Sit with it. Not fix it.
Solfeggio frequency tones, low bowls, a slow held room. AmberRoom's grief recipe is built to give the feeling somewhere to land — not to relieve it, and not to fill the silence with anything that distracts.
Start a grief session →Who this is for
People who lost someone recently. People still in it years later. People who want to feel it in private without sitting in literal silence. People who are tired of well-meaning playlists that try to make grief into something else. Not for acute crisis (please call your local crisis line); for the daily, ordinary, lonely work of being in grief.
What plays, and why
Layer 1 — Crystal bowl, 396 Hz lead (Pro)
A single low crystal bowl tuned to 396 Hz, sustained. Held tones rather than melodic movement. The recipe doesn't try to take you somewhere — it sits where you are.
Layer 2 — Soft cello drone (Pro)
An ambient string drone underneath the bowl. Slow, no resolution, no climax. The compositional choice is deliberate — grief responds badly to musical narrative arc.
Layer 3 — Brown noise + 5.0 Hz binaural beat (free)
Two pure tones, one in each ear, detuned by 5 Hz — your brain hears a phantom beat in the deep theta band, where emotional processing tends to settle. Brown noise floor at −26 dB, very quiet, more felt than heard.
Pacing — 25 or 30 minutes
No arrival → climax → return arc. The curve is mostly flat: arrive, stay, leave. The point is the staying.
The research
Wellness, not medical treatment. AmberRoom is not a substitute for clinical care.
vs. the alternatives
Common questions
Can sound therapy help with grief?
Not in the way medication or therapy can. Grief isn't an anxiety state to be relieved — it's a process that needs space to unfold. AmberRoom's grief recipe is built to give you that space: a held tone, low bowls, no surprises. The point isn't to make grief stop. The point is to be in it with something other than silence or distraction.
Why solfeggio frequencies?
Honest answer: the modern scientific evidence base for solfeggio frequencies (174–852 Hz) is weak. We use 396 Hz in the grief recipe because the tradition is culturally embedded in sound healing practice, the listener experience supports it, and the held-tone format is what grief seems to want. We don't claim a clinical effect. If you'd rather skip solfeggio entirely, the meditation recipe uses theta entrainment without it.
Will this make me cry?
Sometimes. Often the point. The recipe is structured to give you somewhere to put the feeling, not to suppress it. If you're trying to function (work, parenting, driving), this is not the right tool — use the focus or anxiety recipe instead.
How long should I sit with it?
Whatever feels right. Most users land on 25 or 30 minutes. The recipe doesn't push toward catharsis or resolution — it just holds the room steady while you do whatever you're doing.
Is there a voice or guidance?
Off by default. Optional spoken guidance (Pro) adds a 90-second body-scan at minute 4, then silence afterward. Most grief users prefer the wordless version — language can interrupt the part of the body that needs to feel without naming.
I lost someone recently. Is this appropriate?
Yes, but AmberRoom is not a substitute for grief counseling, support groups, or pharmacological care if you need them. It's a tool for the daily, ordinary work of being in grief — the part you do alone at night.