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Technique
more common in treating those with physical and
other disabilities
By Caryn Meyers Fliegler
The sound of scales being played on pianos, cellos
and violinsfilled the hallways of Michigan State
University's music practice building. In a spacious
practice room in the basement of the building,
Celina Stanaway had her own private concert going.
"Fruits and veg-tables, orange and banana,"
the 12-year-old sangwith oomph.
"Fruits and veg-tables, orange and banana!
Ooh, aah."
Stanaway sang the melody, which sounded like a
mix of a Chiquita Banana commercial and the blues,
with a smile on her face. Her body swayed with
the upbeat rhythm. The Jackson resident with shiny
brown hair and big expressive eyeshad come up
with the words and notes for the song on her own.
She clearly hadan ear for music. But Stanaway
wasn't just playing -- she was participating in
music therapy, a kind of therapy that can work
on a range of personality and physical issues
and has been known to create miracles. Breaking
through autism Stanaway was diagnosed with autism
at age 2, and music therapy has helped her break
out of the isolation that the disorder can create.
"It's really hard to get through that autistic
aloneness," said Stanaway's mother, Cindy
Seppa. "If she feels success in working musically
with things, maybe she'll have success in conversations."
Such success was evident during one of Stanaway's
recent musictherapy sessions. Stanaway would come
up with a melody, whether it be bluesy orwith
a tinge of salsa, then have her therapist Cindy
Edgerton play the melodyon the piano. Stanaway
would make jokes and encourage her teacher to
keep up with her as she played on an electronic
keyboard. "In her music, she's very social,"
Edgerton said.
Communication tool Whether used to help children
with disabilities communicate, or Alzheimer's
patients remember, music has a unique therapeutic
power. It can change behavior, bring out personality
traits, teach skillsand even heal, according to
those who work with the ill and disabled.
"People can connect and communicate through
music, even if they'renot able to communicate
in other ways," said Kim DeHart, program
director for the Alzheimer's Association Michigan
Great Lakes Chapter.
Music can help with socialization, cognitive development,
emotional healing, or gross- or fine-motor development,
according to therapists. It provides a comforting,
motivating vehicle for change.
"I think music gives us the nonverbal means
of communication and self-expression," said
Edgerton, who is co-director of music therapy
clinical services at Michigan State University's
Community Music School.
Years of therapy Edgerton has been providing music
therapy to Stanaway for six years. Starting when
she was a little girl, Stanaway would sit in front
ofa mirror to sing nursery rhymes to herself.
When she was diagnosed withautism at the age of
2 -- when she stopped using words and talking
to others -- music became the key that could open
Stanaway's personality. At the age of 6, Stanaway
started receiving music therapy from Edgerton
after Seppa attended a seminar about the impact
music could haveon autistic children.
The therapy would range from having Stanaway repeat
patterns to allowing her to express feelings through
rhythm. She is now interactingwith others more
than ever, according to Seppa. "She acquired
language really quickly, I think, once she started
getting music therapy," Seppa said. "I
know it's that musical foundationof interaction
that led her to communicating verbally. She learned
that give and take. ...
She learned how to describe what she wanted."
Several universities in Michigan -- including
Michigan State,Eastern Michigan and Western Michigan
-- offer programs in music therapy, and the field
is growing. When Edgerton started working at the
Community Music School in East Lansing in 1993,
she worked for a half-hour a week.
Now she works full-time, and the school employs
one other full-time and two part-time music therapists.
Used at Torrant Katie Chappell-Lakin works as
a music therapist at the Lyle Torrant Center in
Jackson. She uses instruments as well as her own
voice to draw students out of their shells.
"Music is a unique stimulation for kids,"
said Chappell-Lakin,sitting at a desk during a
lunch break at the Torrant Center.
"It works especially well because it's patterned,
predictable, repetitious. Those make it motivating."
Many students who have cognitive and physical
impairments respond to Chappell-Lakin's music
therapy with bright eyes and laughter. "I
see a lot of smiles," she said. On a recent
afternoon, Chappell-Lakin stood at the center
of aTorrant Center classroom and played a melody
on a keyboard. Mike Grohalski, 20,went up to the
keyboard and carefully pressed down on the keys
asChappell-Lakin played a rhythm beside him.
After Grohalski finished playing, he pumped his
fist in the air with excitement. Chappell-Lakin
then lifted up a drum and started going around
to the students, singing each one's name, encouraging
a few taps on the drum. The music brought out
different personalities. Some students played
carefully, while others banged the drum with glee.
One student, Chase Krygowski, 15, warmed up to
the drum as Chappell-Lakin sang to him.
"Last year, he didn't participate at all;
he just sat in his chair with his head covered
up in his shirt," Chappell-Lakin said.
"This year he has blossomed. I don't know
if it's a change in the environment, it could
be a number of things, ! but I do know that in
music he's participating a lot more."
Training rigorous Such progress has inspired many
people to support the concept ofmusic therapy.
MSU established the first music-therapy program
in the country in 1944; now, more than 70 colleges
and universities offer programs in the field,
according to Al Bumanis, director of communications
for theAmerican Music Therapy Association.
"It's a tough degree, and it's rewarding
in the sense that it's a helping profession,"
Bumanis said.
Music therapists such as Chappell-Lakin take years
of coursework in music and psychology and complete
more than 1,000 hours of clinical training. Certified
music therapists complete specific requirements
to gain approval from the Certification Board
for Music Therapists.
Informal use While professional music therapists
complete training and become board-certified,
many people from ministers to parents to activitydirectors
in nursing homes can use music to help others.
A minister used music to awaken Mildred "Millie"
Gwinn late in her life. Gwinn lived many fruitful
years before being diagnosed with Alzheimer's
disease. The progressive illness robbed her of
much of her memory and of the ability to communicate.
Yet, even in the depths of dementia, music was
one thing that could bring Millie alive, according
to her husband, Maclay "Mac" Gwinn.
"Near the end of her life, our minister came
and sang old hymns,"said Mac Gwinn, who leads
a support group for husbands of Alzheimer's patientsin
the Jackson area.
"Millie would sit there and tears would come
down her face. I could communicate with her somewhat,
but nothing like that. It was amazing to me --
she was singing hymns that she remembered from
her childhood."
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