The Sound of Healing

Beautiful Day by Zeyla Tomlyn

Jason Amoroso Season 1 Episode 1

Join us on a journey with the inspiring Zeyla Tomlin, a singer, songwriter, producer, and healer, as she shares her transformative path through music. Discover her uplifting anthem "Beautiful Day," a track that we play in our online Revelation Breathwork classes, infusing participants with joy and the spirit of life. As global challenges arise, Zeyla's work serves as a beacon of healing, encouraging listeners to find beauty and positivity in every moment.

Peek behind the curtain of Zeyla's creative process where melodies and lyrics often emerge spontaneously during everyday activities. With a rich musical background influenced by her mother's love for diverse genres, Zeyla's eclectic style is a fusion of classical, gospel, pop, and rock. Her evolution is marked by experiences in garage rock bands to electronic music production, all while embracing music as a tool for healing through sound.

Three years ago, a pivotal name change led Zeyla to profound inner peace and the practice of sound healing. Through voice and simple instruments, she facilitates energetic healing in both in-person and online sessions, highlighting the transformative power of intention. 

Exciting new projects, including a potential album titled "Healing Songs," are on the horizon, as Zeyla looks forward to collaborating with artists worldwide, continuing her mission to heal and inspire through music.

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Jason Amoroso:

Welcome to the Sound of Healing podcast, where we explore the transformative power of music and its ability to touch the soul, heal the heart and inspire our journeys. I'm your host, Jason Amoroso, founder of Revelation Breathwork, and in this podcast we highlight the songs that resonate deeply with us, songs we breathe to in our online Revelation Breathwork classes. These songs have the power to move us, open us and bring us closer to the truth of who we are, and our guest today is the incredible Zeyla Tomlin, singer, songwriter, producer and healer. Born and raised in Romania, now based in Germany, Zeyla creates music and sound healing experiences that awaken inner peace, inspire joy and foster deep connection. We're going to dive into her journey as a musician and healer and explore her amazing song Beautiful Day, which is an anthem of positivity and celebration for life. So sit back, relax and let's get inspired by the sounds of healing with Zeyla Tomlyn. Hope you enjoy this episode.

Jason Amoroso:

yes, I'm so excited to be here with you today, Zeyla super happy that you found me oh, my goodness, I don't know how I found you, the power of Spotify and whatever algorithms Spotify have, but you know, and I reached out to you. We have been playing. I've been playing since I found your song and Instant was like, oh, this is so good, it's groovy, it's soulful, it's joyful. And I started playing it in my Revelation Breathwork classes because I play music that I connect with, you know, first and foremost, and it's just to breathe to that song, to do the Revelation Breathwork to that song. It just fills you, fills me up, fills you up with with the spirit of life, and it's just so powerful. So I want to thank you for for sharing it with the world.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Wow, thanks so much.

Jason Amoroso:

Yeah, and actually, you know, this is something that I'm experimenting with, which I was wondering if we could actually just listen to it together to kind of get into the energy of it, and then we can kind of talk about it. All right, let's do it, I'm going to play it here. Here we go. Let's go Some Beautiful Day. By Zeyla Tomlyn.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

What a beautiful day to celebrate.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

What a beautiful day to celebrate.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

yeah, what a beautiful day to celebrate.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

What a beautiful day to celebrate. Yeah, what a beautiful day to celebrate. What a beautiful day, a beautiful day. Yeah, I am having a good day and I wanna share it with you. Yeah, you Cause it's a beautiful day to celebrate life. It's a beautiful day to love. It's a beautiful day to celebrate life. It's a beautiful day To love. What a beautiful day to hold on to your dreams. What a beautiful day To smile. It's a beautiful day to bless all memories. What a beautiful day to fly. What a beautiful day to love. It's a beautiful day to celebrate life. What a beautiful day to love. What a beautiful day to open up your heart. What a beautiful day to open up your heart. What a beautiful day to forgive someone. What a beautiful day to call someone you love.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

What a beautiful day. Oh, what a day, what a day. What a beautiful day to celebrate life. What a beautiful day to love. It's a beautiful day to celebrate life. It's a beautiful day. What a day, what a day, what a day, what a day. What a beautiful day to celebrate. What a day, what a day, what a day, what a day. What a beautiful day to celebrate. What a beautiful day, a beautiful day. What a beautiful day to celebrate. What a beautiful day. I wanna wake up to the groove of your heart, Babe. I wanna wake up to the groove in your heart. I wanna wake up to the groove of your heart, Babe. I wanna wake up to the groove in your heart, Cause it's a beautiful day to celebrate life. What a beautiful day to love. It's a beautiful day to celebrate life. What a beautiful day to love. What a beautiful day to celebrate life. Celebrate my baby. What a beautiful day to celebrate life. It's a beautiful day to love. It's a beautiful day to celebrate life. It's a beautiful day.

Jason Amoroso:

Yeah, fuck, yeah, Zeyla. Life is good. Oh my gosh. I don't know how anyone could listen to that song and not move their body, not feel something the soul, the funk, the aliveness. That's what that song feels like to me. It's alive, it's like life itself expressed. Oh my gosh yes, yes oh my, do you? I mean, how do you? How do you feel listening to your own song? Do you still?

Jason Amoroso:

oh, if you're super happy, super happy oh my gosh so yes, and if the whole world listened to that song, like if there were loud speakers in the sky and just blasted on everyone, so much healing, so much heaviness would be lifted, so much joy would just be there. Oh, my goodness, call, call to to. To express that in the way that you do, I'm like I could talk about this, that song, for an hour and what it makes me feel, but. But I want to hear from you. But what I will say, and and then I want to hear from you, is um, you know, right now, a lot, of, a lot of stuff happening in the world.

Jason Amoroso:

Um, a couple months ago we live in Asheville, North Carolina Hurricane Helene came and devastated the whole area. And I know, you know, we're in Asheville, north Carolina. Hurricane Helene came and devastated the whole area. And I know, you know, we're in our bubble and there's shit happening all over the world. That's crazy. So much loss of life, so much destruction. Now and we used to live in LA for 20 years the massive fires are just destroying everything. It's really sad, you know, we know so many people have lost their homes and just everything that's happening in the world. And yet, if we're willing to which is hard to do when so much is stimulating the nervous system and our nervous systems on threat for survival, both physically and emotionally, and mentally and spiritually, and emotionally and mentally and spiritually, sometimes like there's this, there's this, there's this, there's this, not aligning, but there's a foundation, like underneath it all is this presence of life that is holding it all together.

Jason Amoroso:

And in these moments of crises at least what I experienced with Helene it was like the neighbors coming together and in North Carolina it's red and blue states or liberal, conservative, and it was right before the election, and like it didn't matter when the shit hit the fan and people didn't have electricity. It was like you're my neighbor, let's go, what can I do for you? How can I serve? And it was just people coming together and like that presence of life is like what your song brings up inside of me, that that yeah of God, of love, no matter what's happening. So I just want to thank you for that Amidst hard times, to be so joyful. It's so important. So where did this song come from?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Oh, wow, it just came to me one day when I was walking to. I was at a festival called Waha Festival in Romania. It's a super famous festival that I was joining since the early beginnings of it, always facilitating some kinds of workshop or singing or having concerts. And I was walking to my workshop and this melody was coming to me what a beautiful day to celebrate life. I don't know how it was in the beginning. It was like no, it was exactly that melody. What a beautiful day to celebrate life.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

What a beautiful day to love.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

And that was it. So that was coming to me while I was walking to that workshop and I integrated it immediately into the workshop and so we sang it that day and then I just had this chorus and I recorded it immediately. So to have it, you always have to record those ideas. And I think half a year later, when I was working on my album one evening I was just chilling after recording the whole day this melody came again and said okay, it's time let's make a song out of it, because these songs they oftentimes have an own consciousness or they're attached to your consciousness and your higher self comes and says look, do this. So that was one of those moments and I said, okay, I take my pen, let's go. And I usually hear those kinds of songs. I just hear them, I just write them down and that's it, they just flow into my mind.

Jason Amoroso:

So that song was like all your other songs. That's your process. It just flows out of you and you just listen and just write.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Very often, very often, it's like that. Yes, sometimes it's also just pieces coming together. Every once in a while I have songs that I wrote over four years or five because I had the chorus and then a couple of months later the verse came, and then another verse one year later or so. And I don't rush it, you know, I just wait when I know that it's time to wait, that it's it's time to wait. Uh, I also have the other process, just, you know, writing and brainstorming and uh, doing sheets and sheets of papers full of scribbles and stuff like that. But there are certain songs like beautiful day, like good things on the album, like cosmic kind on the album, like I feel like a dragon that was also written, just like that, and probably some others that are just channeled and yeah, and then I go to my computer and I start doing stuff and when I'm finished I'm like, oh, my God, did I just do this? It's just what.

Jason Amoroso:

So that's the great thing about the art is I'm hearing like you don't, like you're not, like I'm going to sit down and write a song Like it. Just it comes through, it happens and you allow it to happen.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yes, when I give it space, you know I have to put to put myself into the space, yes, and that I do that through exercise, through you know my routine every day and stuff like that. And when I sit down and say, say, okay, now it's time to maybe receive something, then oftentimes it comes. Or oftentimes it also says, uh, while I'm doing something else, you know, while I'm rehearsing a certain thing, or while I'm exercising my voice, or these melodies come. That was exactly the process when, when I wrote good things, uh, I exercised my gospel tone of the voice and my voice went and I said, okay, wait a minute, this has the texture of a sound. You know, I recognize it. When it comes, it has a certain texture. Yeah, it's yeah many ways of doing it what's your background?

Jason Amoroso:

like it's clear, like I've got a gospel sound. Like you have so many different. Like it's clearly multicultural, multi-genre. Like what are your influences?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

music, wise oh, that's a big question. Well it's, or maybe a big answer, I don't know. When I was six years old, my mother founded a choir so that I would learn proper music, because she saw what I had, what, what we learned in school, and she said, okay, that can't be like that, that can't stay like this. And she founded a choir for my brother and myself and she brought so much, so so many different genres to that choir. We learned about classical music, about gospel, about pop and rock and all that stuff. Even we had reggae songs in that choir. So she was the one teaching me this diversity of music.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

You know, for me it was something super logical, super natural that there are just many kinds of music. And then I had a garage rock band and I had had a funk band, then I had a stoner rock band, then I had a soul and R&B band and so on and so forth. Then I played with the DJ for quite a while electronic music. So it just came to me. You know, all these kinds of experiences just came to me. And then in the pandemic pandemic, I started to produce. And I started to produce all these different genres, also a forbid and gospel and ballads and, yeah, I left out the rock. That's not so much my, my, my genre anymore, but I certainly have influences and in all these bands growing up were you always the singer yes, yes, yes, yeah, not in my first band.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

I entered my first band because my best friends were, uh, were, uh, making a band and they just told me, yeah, we're doing a band and I said, okay, but why am I not in it? And they said, ah, well, we have a singer already. And then I said, okay, what do you need? We need guitar. All right, give me two weeks. I learned the guitar, and so I did, and then I went, I got into my first band. From then on, I was the singer in the other bands.

Jason Amoroso:

Yes, and what's the response when you put out your album? What's the response that you get for a song like Beautiful Day?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Beautiful Day has the biggest response, I think, and two or three more. But Beautiful Day was. People told me that it helped them heal. I have a friend that is a pastor, or how do you say it?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yeah, minister, pastor priest yes yes, yes, and she put it in church during her mass, mass, mass Quite a couple of times, you know. So it's just a lot of joy coming back from the people and a lot of gratefulness. So I'm super happy that it happened and that, yes, I put in all that time and effort and fun and honesty to produce that. And I'm super excited because Beautiful Day is one of the songs I really produced on my own, without any other collaborator. So that's really a first for me to put something out like this and have such a nice, beautiful feedback. I'm very happy about it.

Jason Amoroso:

And some of the lyrics there, like have you had people or have you had the experience? They come up and you say, oh, this lyric like call someone you love I heard that and I called somebody like, or forgive I heard that and I was like, oh, like, when I was listening to it I was like, oh, I've got some forgiveness that I need to do?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

that's very interesting question. That's that happens when I play it live a lot. So when that verse come, comes beautiful Day to forgive someone. Everybody goes like, oh yeah, you can see how the faces drop and they go inside and, oh yeah, I have to forgive someone. You know, it's like the song is like a real-time healing ritual, you know, for the people also while playing it live. It's very interesting.

Jason Amoroso:

And what is that like? Is this part of your singing circles, the workshops, or is this you just performing?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

This is me performing. Yes, I tend to also take bits and pieces of my songs and make circle songs, just improvise on top of them. I have songs that I do that a lot with, like I Feel Like a Dragon, and I also have songs that got born during workshops. So I Feel Like a Dragon, the last song on the album. We had this chorus coming up in the workshop. I sometimes ask people to just give me random words, what they just feel like, what is present for them, and they give me the words, I write them down and then I just sing, I connect them and I sing them and there's I feel like a dragon inside when I sing with hope and delight. It just came out exactly like that during a workshop and then the, the whole whole verses got channeled, maybe half a year later.

Jason Amoroso:

Yes, wow, the patience to kind of allow that process to unfold is very inspiring and tell.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

I mean, while while you mention it, like what are circle singing workshops? Yes, that are singing loops just to get into trance and get into, you know, a common ritual and he made a lot more out of it. It's like a human loop station, you know, a loop station with lots of people. The facilitator just assigns certain phrases, melodical phrases, to a small group and then layers another melody on top of that with another small group, and so on and so forth. You can find a lot of of it on YouTube you have some of your videos on YouTube doing yeah, on YouTube.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

No, I have it on Instagram and on Facebook. Lots of them, yes, yes, yes, and on my website also. It's a good, good point. I have to put them on YouTube and Bobby McFerrin does that with, uh, stadiums of people and huge, you know, thousands and hundreds of people. So it's, it's a technique. You can apply uh from two participants to thousands. It's so much fun. Yeah, yeah, yeah and yeah, that's, that's the technique.

Jason Amoroso:

And so did you learn that from Bobby McFerrin Like tell me about your relationship with him. It sounds like you've at least worked with him or studied under him or something.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yes, I studied with him. I first learned about this technique in 2014 from Roger Trees. Roger is an arranger that worked with Bobby a lot, a lot, a lot, and I got in touch with this technique through him and then, when I realized that Bobby won't come to Europe anymore, I decided to go to San Francisco to participate at a circle song school in 2023. So I spent a week with him, learning this technique and singing with him and spending time. Yeah, is it something you can do?

Jason Amoroso:

online, or is it mostly just in person because of like?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

No, no, no, it's in person. You can't really do it online. It's? You know the difference between the signal, the delay, the lag? Yeah, yeah, it's. It's. You know the the difference between the signal, the delay? Yeah, it's not possible.

Jason Amoroso:

So when are you coming to North Carolina then?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

well whenever I have an invitation.

Jason Amoroso:

I'm coming with great pleasure absolutely oh, my goodness, um tell me a little bit about your new song Beautiful Soul.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Beautiful Soul. Oh fuck, amazing, thank you. Thank you. Beautiful Soul is something that happened for a dance project.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

I had this project with some improvised impro dancers from my hometown and they needed a theme song for this project. So they asked me to write a song and I just went and took a huge xylophone instrument like this out of wood, with all these little wood brackets, or how do you call them, and played with it. And this was the melody that that just came out out of nowhere and then, okay, this is something, I recorded it and then I layered a cajon on top of it and then I just went to my computer and recorded the whole thing, the whole voice, just like that. It just happened. You know it.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Just, you know, sometimes it's, um, it needs a trigger, uh, and this xylophone had such a an amazing groove if you listen to it, you you will notice this. It also has so much melody and it has so much groove and texture and all of it. It's like it's a whole surrounding. You know, you just have to come and put some details on top of it, which was the voice in this case. So, yeah, and it talks about, um, the fact that people oftentimes super underestimate themselves, you know saying more yes, that was the idea.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

It was like, you know, I, I see so much potential in all the people in um, I have this I don't know it's an innate thing of mine to just see the potential in people and to just it's so important for me that they see it too, that they understand it too, because once we all wake up and be and and and come to be our brightest self, you know, we inspire the others to do so, and so on and so forth. So, yeah, the song is like a little wake-up call beautiful soul, you are so lovely, so radiant. Come on and shine. Come, you know. And it says beautiful soul, did you play today?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Um, because a lot of, a lot of this, uh, fear of being ourselves comes from, you know know, fear of playing, or the not knowing that life is a game and that we came to play. Actually, you know, beyond all those things that you talked about in the beginning, all the hurricanes and all the you know illness and all the you know illness and all the war, you know those people who have the occasion and who, who have this huge opportunity to live in areas, in places where peace resides, um has this huge opportunity to really come and play and be themselves and hold space for all the others. You know, because once we are in our power, we can hold space for all the others. You know, because once we are in our power, we can hold space for all the other people. You know, for for those who are sad or those who are suffering, or you know and inspire them and take them with us and how would?

Jason Amoroso:

you define how would you define healing?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

well, it's a lot about love, like you said. You know where love is. Healing can can take place, and to allow this love to flow, we just sometimes have to get some stones out of the way and we oftentimes, I think, can trust some people who have experience with that to just guide us on that way. I had a huge healing process and I'm super thankful to have to, to have had all these guides and healers and facilitators around me to just lead the way. Hold the space for me to you know, healing is something we do with ourselves. It's something we decide to do.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

If we say I don't want to heal, it won't happen. If we say yes, give me all the answers, answers, how can I do it? Then the universe will come and give you bits and pieces to to to make a huge, beautiful puzzle in in a in a time that is perfect for you. So healing is, I think, something so beautiful because it has so many facets and so many possibilities and it's just. It's just one of my favorite things to do. I love it. I love it and I love to see people here. That's so beautiful. Coming back to the love, coming back to pure love, to our essence.

Jason Amoroso:

That's healing, I guess and how is your heel as you've gone through your healing journey and the? And what I'm hearing is it's a journey, it's a process. How is that influence shaped? Your music, your art? It sounds like your. Your listening has also evolved over time.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Absolutely Well. My music is, and everything that I do is intended to heal people people, or to help them heal, or to inspire them to do so, or to inspire them to become who they are, to understand who they are, to have the courage to be themselves, to become themselves. So that's that's, that's the core of my doing in everything I do mostly music, of course and my process has been so difficult, so hard and so long that and so successful in the end. You know that that I really want to encourage everybody to just go for it, just do it what do you think makes it makes the healing process sometimes really hard?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Well, answers are many to this question. I think thought patterns that are just programmed to stay in a very old paradigm. That's what I see from the people I work with. Some people are really, really just blocked in old thought patterns, in old thought patterns, in old behaviors, and and they don't have the, they don't see that spark on the horizon. But it's, yes, it's usually just convictions. Just, do you say convictions in English?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yeah, yeah, just being convinced that it's not possible to yes, yes, believes, mm-hmm. That's the one number one reason in my experience.

Jason Amoroso:

So yeah, would you be willing to share what was one of your kind of big convictions, limiting beliefs that you was operating in your subconscious for a long time? That was a big part of your healing journey.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yes, well, the biggest block of all and it might sound very new to you was my name. Because I found out after 12 years of doing healing work and and trying everything that I could find because I couldn't get out of depression and maniac attacks or panic attacks or things like that I found out that the name tunes as to a certain frequency where certain thought patterns are present. And once I found that out, I just got a so-called balanced name. It is a thing called balanced name that just tunes you to your soul frequency and tunes you to a balanced frequency so that you won't go into extremes anymore, or into drama, or into fear or into other extreme unbalanced emotions and thoughts. So once I got this balanced, nay, everything changed. I just came back to my center and I came back to such a balanced thought world. You know, I couldn't believe it.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

And not only my thoughts changed, also my perceptions changed, my perception about gravity, about colors, about music, about basically everything. My voice changed, my way of singing changed. So once you tune yourself because it's like a radio when you identify with a certain name, you identify with a certain frequency. On that frequency certain information is present. So if you are tuned through the name to a radio station that plays pop, but your soul wants to listen to jazz, then you have a huge problem, and that was my case. To listen to jazz, then you have a huge problem, you know, and that was my case. Um, so everything got tuned and, yes, the moment uh that happened, my all my gifts, all my healing gifts and my sound healing, uh understanding came activated really fast and uh came back to me.

Jason Amoroso:

So, yeah, wow, and that's like a process that you work with somebody to attune to a new name.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yes, that's, it's, uh, it's um a single organization on the planet right now who, uh, creates and calculates balanced names for people. It's a mathematical principle. They are called the Kabalerians and they are in Canada. Yes, they are in Canada and they are doing this since almost 93 years. And, yes, why don't you hear about them.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

I was searching, you know, in all dimensions for these answers. I wanted my suffering to end and I wanted to find the key to end suffering for people. And so, after a lot, a lot, a lot, a lot of searching and a lot of, you know, bumping my head through all the walls and through all dimensions, my spirit guides finally brought me to this. Look at this, this is the answer, and they trained me for it. So I got trained many years to understand this principle and to understand what the name does to people. Yes, it just came to me, you know, because I could receive it, I could understand it, and now I'm helping people changing their names and in Romania, we are the biggest community of name changers in the world right now because of you because of me and my friends.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yeah so when you said you got trained in this by the Caballeros, about your spirit guides, no man by my spirit guides, by my higher selves, by everything that I learned, you know, along these 12 years of healing led to understanding the matrix and the quantum field in a way that made me understand this principle.

Jason Amoroso:

Yes, can you say more about that?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Oh, I can talk for hours about it, of course. Yeah, well, it's. You know, we talk about mental planes. Once you have, once you identify with a name when you're small, when you're a little child, and you say, someone says Lucas, and Lucas turns around and say yeah, that's me. Lucas turns himself to that frequency of Lucas that has certain information saved in it. It has certain thought and behavior patterns that lead to certain emotional patterns. So Lucas will have a certain destiny with this name, with Lucas. If he was named David, his destiny would have been super, super different, because David resonates on a completely different frequency.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Lucas is very organized, he has a vision, he is super detailed and focused, you know, and he can work for hours and hours and hours until he gets it perfect. David, the opposite, you know, is just let's do that and let's do that and let's do that. And yes, I know we can be structured, but first I want to invent something new and I want to do something new and you know that's David. So, um, all these, all these names, they are like entities, they are like, you know, characters, basically that you take on. They are like like masks or like theater roles that you, you take on when, on when, you identify yourself with that name.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

The sad part, or the not so fun part, is that lots of names have huge imbalances and they also can create imbalances that lead to illness in the end. So often I analyze names all the time you can imagine, to just find out how the people function, what is important for them or how can I talk to them so that we can understand ourselves best. And I oftentimes analyze also people who are ill and you really can read all of the symptoms and all of those issues in the name analysis. It is incredible.

Jason Amoroso:

Just first name, or first and last.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Both, both separately, both, both separately. So let's say, David Terrence, you have David entity, David will go on the scene, on the stage and do his you know little show and then, uh, if David Terrence is triggered, then the whole thing will be activated and will step on the on the on stage. So, um, all of them are very important, also middle names, because they come and change again everything. Yeah, wow, it's a, it's a.

Jason Amoroso:

Do these do you do the, the attunements or do you read like if I wanted to get my attunement? If that's even the right language, do I go to you or do I go to the caballarians in canada?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

well, uh, what I recommend is first have an analysis with somebody who does this. I'm doing this since, you know, over three years analyzed lots of names for lots of people, and it's a huge pleasure to do so. So, please, just get in touch and you can talk to me or to one of my colleagues one of my colleagues and then you have to talk to the Kabalarians to really get a name, a new name, a balanced name, and you won't get one single name. You will get a list of 40 first names and 40 second names, family names.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

yes, this is the ultimate tool of sound healing, the ultimate really yes, because you say more about that you tune yourself to the frequency of your soul, you know, and from that, from that, uh, moment on, you operate from a place of balance and of groundedness and you can't, you can't fall anymore. You know, you can't lose it anymore. Every shock that comes, every um I don't know, um, every event that happens, you can't just carry it. It won't, you know, uh, put you down anymore. So, um, that's basically, that's why I'm saying sound healing, the ultimate key to sound healing, of sound healing, because you are tuning yourself to the frequency of your soul.

Jason Amoroso:

Yes, when was this that you got your new name?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

well, it was about three years ago. Three years ago, yes, yes.

Jason Amoroso:

And Zeyla Tomlyn, both first and last name. Yeah, and then that's just what you call yourself, and that's what it is.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

I changed it in all the papers.

Jason Amoroso:

I love it. Well, you got me curious. I want to learn more. I'm very curious.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

I wouldn't go back for anything and nobody would. Nobody that experiences this state of peace, inner peace, and quiet and productiveness and balance and harmony would ever go back to the former state where life was not so flowy, not so harmonious. And from a place like this we can, you know, support people so much better, and you know this best. You know because you worked so much with your breath work, and you are in a completely different state. You know, then, many of the people that are still seeking, so you know how much space you can hold for the others. Right, right, because you have found what works for you, and I have found this that works for me Absolutely, and, yes, I searched for a long, long time for it.

Jason Amoroso:

Love it, Love it. Share with us about your sound healing, like your practice, the work that you do. Obviously you do some of it online. You probably do some in person like just tell us more about sound healing because you're going to be coming to our community, to, yes, we're going to be able to experience it ourselves yeah, so happy about it.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Looking forward, uh yeah, the sound healing came to me after I changed my name because I could handle it then. Before that, music was something pretty abstract. So I did it for a long, long time but I never had a very deep understanding of it. Once I changed my name and tuned my whole world through this soul frequency, this came supernatural, natural not supernatural, but very natural to me and I use it to in many, many ways. I only use my voice and some, you know, shakers or little bells or something, but mostly my voice to create a space, to hold a space for transformation, to do maybe something like energetic surgery. Sometimes, you know I'm shifting frequencies or, you know, always with the intention to really do the best thing I can for the person in that moment through the perspective of their higher selves and divine will. So this intention is very, very important and once I have this intention set, you know I just incorporate a higher frequency, I tune myself to a higher frequency from which I naturally just operate.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

I sometimes also use my hands to do little operations, but I mostly yeah, the voice is the main part and then I combine it with guided meditation. I bring in colors. I bring in situations, or I bring in certain representations for people or entities or such situations, or we represent relationships to, I don't know, money or the past, or truth, or the ancestors or whatever it is you know, and then I create this context, this visualization, and then I use my voice to harmonize the structure and the scene, and then I use my voice to, uh, implement this change, this shift into all cells and all you know, all layers of of consciousness and the mind and the emotional body. So, um, yeah, yeah, I think that's about it and last question how does that translate?

Jason Amoroso:

Because I know I do a lot of work online and it sounds like you do a lot of work online, but I want to hear your experience of how the sound healing translates versus in person, versus online, both for you as a facilitator and for the experience that people at least tell you that they have.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

That's a good question. Well, the most efficient of all is probably the one-on-one either if it's online, either if it's live. It's the absolute same feedback that I got, but it's not really the most. I think it's important for each and every one of the people how they resonate. Some people have huge breakthroughs in group sessions, in online group sessions, because they are at home, they are safe and they know that they are. There are so many other people in the same situation, so they they don't feel afraid anymore. You know, because you're not alone, they're not alone. Um, I also had huge reactions in live group sessions, so I really couldn't say.

Jason Amoroso:

I really couldn't say what is stronger but there's there's no like some people like oh, I gotta be in person. Online it's not the same, but in my experience it can be the same, if not more, because of the it's, it's intention, it's energy which, yes, time and space and it's very important for many people to just be at home in their comfort, you know.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

So I would say it's there's no difference in my view Can be very powerful in both situations.

Jason Amoroso:

What projects are you working on now musically, like, do you have another album like White Cat? Amazing, are you already on to the next or what's your what's coming? You are.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm on to the next, or what's your what's coming? You are yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm, I'm uh on to the next album. I also thinking about an EP first and then then an album. Uh, the album probably will call, will be called healing songs or something like that. Um, and yes, there are so many ideas, but I know that there are more uh want to come and, yeah, I'm opening the space for it.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

That's one, and the other one is just connecting a lot more to collaborators from different parts of the world. It's something so fascinating to me. It's why I'm also so happy for our connection. You can't even imagine I'm just yeah, yes, and I have some, some really interesting collaborators in mind, also for my album and other than that, I'm super open to to, for any experience that wants to come. That will, you know, help me to grow more and to serve people more and better. And what is probably the biggest project for this year is finding a spot on earth to move to, because, yes, I want to move somewhere where I know that I'm not in the place yet that I'm, you know, can fulfill my purpose best let's put it like that and to find that place.

Jason Amoroso:

that will be quite a mission, yeah I imagine it's a similar process to creating your music, where you have an intention or an idea that you're ready for a move. You have a feeling that you know there's a place that's maybe calling you, but it's not like, oh, I'm going to just scroll online and just find the right spot.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yeah, no, no, it will show itself. Yeah, yeah, exactly. And other than that, just do the best I can, you know, to bring my service to the world. Well, where can people find you? On Instagram, on Facebook, on YouTube, on Spotify and on my website, sailor Tomlin calm and what's your Instagram?

Jason Amoroso:

Just at @Zeyla_ Tomlyn yes, beautiful well and @Zeyla_ Tomlyn yes, beautiful.

Jason Amoroso:

Well, and for anyone who's listening, if it's before this time, on January 26th, Sunday, January 26th, Zeyla is leading a sound healing session for the Revelation Breathwork community from noon Eastern to one Eastern. I am so excited, I'm so honored that you're bringing your soul, your love, your and when I say intelligence, I'm not talking cerebral your intelligence and your gifts to the community, and I'm really excited to get to know you more and collaborate more. And, yeah, it's been such a joy to experience you. So, thank you so much for joining us. Zeyla, is there anything else you want to share before we close?

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yes, I want to share a little song.

Jason Amoroso:

Oh, please.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yes, for your heart and for your peace and your love. Amen, oh my goodness.

Jason Amoroso:

Thank you, Zeyla, thank you so much.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

You're so welcome, Jason.

Jason Amoroso:

Look forward to seeing you soon.

Zeyla Tomlyn:

Yes, me too. Me too have great days, guys.