Sound Healing for AuDHD
How Rhythm, Vibration and Frequency Support Regulation
Sound healing for AuDHD offers something different: not more stimulation, but intentional rhythm, vibration, and frequency.
And for many AuDHD adults, regulation is not a luxury.
It is daily maintenance.
The world can feel layered, loud, fast.
Multiple streams of thought running at once.
Movement, noise, expectation, urgency.
Sound healing for AuDHD offers something different.
Not more stimulation.
But intentional rhythm, vibration, and frequency.
Vibration is the movement we feel in the body.
Frequency is the rate and pattern of that movement.
Both matter.
Why Rhythm and Frequency Affect the AuDHD Nervous System
Sound travels through tissue, bone, fluid, and nerve pathways.
It is not just heard. It is experienced.
For many neurodivergent adults:
- Predictable rhythm reduces cognitive load
- Repetition supports focus
- Lower frequencies feel grounding
- Clear, sustained tones reduce internal noise
- Vibration increases body awareness
When the nervous system feels scattered, the right rhythm can anchor it.
When the mind feels overactive, certain frequencies can support slowing and settling.
The body responds before the intellect does.
Shamanic Drums: Grounding Through Rhythm and Low Frequency
A steady drumbeat is simple. That simplicity is regulating.
The drum offers:
- A consistent rhythmic pattern
- Low-frequency vibration felt in the chest and abdomen
- A sensory anchor for attention
- A physical sense of being pulled back into the body
Many AuDHD adults describe feeling “back in themselves” when listening to a steady drum.
The nervous system entrains to rhythm.
The body follows the beat.
Internal chaos softens into something organised.
For me, the Shamanic Drum is really grounding, and has an ancient feeling to it that feels fuelled by earthly wisdoms. It feels like returning home and is something I go back to again and again.
Tuning Forks: Clarity Through Focused Frequency
Tuning forks create sustained, precise tones.
Their effect is different from rhythm:
- The vibration is more focused
- The frequency is clearer and less layered
- The sound is spacious rather than percussive
Some frequencies feel especially calming. Others feel balancing or clarifying.
Many AuDHD adults notice that tuning forks:
- Slow mental overactivity
- Reduce internal chatter
- Support clearer thinking
- Create a felt sense of calm
Where the Shamanic drum grounds, the tuning forks refine.
For me, the tuning forks are especially good at quietening my (hyper)active mind. I can feel my brain waves alter, and my thoughts still. It feels like it gets right inside my brain…
While some sounds I don’t like (including the very high pitches), the frequencies do their magic.
There is science behind this, and I’m happy to explore that further in another post.
Together: Regulation Through Balance
When used together:
- Rhythm stabilises the body
- Frequency calms and organises the mind
- Vibration reconnects awareness
- Tone restores clarity
- Both can assist in releasing stored energy and patterns
Sound healing for AuDHD is not about fixing.
It is about supporting a nervous system that processes intensely and deeply.
Watch the Video
In this video, I share how shamanic drums and tuning forks support my AuDHD nervous system, and why rhythm, vibration, and frequency can be powerful regulation tools.
Exploring Your Own Sound Regulation
If you are AuDHD or neurodivergent, you might explore:
- Do low, steady rhythms ground you?
- Do sustained tones calm or irritate you?
- Which frequencies feel supportive?
- What changes in your body when you listen?
- Do you find you need different sounds, rhythms or music at different times?
I would love to hear in the comments which sounds help you regulate, focus, or return to yourself.
Different nervous systems respond to different frequencies.
Curiosity is part of the process.
Further Reading
If you are exploring sound healing for AuDHD and nervous system regulation, you may also find these helpful:
- Gentle Study Support for Neurodivergent Learners: How regulation, not pressure, improves focus and recall during study and assessment periods.
- Gentle Re-Entry for Neurodivergent Minds: Finding Flow After the Holiday Pause: Supportive strategies for returning to work, study, or creative life after a break.
- Working Memory and Neurodivergence: An exploration of how working memory affects regulation, attention, and daily functioning for neurodivergent adults.
Each of these posts explores regulation from a different angle, because regulation is rarely one-dimensional.
When the Rule Book Doesn’t Fit
For many neurodivergent adults, regulation becomes a turning point.
You begin to notice that your nervous system responds differently.
That certain sounds soothe you.
That rhythm helps you focus.
That silence can either steady you or unravel you.
And slowly, you realise the rule book you were handed was never written with your frequency in mind.
If this reflection resonates, I created something inspired by that very moment of recognition — When the Rule Book Doesn’t Fit.
It’s for neurodivergent adults and reflective parents who are ready to question inherited templates and begin building regulation-informed ways of living that actually honour how their brains and bodies function.
