“Sit Up and Listen to Me!”

I Can’t

You hear parents, teachers, coaches, employers, and coworkers trying to get someone to pay closer attention. Most listening programs give you that kind of advice about how to change your behavior.

Did it ever occur to you that you are physically unable to sit still, pay attention, stand up straight, keep quiet, stop bumping into furniture and people and walls, repeat exactly what someone has said to you, or understand certain concepts such as gravity?

Music changes the Ear

If the right ear happens to be the ear with the weaker muscle, it may improve, but not enough to become strongly dominant. The person feels improvements but not full “normalization.” And the changes may not persist, especially if the treatment period is confined to an arbitrary two weeks. This situation has made it difficult for music therapists to understand why their therapies sometimes work, but not as well for some clients as for others. Or, the therapy may work but fades quickly and catastrophically or slowly and mysteriously.

Lacking the patented electronic equipment, the client feels there is no way to replay the experiment in the hope of better results. The return trips to the clinic or office are costly and offer no scientific reasons for the previous failure and no guarantees for the future.

We have millennia of evidence that music alters mood and sometimes enhances reasoning. The Tallman Paradigm™ explains those phenomena as changes in muscle and nerves that affect brain function.

Focused Listening changes the RIGHT ear (did I mention inexpensively?)

Focused Listening costs very little and gives the user new scientific knowledge, so the method and process also belong to the user. Multi millions of people already own headphones and a mobile phone that connects to the Internet, so they can treat themselves with little or no further financial investment. Now, they can learn what those headphones are doing for them, to them, and act in their own best interests.