Doing our part

Ronja, my friend from way back in Assisi days, wrote this to me a few days ago:

Hi! So I think it’s time… Could you, as a talented musician, please share your favorite 20 seconds of Swami’s or Master’s music? I’m getting a little tired of Happy Birthday twice and Yankee Doodle isn’t really that uplifting either….😉🙃

To be honest it took a few moments for me to make the connection and realize she was looking for music to time her hand-washing by! But then I totally got it, because I had experienced the same frustration of wanting to sing something uplifting while washing my hands but not knowing how much of any particular song or chant would take up 20 seconds. I usually ended up counting “one thousand, two thousand, three thousand…” instead!

I’m happy to say that Ronja’s request was the catalyst for Ramesha and me to create this short (and hopefully fun) little video. We’ll be sharing it more widely via social media tomorrow, but I wanted to mention it in today’s blog post because…well, I feel pretty good about it! 💖

A song for the times

It’s in times like these that Swami Kriyananda’s song, Go On Alone, really speaks to me. We sang it for Sunday service this morning and I felt more strongly than ever the message of Truth that is so powerfully expressed through this thrilling combination of melody, harmony, rhythm, and lyrics! (The song is at approximately the 16:45 mark in the video below, if you want to listen to it.)

But what is that message? For me, this song is all about being in the spine. About standing strong and living life from one’s center. About having courage of conviction and feeling so secure in who you are that you can act with kindness and compassion towards others. Wow, that pretty much describes a hero/heroine, doesn’t it? Which is what I believe these times are calling us to be, because our world sure has need of more everyday heroes and heroines.

Swami’s brief introduction to the song pretty much says it all:
“The path to truth is not for weaklings!
Seek approval not from others,
But in your self, with God.
-Truth Can Never Die”

GO ON ALONE
Some men call it progress—
Down with those who doubt!—
To join the causes others join,
And shout when others shout.
CHORUS
Come, you’re a man,
No passive stone!
Stand up, and call your soul your own!
Go on alone! Go on alone!
Banish weakness: Go on alone!
Go on alone! Go on alone!
Don’t look back! just go on alone!


Some men lack the daring
Ever to be free!
They shun the heights, and crowd the depths,
And court security.
CHORUS

Cowards see but pride in
Singularity,
“Oh, never mind if men are wrong,
So long as they agree!”
CHORUS

Claim the power within you
Error to defy!
The world may change or disappear,
But truth can never die!
CHORUS

Only love…

I can’t find words to express how grateful I am for this life and my spiritual path. “Thank you” will have to do. 💖

Spread LOVE

Just imagine if LOVE were to go viral!

If the idea of spreading love seems too much, you can start with a smile. Spread smiles! Or a teeny tiny act of kindness. Spread kindness! It’s all directional…and any of these will be moving us in the direction of LOVE. 💗💗💗

By Driven Hope

A special Guru Day

Thursdays are Guru Day and today’s was extra special! A beautiful statue of Yogananda took up residence on the ridge overlooking Ananda Village. From this vantage point he will bless the community, the region, and all the world.

Moving the statue into place…

Yogananda’s feet are firmly grounded at the Village…

Applying the finishing touches…

Jai Guru!

Drawing a blank

But it’s actually kind of cool to realize how infrequently this happens lately. Seems like I mostly find something to write about.

But not tonight. 🙂

Positive, helpful, proactive!

At Ananda Assisi they’re “living the experience of the Coronavirus with high and positive energy and… as a really good opportunity to practice what we know!” Toward that end, they’ve decided to follow Yogananda’s Nine-Day Cleansing and Vitalizing Diet as a group, inviting people from all around the world to join them (when you go to the above link, scroll down to read the text in English)!

Here at Ananda Village, a group of friends is adding energy to the endeavor by pledging to practice the Energization Exercises three times a day!

Take that Coronavirus!

One of my favorite days!

We’ve had a delightful time celebrating Ramesha’s birthday (we actually got an early start, with a fun gathering Sunday night). And it’s with a great deal of joy, love, and gratitude that I look forward to sharing another year of life together. 💖

…nothing else matters

Something that my friend, Erin, shared in this morning’s beautiful Sunday service talk reminded me of a powerful experience I had many years ago that helped me reach a similar conclusion.

It was basically the gig from hell, due mostly to the fact that I was doing way too much, to the point that my life was spinning out of control. I had multiple rehearsals that day, followed by an evening gig in Oakland. My ex-husband (a double bass player) needed the car, so I was dependent on getting a lift from my last rehearsal to the church in Oakland, figuring I would take BART back to San Francisco. I hadn’t done laundry in so long that my usual black performance clothes were dirty, so I was wearing some random thing of my mother’s(!) that I didn’t even feel good in. And to top it all off, we had no food in the house, so I was counting on grabbing something on the fly once I got to Oakland.

Well.

Turns out the church was up in the Oakland hills with absolutely no stores or restaurants (or BART stations!) in the vicinity. Bummer.

Then it turns out that when the woman who hired me said “after five attire,” she meant fancy, like cocktail party clothes. She was so horrified at what I was wearing that she made me take off the (admittedly ugly) blazer jacket and put on her flowy caftan-type outfit over my black pants. Of course, that left her wearing boring black and she was not happy with me.

Needless to say, I felt awful. But I got through the gig (which was the ordination of a new minister) and was more than ready to take in some sustenance at the reception. I would have given almost anything for some cheese and crackers! But no, the refreshments consisted of little marzipan cakes and champagne. Partaking of either would have been worse than eating nothing.

Of course, being up the hills I had to wait for a complete stranger to give me a ride to the BART station. The final insult came when I got on a train going in the wrong direction. A complete and utter disaster of a day that contained lots of lessons for me, as well as one gift.

Several ministers spoke at the ordination, one of whom I found particularly inspiring. I don’t recall much of what he said, only the phrase: “God loves me. I love God. Nothing else matters.”

That was my mantra for some time and I’ve never forgotten it to this day.

God loves me. I love God. Nothing else matters.

The rhythm tap path to joy

My recent blog post about dancer Bunny Briggs set me off on a voyage of discovery. I’ve loved dance forever, but I never knew there was something called “tap” and something called “rhythm tap” (a form of tap dance that includes percussive heel drops, instead of only emphasizing toe taps).

And I never knew about the men who were masters of this style of dancing. They’re quite amazing!

But here’s the thing. There is so much JOY happening when these guys dance! It’s palpable. They are having all caps FUN, but in a harmonious, cooperative, supportive, joyful kind of way.

I was marveling about this the first time I watched the second video below and then the thought came: “But I wonder what they were really like? Were they decent people? How did they treat their wives and children?” And I struggled a little bit over the age-old conflict of witnessing the ways an artist can achieve transcendence through their particular medium (dance, music, art) without being in any way a completely perfect being.

What I think, however, is that when a person gets a little taste of this kind of transcendent joy for even one moment, in just one area of their life, it makes a lasting impression. In some subtle way it leads to them wanting more.

And so the search begins, as we achieve perfection and transcendence first in this activity and then in that practice, getting another taste, another glimpse of the divine. Until we finally find the infinite love and joy we’ve been seeking by merging back into our true source.