Didgeridoo Meditation
Wednesday afternoon sky playing with clouds and sunshine. |
Marc and his Didgeridoo (on a Clifford the Big Red Dog pillow, which made me chuckle. |
Meditation aside, I find the instrument amazing because of the way the player breathes in order to produce sounds: circular breathing. I can't really wrap my mind around it. It seems like breathing in and out at the same time...which seems impossible to me. I know it IS possible, obviously, but it seems so unlikely.
I left feeling delightfully warm, loose, and utterly relaxed. I stopped by the public library on the way home so I could finally got a library card for that library, too. They have a lot more of the knitting, cooking, gardening type books I'd like to read whereas Rocky has more of the nature, history, culture type books I read. Now I can access both without having to use interlibrary loan. I've been meaning to do it for so long, but...its not exactly as if I've had a shortage of great reads so it wasn't too pressing.
Matt had dinner ready when I arrived.
Kale-Potato Soup with cannellini beans and chunk of homemade bread. |
Are you familiar with throat singing? It has a similar quality to didgeridoo sounds, and is similarly mind boggling. To me didgeridoo & throat singing are both awesome in the intended sense of the word. :)
ReplyDeleteI filmed didgeridoo playing at my DD's Uni Grad but I can't post it on my blog as I didn't think to ask permission at the time. I agree that it would be good meditation music due to the tones and timbre of the sounds that can be produced with it.
ReplyDeleteNo, I've never heard throat singing. I just youtubed (is that a verb?) it though and whoa!! I am going to have to learn more about this.... Have you ever heard it in real life, Darci?
ReplyDeleteWe spoke at length to a didgeridoo player at a healing/creative arts fair last year. He showed us his array of didgeridoos and it was amazing how they each had a different tonal quality and could make different sounds and vibrations. He had some naturally hollow ones, some wood-but-man-carved ones, some metal ones, etc. It was amazing the differences.