posted on 16.06.10

The Sound of the Big Bang

“If you could stand the heat inside a trillion-degree soup of subatomic particles created to mimic the conditions of the big bang, this is what you would hear…”

via New Scientist

— interestingly sounds like a didgeridoo tone, the shaman’s voice of the universe.

Related:

Michael Bayard Shamanic Theta Wave Entrainment (via TarotWoman) - listen with eyes closed and ear phones on.

The Shadow Biosphere

Acupuncture, String Theory and Musical Resonance (via AcupunctureGirl)

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vajrar0ck:

Dreaming is something like Jung’s active imagination, where the dreamer encounters dream experiences on paper, through dance, or in her head, in the form of inner dialogues or visualizations.
The shaman’s dreaming, however, involves the sense of energy and does not revolve simply around insight or the improvement of every life. Through noticing, identifying, differentiating, confronting, and following unusual secondary processes as they appear at any moment, shamans have always derived a vitality and renewed sense of themselves. That is why shamans and healers today give you the impression that they are connected to something infinite and ungraspable.
- Arnold Mindell, The Shaman’s Body, p79-80
posted on 23.02.10

vajrar0ck:

Dreaming is something like Jung’s active imagination, where the dreamer encounters dream experiences on paper, through dance, or in her head, in the form of inner dialogues or visualizations.

The shaman’s dreaming, however, involves the sense of energy and does not revolve simply around insight or the improvement of every life. Through noticing, identifying, differentiating, confronting, and following unusual secondary processes as they appear at any moment, shamans have always derived a vitality and renewed sense of themselves. That is why shamans and healers today give you the impression that they are connected to something infinite and ungraspable.

- Arnold Mindell, The Shaman’s Body, p79-80

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