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本來在國外接了夢幻工作,要當翻譯嚮導跟著團四處旅行,Ashley 卻因為疫情回到台灣,彷彿落魄的籠中鳥。直到聽見人生第一響頌缽聲,像找到磁力線,一路走向了現在的頌缽師之路。
Ashley had landed a dream job abroad as a travel translator and guide, until the pandemic forced her back to Taiwan, feeling like a caged bird. Then she heard her first singing bowl — and like finding a magnetic line, she followed the sound to her calling as a singing bowl healer.
Friends gave her a fun nickname: "the Crowd Lu of singing bowls," because "when she holds the bowl, the sound that comes out is pure innocence." Ashley agrees that as an office worker, everything felt off — but from the moment she started learning singing bowls, she finally felt in the right place.
When COVID first emerged, she rushed back to Taiwan mid-trip from Colombia. The free-spirited traveler fell into depression. But during yoga practice, she discovered singing bowls. "When the first bowl struck, every cell in my body vibrated — tingling from head to toe."
The first lesson in singing bowl healing is learning to love and heal yourself. "My teacher said, if you can't treat and heal yourself well, how can you treat and heal others?" This philosophy deeply shapes her healing practice.
Every healing session is a fresh improvisation. Ashley chats with clients first, then intuitively selects the right bowls, techniques, and rhythms. She describes it as "collaborating with the universe" — she's just the channel, letting energy flow naturally.
"A singing bowl is gentle companionship." It doesn't force or rush — it simply waits patiently, offering the warmest support when you're ready.
This summary is sourced from Marie Claire Taiwan. View the original at external link
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