A Guided Imagery and Music (GIM) Group Experience. What happens when we truly listen?
Guided Imagery and Music (GIM) is a music-centered therapeutic method that uses carefully selected classical music to help access inner imagery, emotions, memories, and insights that often remain outside everyday awareness.
Rather than analyzing the music, we allow the music to move us.
In this group experience, music becomes both catalyst and container — gently guiding you into a receptive state where imagery, sensations, symbols, or emotional shifts may emerge naturally.
You can think of it as structured inner listening.
If you’d like a brief introduction to the method, you can view this short video: What is Guided Imagery and Music (GIM) Therapy?
Over two hours, we will:
This is not performance, analysis, or group discussion about music theory. It is an experiential process.
You will be lying down or seated comfortably while listening. You are invited to notice whatever arises — images, colors, memories, emotions, body sensations, or even the absence of imagery.
There is no “right” experience.
You do not need musical training.
You do not need prior therapy experience.
You do not need to know what you are looking for.
Only a willingness to listen.
Art materials will be provided.
When: Friday, April 10 th, 2026 - from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Timing note: We'll begin promptly at 7:30 PM and create a closed container for the evening, so please plan to arrive by 7:15 pm. The door will be locked at 7:30 pm to create a safe container. This will be a closed-container event; you won't be able to participate if you arrive after 7:15 p.m.
Where: HeartLab (3095 21st St, San Francisco)
The San Francisco Community Nights events are not commercial events; this is not a for-profit business. All contributions go to cover the venue rental and support the facilitator.
Sophia Wang is a violinist, board‑certified music therapist (MT-BC), integration practitioner, and life coach whose work centers on music, imagery, and non‑ordinary states of consciousness. She integrates music psychotherapy-guided imagery and music, art, and depth‑oriented talk therapy integration to support emotional healing, insight, and meaningful change.
Her approach blends clinical training with creative inquiry and emphasizes safety, pacing, and integration. Sophia works with individuals navigating emotional distress, life transitions, relationship challenges, and the integration of transformative experiences.