Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Music and the Chakras

It's a common belief that the chakras are aligned with the Western major musical scale, but it would be more accurate to say that that they almost are. Western music since the mid-18th century has been based on what is called an equal-tempered scale, meaning that the 12 chromatic semitones are vibrationally equidistant from each other. The upside to this is that it allows for instruments which can be played in many different keys. The downside is that the scales are slightly out of tune within themselves. We just don't notice this anymore because we've been listening to equal-tempered music for the last 250 years.

Also, the major/minor modality that we are so used to only developed in the West starting around 1650 or so. During the Renaissance and earlier, the major and minor scales were only two of six different scales (or Modes) that were commonly used (there is a seventh, but hardly anyone used it). An example of these modal scales is the song "Scarborough Fair" by Simon and Garfunkle. It's in what is called Dorian Mode; a minor scale with a sharped sixth. On a piano, play a scale on all of the white keys, going from D to D, that's Dorian.

So the idea that the chakras line up with the Western major scale is a misconception born from typical Western hubris; that the way we have things now is both the best way and the way it has always been. But this does not mean that music and the chakras do not have a connection, they very much do. But the connection is a more natural one, based upon harmonic vibrations and not a man-made scale. The chakras actually resonate with certain musical intervals, based upon what is called the "harmonic series". In a nutshell, the harmonic series is how mathematical ratios line up with music. All music is vibrations. If you take a certain vibration, a certain tone, and double the speed, you end up with a tone that is an octave higher than the original. If you triple it, you end up with a perfect fifth. If you multiply it by 5, you get a major third, by 7 and you get a minor 7th, and so on. I feel that the chakras resonate with the same musical intervals, based upon a fundamental tone: the second chakra with the octave, the third with a fifth, the fourth with a major third, the fifth with a minor 7th, the sixth with a ninth or major 2nd, the seventh with a tritone, and the eighth with the octave again.

If you are truly interested in experimenting with music and the chakras, try this out. Find a piano and play an octave with your left hand, down towards the bottom fourth of the keyboard. With your right hand, play a perfect 5th higher than the top note in your left, then a minor 6th higher than that. So if you start with C, you play two Cs with your left hand and a G and an E with your right. If you have the notes correct, you will notice this gives off a very open and powerful sounding major triad. The reason it sounds so good is because these three notes are in order based upon the harmonic series, vibrating at double, triple, and quintuple the speed of the bottom note, so they all resonate perfectly with each other. Now, start shifting chromatically up and down the scale, keeping the same intervals. Eventually you will find a chord that resonates more powerfully with you than any other, one that you feel almost as a physical force. For me, it is E Major, but it is different for everyone. This is your fundamental, the tones that resonate with your lowest four chakras. You will probably find, if you listen, that some of your favorite songs or musical pieces are in that same key, and that you will not like pieces that are in keys that clash with it.

This is all just my own personal conjecturing, so I'd love to hear other input as to whether or not they have similar experiences to mine.

JCS

Sunday, October 17, 2010

The Ottawa store opens in five days. Wish me luck, and I'll check back when I can.

JCS

Sunday, September 26, 2010

At an impasse.

Hello all,

So, once again, my favorite outlet for spiritual ideas has gone kaplooie. SpiritualForums.com has been down for 4 days now. Between this and the good news of my long-awaited promotion, I find myself adrift as to what to do with my ideas. I will have less time to devote to them, especially between now and Xmas, so do I seek out a new site to get addicted to, or do I focus my free time on creating something more focused?

More to come, I promise

JCS

Thursday, September 2, 2010

The truth about "Psychic Vampires"

Back in the day, I really got into the whole Celestine Prophesy/energy vampire thing. Since then, my views have changed significantly, and I think the truth is a lot simpler than this idea of people sucking the life out of you.

Put simply, you do it to yourself.

Let me explain what I mean. People in this world have created this thing I call the Scarcity Myth, the general idea of not-enough-ness in the world. We have this subconscious belief that everything worth getting or having is scarce: money, love, time, good ideas, energy, happiness, and so on. I personally believe that our thoughts create our experience, so therefore if we believe these things are scarce, we experience that.

But where does this myth come from? What is the root cause of this assumption? IMHO, I think it comes from the Western monotheistic (WM) idea of a God whose love is conditional. Put simply, the greatest feeling of all is Love, and the greatest Love of all is God's Love. But, according to WM, God requires things from us in order to receive this perfect Love, namely proper worship and behavior. What worship and which behaviors are proper? Depends on who you ask: surrender, the Five Pillars, the Ten Commandments, what have you. If God does not receive what He wants, or worse, receives the wrong thing, His Love is withheld, and even punishment is meted out.

Each monotheist sect believes it has discovered the right way to placate and please this demanding God, and that all others have it completely wrong. Between these two, the capricious nature of the WM God and the confusion created by so many conflicting ideas about what the WM God really wants, we subconsciously believe that the Love of God is scarce and only given to those who are "worthy". The extrapolation from here is simple; if God's Love is scarce, all other good things must also be. If all good things are scarce, then we must compete, horde, and fight over all good things in order to make sure we have "enough".

So what does this have to do with psychic vampires? All of these ideas of scarcity and competition have created in us the belief that everyone else is out to "get" everything that brings us joy. When a person first discovers the wonders of spirituality and personal energy, they have yet to unlearn this scarcity mindset. They get this incredible jolt of inner energy which, while it comes from within and from the truth of our connection to All That IS, they still think comes from some "outside" source. If the energy comes from an outside source, it must be both scarce and losable. Which means others can "take" it from us, and thus is born these ideas of psychic vampires, demons, evil spirits, and all these other dramas. In truth, all there is are people who have yet to unlearn their reflexive belief in the scarcity of God's Love.

JCS

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Oneness as honeycomb

Hey all, been a while.

A great analogy popped into my head when I was debating on SpiritualForums.com, and I needed to share it. For context, we were discussing the nature of Unity and whether or not individuations actually exist....

It really depends on what we mean by "exist", doesn't it? When I say "doesn't exist", what I mean is that the individuation is perception, a point of view. Let me use an analogy....

Picture a piece of honeycomb, all those little perfect hexagons. If you choose to see the honeycomb as the individual cells, then yes, it is a whole made up of parts. But in fact, the cells are just empty spaces, and the comb is in fact an interconnected lattice, all one continuous piece that merely seems to be made of separate parts. The walls that make up one cell also belong to all the surrounding ones, whose walls belong to the ones that surround them, and so on and so forth. The empty space created by this lattice is then used by the bees for the creation of honey.

Just the same, we are the "empty space" used by Oneness, the lattice of energy that permeates, that IS, all of physical reality, to make the sweet honey which is experience.


Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Desire vs. Attachment

IMHO, experiences are the whole point of physicality. As such, desire for experience is not something which "should" be transcended, nor should the perception of separation. What "should" be transcended is attachment to particular results and the belief in the reality of separation.

Many people don't see the difference between desire and attachment, so let me give you an example. You are on your way to work, and you usually catch the 8:17 train. You wish (desire) to catch this train because it gets you to work a little early, allowing you time to get situated before starting, maybe get a cup of coffee. Today, there was an accident on your way to the train station, and you ran late and just missed the 8:17.

Now the average person, someone attached to results, would get upset now. There is another train at 8:26 which can still get you to work on time if you hustle, but this means you don't get your morning cup of coffee, and you will start the day hurried and frazzled, and this would upset the average person. You would not be upset because of losing your desired outcome, but because you are still attached to that outcome and the experiences that would have resulted from it. Attachment is an emotional state that draws you out of the Present Moment and into the imagining of outcomes which are no longer possible. It is a clinging to the past.

Now, a more "evolved" person can still have desires, but can let go of unmanifested experiences. Take our example. Instead of becoming upset at having to catch the 8:26, you can look and see that no actions of yours could have kept this experience of missing the 8:17. This can now be seen as an opportunity, because no circumstance happens "by chance". Any situation which comes to you not of your active choosing is a situation drawn to you by your soul or higher self, for the purpose of setting in motion a new set of circumstances. Thus the missing of the train can be released, and you can now look around at your new experience and try to find why it has come into your life. Sometimes, such events are the triggers for serendipitous coincidences (what Karl Jung called "synchronicities"), initiating new possibilities.

Thus it is possible to desire an outcome but not be attached to it if it does not manifest.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Totally non-spiritual thing here... Winter Is Coming!




JCS