The Healing Power of Art: How Music, Dance, and Creative Practices Shape Daily Life

 

In my daily work as a physician, I sit with people in their most vulnerable moments—when they’re anxious, hurting, or struggling to find hope. Medicine requires sharp attention, but also presence, patience, and compassion. Over the years, I have discovered that the practices I turn to outside the clinic—music, dance, and other art forms—are not separate from my work. They are the very tools that ground and guide me.

Dance as Meditation: A Lesson from the Natyashastra

One of my favorite verses from the Natyashastra captures this beautifully:

“Yato hasta tatho drishti, Yato drishti tatho manah, Yato manah tatho bhava, Yato bhava tatho rasa.”

Where the hands go, the eyes follow; where the eyes go, the mind follows; where the mind goes, expression arises; and where expression arises, emotion blossoms.

When I practice dance, I see this unfold within myself. The movement of the body trains the eyes, the eyes anchor the mind, and soon my entire being is aligned in presence. I even teach this to my 6-year-old child, showing him how focus can grow by simply letting his eyes, mind, and movements align. It’s a simple practice, but one that lays a foundation for concentration early in life.

Music and Mental Well-Being

Music carries its own medicine. Certain ragas- like kalyani are traditionally associated with elevating energy, soothing anxiety, or even easing depression. While scientific studies now support the neurological impact of music on mood and cognition, our ancestors already knew that sound vibrations affect the manas—the inner mind.

Natural sounds—like the flow of a river, the gentle fall of raindrops, or the rustle of leaves—have an almost immediate calming effect. For many, these sounds ease anxiety and even help them fall asleep. This reminds me that “music” isn’t limited to instruments or ragas—it includes the rhythms of nature itself, which our bodies instinctively recognize as healing.

 

Beyond Music and Dance: The 64 Arts (Chatushashti Kalas)

Our shastras describe 64 traditional kalas—art forms ranging from painting, poetry, and storytelling to more subtle skills like fragrance-making or conversation. Each was considered essential not merely for aesthetic enjoyment, but for nurturing creativity, intelligence, and adaptability.

Engaging with these arts shapes more than skill; it refines perception, builds resilience, and fosters joy. Creativity, once cultivated, becomes a way of approaching challenges—with curiosity instead of fear, with openness instead of rigidity.

The Many Arts: Nurturing Creativity in Life and Work

Our shastras describe 64 traditional kalas—arts ranging from music and dance to painting, poetry, even conversation and storytelling. These were not considered luxuries, but essential ways of cultivating creativity, intelligence, and resilience.

As a physician, I see how vital that creativity is. Each patient is a new canvas. No two diagnoses or life stories are alike. It is my ability to approach with openness, curiosity, and sensitivity—qualities nurtured by the arts—that allows me to serve well.

How Art Supports Children with ADHD and Autism

One area that excites me is how art forms can support children with neurodiverse minds, such as those with ADHD or autism.

  • Dance and movement help channel restlessness into rhythm, teaching body awareness and self-regulation.
  • Music therapy can engage children who struggle with verbal expression, giving them a new language for emotions.
  • Drawing or painting fosters focus and offers a calming outlet, often helping reduce sensory overload.
  • Structured art forms (like learning a song or practicing a dance step) provide predictable patterns that comfort children with autism, while also gently stretching their creativity.

I’ve seen how even a few minutes of engagement can change the energy of a child—bringing stillness to a restless mind, or opening expression where words fail. These practices not only build focus and creativity, but also cultivate joy and confidence.

What Art Teaches Me in Daily Practice

  • Concentration: Just as a dancer must focus on each gesture, I encourage my child—and my patients—to practice focus through movement and rhythm.
  • Emotional Balance: Natural sounds and music regulate moods, calm anxiety, and soothe sleeplessness.
  • Creativity in Problem-Solving: Artistic practice keeps the mind flexible, able to find solutions where protocols fall short.
  • Compassion: When art awakens rasa—emotion—it deepens empathy, allowing me to meet patients not just as cases, but as human beings.

Art as a Companion on the Healing Journey

For me, art is not an extracurricular indulgence. It is a companion in my journey as a healer and as a mother. The rhythm of dance, the melodies of music, the wisdom embedded in the 64 kalas—all of these sustain me, reminding me that healing is not just about curing disease, but about bringing harmony to mind, body, and spirit.

Every time I return to my practice—whether it is a step in dance, a note in music, or simply listening to raindrops—I return more grounded, more attentive, and more compassionate. And that is what allows me to offer the same to my patients and to my child.

 

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