If you have any news to share about births and deaths, or if you have written a book or composed a piece of music you think our community would be interested in, please send it to zephyr@inayatiyya.org with the subject heading “News of the Caravan.” Photos are welcome.
Inspiring Work by Avalon Gallien
Many years ago, while working 40+ hour weeks in Social Work, I was inspired to hear about an older gentleman in Seattle who would go to one of the local hospitals in the evenings to hold babies who needed extra cuddling and rocking. After retirement, in 2021, I contacted a local hospital’s Volunteer program, and I was accepted as a Cuddler Volunteer and trained to hold babies over a period of four hours, now 3 times a month.
The babies are of various descriptions: some are slowly developing “preemies,” some are babies who may need surgeries that keep them in the hospital for many days, some have parents who live far away and have other children to care for and cannot come as often as they may want to, and some of the babies who are recovering from exposure to opioids while in utero.
I am usually handed a baby who is crying and seems inconsolable. In order to calm the baby, I have learned over time to try to gently match a note within their cry and change it to a vowel intonation that they respond to by relaxing. Many of the preemies and long term stay babies respond to “ah” or to “eee” which I softly intone in lullaby form. All of the babies who are recovering from opioid exposure that I have held/cuddled/rocked in the last 4 years, have responded to “hu” by relaxing, and eventually sleeping. The effects of the opioid in one so young means some developmental stages are delayed. In addition to the intonations that I use, depending on the baby’s condition, my awareness of the presence of a young (and sometimes old) soul has become more and more pronounced. Each baby is unique, and brings a new light to this world, some come with huge challenges they must overcome. I have been blessed with a lot of life force, energy, or liveliness, as an integral part of who I am. My inner practice while holding them is to not only share a calm atmosphere, but to gently, silently (while intoning) offer my own life energy for the baby to absorb for their best healing. To concentrate in such a way for the full four hours is like a mini-mini retreat. The nurses refer to me at times as a “baby whisperer.” Just this week, we were informed by our Volunteer Coordinator of a note from the pediatric therapists:
“Cuddling changes outcomes for our neonates….we cannot measure love and the impact of positive touch, but what we can do is recognize and acknowledge how an infant positively responds (heart rate, temperature regulation, respiration, sleep state, improved feeding; all of which lead to improved brain development.”
As a balance to the work with babies, I also joined a choir of mature women, called the “Rolling Crones” – we perform in assisted living facilities, memory care units, and senior residences with about 6 winter performances and 6 late spring performances. I feel privileged to be able to use my growing understanding of sound and healing for calming and uplifting the young babies and our elders. It is the ability to share the deep and rich realizations gained on this spiritual path of the Inayatiyya that allows me to reach beyond the framework of the path into the lives of many beings, and that brings me a deep feeling of the ecstasy of a shared love of sound and music.
Avalon Gallien is a Representative, Retreat Guide, Shefayat, Cherag, and Suluk Graduate, who facilitates the Wings of the Message Center-Inayatiyya/Seattle with her husband Wajid Gallien.
Passings out of the earthly realm

