeds of up to 60 kilometres per hour with endurance. Orcas are one of 90 species of cetaceans – dolphins, porpoises and whales – and they have a complex way of communicating with vocal and body language, as well as emotional communication, suggests Pierre. The founder of USEA ( Undersea Soft Encounter Alliance) and Cetody has more than 6,000 dives under his belt with killer whales. Pierre Robert de Latour may have a background in biochemistry, but he has been working with orcas for over 20 years. Pierre Robert de Latour, aka the Orca Whisperer, talks to Monaco Life about the healing sound of orcas.
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