Rhythm

July 12, 2021
Oakland, CA
Sunny and warm

A few years ago in India, I was staying at a tiny ashram in Gujarat near the border of Pakistan. We were near a Muslim village on the banks of the Shabarmati River, which flows through Ahmedabad. In the morning we could hear the chanting of the village women as they washed their clothes in the river, slamming them against the rocks on the edge of the river. “Chant – wham! Chant – Wham! Chant – Wham!.” The chanting, I am sure, made the whams much easier.

In the classic movie, “Oh, Brother, Where Art Thou?” a chain gang is chanting as they drive the pylons into the railroad ties. There are many sea chanties used by the sailors of wind-driven ships to lighten their work. And when I put on some loud and very rhythmic jazz, my daughter says, “Wow! Housecleaning music!” and hauls out the vacuum cleaner.

Politicians use rhythmic speech to capture their audience. For good or evil, the principal is the same. They use rhythm to catch people, get them to board their train and take off with them to an unknown destination. Only the speaker knows where they are going, and often he doesn’t know either. But the force of the rhythm carries them along.

Where does rhythm come from? Is it something pre-existing which we can tap into? Or is it something we invent as we speak? The planets and stars revolve in a gigantic rhythm such that we can predict exactly when they will reappear in the same configuration. Here on earth, the rhythm of the seasons is fairly reliable. The pulse of the cosmos is always beating whether in broad, spacious beats, or in tiny, fractional beats. Our heart beats may be echoing the rhythmic beats of the cosmic heart. We are living in a sea of rhythm.

The Pied Piper of Hamlin used music and rhythm to kidnap the children of Hamlin and lead them, dancing, to oblivion. The sound of Krishna’s flute drew the respectable housewives of Vrindaban to a divine, spiritual experience in the jungles of Vrindaban. Whose rhythm are we following? The rhythm of the Pied Piper, or the flute of Krishna? Will we end up with disaster or with joy? Be careful!

May we all have joy!
Dorothy Deviani

What I am reading: “Life as Play” by Mark Johnson, one man’s spiritual adventures told with a self-deprecating sense of humor. Read for fun, read for learning, read for inspiration. I highly recommend.

5 thoughts on “Rhythm”

  1. Great idea…RHYTHM!
    It was the first thing I was taught as a chlld, then went on to study and perform
    music the rest of my life! It was wise, for without rhythm….we could not master
    playing an instrument..whether piano , guitar,or whatever. xI have a aways been grateful
    for the wisdom of my caretakers who placed my hands and fingers onto rhythm.

  2. Wonderful Dorothy. My rhythm consists of playing music with my friends and keeping the beat to hold things together.

  3. SHARON L SCALTRITO

    Dear Dorothy.

    I too have been fortunate to spend time in India at an ashram on the Narmada River listening to the sounds of life and learning to chant from an open heart. We are defined by the choices we make.
    Thank you for your beautiful reminder to be conscious of the rhythms we invite into and reinforce in our lives. May we choose wisely for the benefit of our souls.

    1. Marilyn Bodnar

      Dear Sharon,

      “We are defined by the choices we make.”
      Such a simple statement, such profound consequences. Thank you for your elegant reminder.

      The best to you!

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