That song ran through my brain this morning...
Denver. I've not watched continuing coverage. I do not CARE to know more about the shooter. I have the sense that this is what he wants--for us to know him. I don't want to honor someone who opens fire on a theater full of people.
Last night I went to my women's singing circle. We meet every single Thursday except Thanksgiving. Year round. We sing songs to the earth, to the power of sound, the energy of music. Yes, indeed, we sing songs that would most definitely seem like earthy crunchy granola songs, and songs of an aging hippie freak. We do it unabashedly and whole-heartedly, with the knowledge that we are powerless to change anything beyond ourselves and one another.
I have never been one to think of group activities as being sacred at all, but this has become for all of us, a time when we put all family, individual, societal details aside. We simply sing. We try very hard not to have conversations between songs. Many songs are chants, and at times, when we hit our groove, even with eyes closed and the four or five-part harmony, we breathe together. We rise and fall in volume together, and we end together with no one directing. If, during the healing song section, you sit or lie down in the center, I know first hand that you can literally feel the sound waves or the energy--I don't know or care what it is. You feel it hit your body like the best massage ever.
When I first went, I admit that I DID have trouble singing "women's" songs. I have my prejudices and, to me, calling to Earth Mother, and deliberately excluding men felt somehow weird. I've always sung in mixed choruses. After the third time, however, I said, "Oh, Jeannette, GET OVER YOURSELF. You are the woman who didn't stop to realize you were singing 'she don't lie, she don't lie, she don't lie... cocaine' at the top of your lungs with your 12-year-old son in the car! And you have trouble with singing 'Mother Earth, feel me. Take my body and heal me." REALLY?"
And something unlocked inside and I let it go. How good to find these tangles inside that seem to stubbornly hang onto old and silly preconceptions, to pull them apart and release.
I did not care what we sang, but began to listen to the sound, to focus on blending and to simply let myself go with the strength and spirit of the women who were all around me. I changed. And now I unabashedly go with it, words and all. For now, there are harmonies of such beauty, I sometimes cry. We play with the music, we almost dance to it. No one to judge us, no one to sigh at us or roll the eyes in embarrassment. We are a group of about twenty women who regularly attend, from age 23 to 82.
How does my first paragraph relate to any of this? Our focus is on acceptance of all people, on gentleness of spirit, but strength of purpose. Our focus is on peace, and on the power of being at peace. And this week I wrote my first song ever. Very simple, for many of the women had never sung in a group before this. I wanted it to be a melody that was relatively easy to pick up. And I wanted the words to be simple--I am my strongest, when I'm at peace. I am at peace when I let love fill all my soul. And I feel so much love, right here all around me. So I am strong for I have love and am at peace. And we go to the you and the we of it all, in two verses. And the very Unitarian coda of wishing we all could use our strength to share love and live in peace. Is it corny? Undoubtedly. I don't much care. All I know is that we sang it and learned it enough to begin to harmonize, and it's funny how uncorny words suddenly seem with twenty women singing them in harmony and 6/8 time.
We focused on our songs of peace last night.
And this morning I heard this news and a friend had spent the night. She came upstairs from her sleep, and we sat there, tearing at such horrific violence. And another dear friend had had a stabbing occur in her neighborhood two nights ago, with the perpetrator apparently running through her yard. And I've turned off the television because I am sick to death of the partisan nastiness and incivility in general that is on tv and in the grocery stores, and in so many places these days.
And our circle felt more important, not less so. Because it is so very hard to stay centered, to stay hopeful, to keep believing that we humans WILL do better, when there is such ugliness around. The sheer quiet and beauty of my Thursday nights of music fills me back up.
So this aging, flower-child, sixties hippie freak loves her song circle. Loves the friends who never let me fall. Love the bloggers who seem to keep following regardless of how sporadic the entries. I know I am lucky; my life is one of increasing creativity as I age, and that may be a rarity. I don't know, but I suspect so. The friendships are increasing, not decreasing. There are no monsters under my bed. And the images of cruelty, rudeness, meanness on television cannot erase the goodness I get to experience in the people I have been meeting and gradually getting to know in every facet of my life the last two or three years.
And I'm thinking that, in light of Denver and more, perhaps focusing on accepting one another and supporting one another BECAUSE of differences as well as "in spite" of differences has never been more important.
Thank you. Thank you all, no matter whether or not our political, social or religious views differ, I have stumbled into bloggers who do not see this as a place to be flamers, or mean-spirited. I come in here when my heart hurts from something, and within three or four blogs--reading them, my brain is turned around.
... and I breathe.
21 comments:
Dear Jeannette- "What news!" Thoreau said in Walden.
This post reminds me of his peaceful, full of good news, living at one with the earth Walden: "And I am sure that I never read any memorable news in a newspaper. If we read of one man robbed, or murdered, or killed by accident, or one house burned, or one vessel wrecked, or one steamboat blown up, or one cow run over on the Western Railroad, or one mad dog killed, or one lot of grasshoppers in the winter, - we need never read of another. One is enough. If you are acquainted with the principle, what do you care for a myriad instances and applications?"
The best news is not in the papers--it's reserved for those who search elsewhere for it. In their choral groups, in their gardens, in their art. There is so much sadness in this mad, mad world. This, I don't believe, will ever change. It is part and parcel of the human condition. All we can do, as human beings, is our little part to make good news, to feed those glorious song circles, to find happiness in the simplicity of corny pursuits. We recognize our weaknesses, but must certainly celebrate our strengths.
You've done all of that so well. :)
A women's singing circle is a very, VERY powerful healing experience. Some of that power definitely comes from it being a woman-only space, which is a very rare thing in our society. Sometimes women just need to be by ourselves, focused on ourselves. There's nothing wrong about that. I've belonged to or led women's singing/chanting circles for 20 years.
No, Debra, you are so right. There is nothing wrong with it at all--it was simply unfamiliar to me at first. And I had these prejudices in my brain Doesn't it just stink to be drawn up suddenly by OUR OWN prejudice?
And writing a song and having others sing it--other women, was one of the most powerful experiences of my life. Twenty years, Debra? That is wonderful. Ours is only two years old, an off-shoot from an experience with a group of women in Maine.
Jayne, I guess it is human nature to have darkness, but mass shootings? I don't know. Sometimes that's just more than my brain can wrap a thought around. Thank you for your support!
Ah, mad world indeed. Haunting song, that. Fit nicely with the insanity around us. Sat and listened to it as soon as I saw your blog title.
Wonderful that you and your women friends are still singing. Even more wonderful that your wrote words and music, and the whole group serenaded together.
Sure beats depression!
And I breathe too, being thankful for each breath.
There is something larger than its parts in standing in a circle with other humans and speaking or singing together. I know that from AA meetings' closing prayers. I think your choral group sounds like excellent therapy, and I do truly believe that perhaps your group and its vibes spread out like ripples in a quiet pond.
I hope so.
In the meantime, remember that the news is "news" because it is aberrant. Most people are kind and good. I believe that too, despite many instances in my life to the contrary.
This is a lovely, thought-provoking post and a beautiful counterbalance to world-wide violence. I remember on 9/11, my friend Suzannah called everyone she knew and created an impromptu drumming circle around a fire at a nearby park. We gathered as people with different backgrounds and beliefs, but a common need to be together to process what had happened. I took my kids with me so they could be in a safe, loving place while the news played images of the twin towers over and over and over until we simply unplugged the t.v.
There is undoubtedly a sort of awe that taps us on the shoulder when a group of people come together for peace, whether it's in a singing circle of women or a drumming circle of people or simply two friends who hug each other and ask, what can we do to make things better?
Thank you for this wonderful post. Keep writing and singing for peace.
What wonderful comments to see today. Rob, Ben, June, OMWriter, THANK you. Any group with shared intent is so much larger than it's parts, indeed. And I hang onto the goodness in people with both hands. We must.
The air is so clear, so refreshing. A peculiar thing is that I have spoken to five of my friends today, NONE of whom slept more than an hour or so. We were not thinking of all of this particularly. Each of us simply felt that we could not rest, could not lite.
Is there a sun storm of some sort? I know that's not what they call it, but I like to call them that.
Anyway, I did not expect this little cry to the universe of mine here to inspire such thoughtful comments. It IS wonderful to have a refuge of this sort--a group of women who focus on nothing but peaceful and loving energy and the sound of voices blending. The energy is intentional, and the music is the result.
And some of us will be singing our songs and my new one, perhaps, we HOPE in some shelters--homeless and for battered women and children. And we hope to find ways to inspire others to form these circles.
We'll see. I never knew turning sixty could feel so brand new. I'm thinking I'll have to have a new picture soon--one that reflects, if possible, how I feel in the world.
It is so different from the woman in 2010--lost, trying to find a way to keep from crashing, trying to recreate herself into a being whose life matched her dreams.
And here I am! Doing it in my baby steps AND giant steps.
Good Lord, Now I'm writing a blog in a comment. I'll stop now!
I'm loving how you react to life and life events. Would love to hear your song.
You do exemplify gentleness of spirit; strength of purpose.
"And the images of cruelty, rudeness, meanness on television cannot erase the goodness I get to experience in the people I have been meeting and gradually getting to know in every facet of my life the last two or three years."
Hear, hear, Jeannette, hear, hear!
Hippie freak be proud! I believe that even though your small group is behind closed doors, your energy radiates beyond that. We need to project love and light outwards and try to heal this world of nastiness. Just like the 'Be Good Tanyas' sing, "the littlest birds sing the prettiest songs". Keep on.
Someone I met while on vacation quite a few years ago, used the adjective "soul-soothing" to describe the Mexican beach we were standing on. I had never heard anyone else use that word before, and haven't since that day, but occasionally something I read or experience strikes me as being just that -- soul-soothing. I am glad to that you've captured some of that for yourself.
Okay, Kass, so I emailed you my song... Bad rendition though it is.
Scriptor, thank you.
Kerry, I AM proud of being a hippie freak. Singing the Cocaine song to my kid, though... he likes to remind me of that now and then--he's forty. Brat.
Bruce, that is very odd. My sister and I used to call only very particular things soul-soothing, but that WAS our expression. Particular trees, the beach at the Lake at sunset, watching the sunset over the mountains. My mom taught us that term. I wish I knew the person from your vacation long ago... Anyway, I'd be dead in the water without these vivid points and rituals that have punctuated my life. Sometimes, as is the case now, they have been the text of my life--that has saved me more than once.
we were driving to vacation the night it happened and heard updates on the radio...its a crazy world certainly at times and people do senseless things...i hope he gets the justice that is coming to him...those are not peaceful thoughts...smiles...
i love that you gathered to sing...i find peace in that surely
you certainly have a powerful way with words!
how wonerful that you sing and that you are part of a singing group. i would love that. i would love to do that. but unfortunately, where i live, singing is frowned upon, so my chidlren and i sing and dance to our hearts' content at home, away from prying eyes and judgemental comments.
Oh, the ease of reading your words, flowing in my my mind like water from a spring. And I feel calm as I imagine your group, you singing, escaping the cares of this world. And I appreciate you giving pieces of yourself and your past.
Thank you.
8/01/2012 01
Jette,
I am sorry, I am always commenting on your blog 4 to 6 weeks after you write it. Your blog falls off the cutesy Apple stage Safari presents and I forget it. Then I see a comment from you somewhere and remember to go and check it.
I would love to sit in on one of your singing groups sessions especially the chant. It has to be uplifting to the Soul.
Years ago I helped my father in law service pipe organs for churches. Lent was one of our busy times because all churches wanted their organs tuned for the Easter service. We went into a very large old time Catholic church, it looked like a cathedral. It was Holy Week. It was raining out side, a dark and very dismal day. The church was dark except for candles and what little light came through the beautiful detailed stained glass window. There was a group of about 100 women, sitting in the sanctuary, repetitiously chanting in unison Hail Marys. My father in law and I had to quietly wait up in the choir loft for the women to finish their worship. It lasted for about 20 to 30 minutes. I am not Catholic, hardly Christian actually, but I must say that was one of the most profound experiences of God that I ever had. I learned something that morning, despite my pain with Christianity, my agnosticism, to be replaced with a free wheeling semi-eastern, new age hoo-haaaa, there is something to be said for the power of ritual. I didn't leave that church that morning with the desire to convert to Catholicism, nor was I saved, but I did leave with a deeper realization that there is something far more powerful than ourselves and all of its various manifestations to we humans are valid. It was simply one of the most beautiful things I ever experienced. The women suddenly stopped chanting and left without a word. We tuned the organ and went on with our day, and I fell deeper in love with a very undefined God that as the atheists like to remind us does not exist in our temporal world of science and logic, but I believe exists just on the other side of the Big Bang.
We can not understand the violence that surrounds us, but I think that as long as people join together to create acts of beauty, as long as we love one another, the sum of humanity will always rise above the violence and grief that surrounds us.
Again I would love to sit in on one of sessions and just behold the beauty of your combined voices.
I don't know how readily available the music and lyrics (which are in vulgarate Latin) but the music of Hildegard Von Bingen would be a lovely selection for your group.
Here is a traditional rendition:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooQv4JcWqnA
http://www.amazon.com/Hildegard-von-Bingen-Canticles-Ecstasy/dp/B000001TYF/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1346170851&sr=1-1&keywords=sequentia
Here is a modern rendition:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M48_LZUpo0Q
Which is from the album:
http://www.amazon.com/Vision-Music-Hildegard-von-Bingen/dp/B000002SL6/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1346170733&sr=1-1&keywords=vision+hildegard+von+bingen
Here is another lovely traditional version:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OFl3lu85pXk
http://www.amazon.com/Feather-Breath-God-Emma-Kirkby/dp/B000002ZGD/ref=sr_1_3?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1346171227&sr=1-3&keywords=hildegard+von+bingen
As always a very lovely post.
BTW the selection I provided in the first Youtube is not from the album I have listed at Amazon. It was mis-identified on youtube. I listened to the album later in the day and it was not on the album:
Looking at the youtube selection, I found this note:
"did some research. The piece is by Hildegard von Bingen, but the performance is actually the Hilliard Ensemble with Jan Garbarek on alto sax from the album Mnemosyne. The version sung by Sequentia is also good, but totally different.
Cheers!"
The piece appears to be track 10 from disc 1 of this album:
http://www.amazon.com/Mnemosyne-Garbarek-Hilliard-Ensemble-Jan/dp/B00000K2AC/ref=sr_1_sc_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1346211135&sr=8-1-spell&keywords=hilliard+ensemble++Hildegarde+von+bingen
The other tracks on this album are not Von Bingen's works.
Sorry for the confusion. I must confess I rather like
Jan Garbarek's sax work.
Jo kaam medicine se
bhi nhi hota hai na, satta king
play bazaar
play bazaar
play bazaar
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