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My wife is a social worker/counsellor by profession, and we've been playing with the idea of making a recording/book for children on how to relax and deal with tension/anger-causing events. Our son is in the first grade, and on Tuesday she and I went to his class and preformed a half-hour meditation/relaxation workshop. She read and led the kids through a relaxation meditation, and I played gentle looped music in the background. It was a wonderful success. The teached loved it, and the kids were giving my wife hugs and thanking us for the experience. My rig? A 335-style guitar (though any electric will do for me), an Akai Headrush, and a 15-watt Fender Bronco amp on about "three." It was a fine meditation for me, too: I chose a simple chord progression (C major/G major/A minor/F major) and gave each chord four beats at a tempo of about 60 beats per minute. I "played" the progression in my mind, then set the length of the Headrush accordingly using the delay mode with maximum feedback (one tap to start the length, one tap to end). While my wife introduced the work (discussing what causes tension and fear, how it feels in the body, and how we can conquer the feeling by relaxing and meditating on positive things), I held the tempo and progression in my mind. I kept myself in sync with the Headrush's LED for the first of the sixteen beats. Then, as she began the meditation proper, I began the music, layering one note at a time through the progression. A great joy, and absolute minimal gear. Douglas Baldwin, coyote-at-large coyotelk@optonline.net