The Soundtrack

Sound is part of the treatment. The music isn't decoration. It's doing work.

This isn't where we started. The room used to sound like everyone else's waiting room. What plays in this room isn't random, it's North African and Arab soul — a tradition that moves between stillness and rhythm in a way that tracks with what the nervous system actually needs during treatment. Tempo, texture, and frequency all influence how easily the body downshifts out of a braced, high-alert state. These sounds are chosen. They're part of how the room works.

Lubiana Radio Warm and vocal, with that particular ache that loosens something in the chest.

Arab Soul Mix The through-line of the whole room — where all the other playlists come from.

Moroccan Chill Lighter in texture, more air in it — the one that plays best on a slow afternoon.

Sona Jobarteh Mix Kora-led, West African in its roots — bright and meditative at the same time.

Arabic Oud Radio Mostly instrumental, mostly oud — good for the deeper part of a session when words feel like too much.

Arabic and North African ChillThe widest lens — draws from the whole region, unhurried.

Divine Feminine Radio Lubiana as the anchor — spacious, sensual, and deeply unhurried.

Momi Maga Radio Rootsy and warm, built around the kind of groove that settles rather than excites.

Dominique Fils-Amie Radio Soft and full at the same time — Haitian soul, lots of air in it.

Ebo Taylor Radio Ghanaian highlife and afrobeat — more rhythmic, good for the end of a session when you're coming back online.

Lubiana x Anaiis Vibes Mix Two voices in the same world — layered, textured, made for slow movement.

Ignacio Maria Gomez Radio Andalusian at the root — flamenco and Moorish influence woven together, more Mediterranean in feel.

Samba Geladio Radio Senegalese griot tradition — rhythmic and ancient, the kind of music that knows exactly where it comes from.

Tulum Vibes The outlier — electronic and ambient, for when the room needs more stillness than soul.