What is Our Mission?
To realize the vision we hold, it is necessary to clarify what we are trying to do and what product we provide
For sustainable success, the Kian Group is in pursuit of expert design and production of items that can bring peace to the consumer through silence.
Since we consider our mission to be of “humanitarian” nature, our goal is to provide everyone with the possibility of achieving inner and outer peace.
The first step towards this goal is to provide the option of silence around people. With silence, peace emerges, because peace is the fruit of the tree of silence. Every sound except the sound of nature disturbs our peace, so by insulating the unnatural sound sources that disturb the silence and pollute the environment and lead to the loss of human peace, the first step of this mission can be achieved.
The end of silence around humans can instead lead to inner silence so that we can get closer to peace. According to traditional medicine, what we eat has a lot to do with the quality of our state of health. So, how can one think that the amount of noise that continuously enters our being as if it is being fed to us, has no effect on our state of health? The reality is that sonic hygiene is as effective and as necessary as good nutrition for health and well-being. Therefore, we will be the expert providers of peace through silence. The peace that is resulted from silence is not just a psychological state, such a state is not considered suppressive of thought or expression. Such peace is the meeting point of time and eternity.
Silence is not the same as emptiness, it is the motivation of an infinite power that can lead us to strive and thrive.
Silence is that eye opener element which the ancients knew as the “third eye”. The third eye sees hidden dimensions and it brings with it hope and peace.
It is appropriate to seek the experience of realizing a special state which transcends and goes beyond the therapeutic effects. True peace, therefore, comes when we are immersed in a deep state of contentment with our own existence.
Mother Teresa’s famous quote goes as follows:
“The fruit of silence is prayer,
The fruit of prayer is faith,
The fruit of faith is love,
The fruit of love is service,
And the fruit of service is peace”
“Robert Koch”, who created the Tuberculosis vaccine in 1921, expressed his beliefs as such:
“The day will come when mankind will fight noises, as he does the likes of cholera and plague.”
In a 2011 report, the “World Health Organization” dubbed “noise pollution” a “modern plague” and declared that there is much evidence that exposure to environmental noise endangers public health.
Before this, many thinkers and elders had spoken about the benefits of silence and its tremendous impact on the human body and mind. In this way, silence can be considered as a fundamental basis for peace in people, which ultimately leads to the establishment of peace on a greater scale and among all the people of a society by reducing the tension and pressures caused by the modern lifestyle.
Silence helps restore brain cells:
According to a research conducted in 2013 on the different effects of the levels of sound, it became clear that two hours of silence a day leads to the formation of new cells in the brain’s Hippocampus which is a part of the brain that is responsible for learning, memory and emotions. Although researches like this are still at their infancy, the results clearly indicate that silence has a therapeutic effect on diseases such as depression and Alzheimer’s – both of which, according to scientists, are related to the decrease in the production of neurons in the Hippocampus.
During times of silence, we can tap into the base network of the brain. This network becomes dynamic when we focus on “self-knowledge”.
“Self-knowledge” can be achieved after going through mental stages such as imagination, meditation, contemplating the future, and free reflection.
When the brain is relaxed and not stimulated by external factors, we can become aware of the inner flow of our thoughts, feelings, memories and ideas. Using this network in turn helps us to understand the meaning of our experiences, to have sympathy and empathy with people, to increase our creativity and to reflect on our mental and emotional states.
Herman Melville, a 19th century American writer and poet, once wrote:
“All profound things and emotions of things are preceded and amended by Silence, and Silence is the consecration of the universe.”