
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Can sound actually balance your brain?
In this episode, Ellis and Dr. Robert Melillo break down the science of sound: high vs. low frequencies, why one ear can stimulate the opposite hemisphere, bone-conduction hacks, and how music choice (yes, even Mozart vs. jazz) can shift mood, focus, anxiety, and reading/rhythm issues. We also share quick at-home tests and everyday listening tweaks you can try safely.
What you’ll learn
Timestamps
00:00 Cold open & dinner debrief (Nashville updates)
02:15 Sound ≈ frequency—how the brain “hears” waves
05:40 High vs. low notes: which side of the brain they hit
08:55 Bone conduction headphones 101 (why they help vertigo/reading)
12:20 Jazz, classical, sad songs & what they say about your wiring
16:45 DIY tests: the one-ear trick, volume bias, tuning forks
21:10 Anxiety triggers (honks, dryers) & the startle/Moro reflex
25:30 Building a smarter playlist for focus or calm
30:10 Quick recap & how to experiment safely
Try these quick experiments
Resources mentioned
By Ellis Melillo5
99 ratings
Can sound actually balance your brain?
In this episode, Ellis and Dr. Robert Melillo break down the science of sound: high vs. low frequencies, why one ear can stimulate the opposite hemisphere, bone-conduction hacks, and how music choice (yes, even Mozart vs. jazz) can shift mood, focus, anxiety, and reading/rhythm issues. We also share quick at-home tests and everyday listening tweaks you can try safely.
What you’ll learn
Timestamps
00:00 Cold open & dinner debrief (Nashville updates)
02:15 Sound ≈ frequency—how the brain “hears” waves
05:40 High vs. low notes: which side of the brain they hit
08:55 Bone conduction headphones 101 (why they help vertigo/reading)
12:20 Jazz, classical, sad songs & what they say about your wiring
16:45 DIY tests: the one-ear trick, volume bias, tuning forks
21:10 Anxiety triggers (honks, dryers) & the startle/Moro reflex
25:30 Building a smarter playlist for focus or calm
30:10 Quick recap & how to experiment safely
Try these quick experiments
Resources mentioned

229,564 Listeners

172,061 Listeners

46,506 Listeners