On ceremony
Last night, there was a drum circle at my house. A gifted friend suggested that it was needed for me and for our land. Since she is usually right about these matters, I was all in.
We gathered around a substantial fire with our drums and no real plan other than to drum into a nice, meditative state. For ourselves, for the land, for the ancestors.
Drumming is healing; it’s a primal and sacred beat and if you really allow it to take you over, it’s like feeling the heartbeat of God/The Divine/Source/Gaia. It is ceremony. It is what we are meant to do.
Another gifted and wise friend of mine recently said “Life is ceremony.” Meaning that we have to pay attention to the small rituals of our daily walk on earth. Why do we do certain things; why do we NOT do certain things? Are we treating our time here with the necessary gratitude and honor that is our birthright?
There is a lot written about mindfulness anymore. It’s a tired buzzword that has mostly lost its meaning. We equate it with doing things slowly and gently or piously and that’s not always the point.
The mindfulness of ceremony is realizing that everything we do emits energy. Everything we do has an effect on everything. We don’t live in a vacuum or a bubble. We affect and are affected by every other human and non-human, not only on this planet, but in the entire cosmic plane, both past and future.
So, if you ponder and absorb that concept, you see that pop culture mindfulness isn’t enough. It’s good, don’t get me wrong. But, we need to gather and meld our minds and energies.
Decades ago, most folks attended church in the US. Okay, here’s the obligatory eye roll from some of you who reject and mock organized religion. I get it. I haven’t regularly attended church since I was 6. What I’m saying is that the weekly (or more) visits to a church service were a time to gather in ceremony. And even if you squirmed or fidgeted or counted the seconds until the service was over, it had an effect.
We need these gatherings. We need ceremony. We need a time to lose ourselves in spirit and the energy of that spirit or consciousness that animates us. A time to allow our analytical, western minds to shut the hell up. A time to go inward and quiet the fears, monkey mind, anxiety, cravings and grasping that comes with modern life.
About a week ago, my family gathered to bury the ashes of our parents. They had requested a very simple graveside gathering. In my mom’s words, “no preaching”. And so we did exactly that.
We gathered; kids, grandkids, great-grandkids and a few other friends and relatives. My brother spoke, I read a short eulogy, my uncle said a short prayer and then we talked. Anyone who wanted to share a fond memory of my parents spoke. We laughed a lot and that felt good. We were able to honor our parents’ lives in an informal, loving way, just the way they envisioned. Ceremony. A gathering of love and closure. It was cleansing and necessary.
To me, ceremony is about healing; it’s a way to nurture ourselves and all of humanity. Heck, all of everything. So, if we begin to live our lives as ceremony, it would force us to look at what we do. Is this activity/thought/belief nurturing or is it harmful or an escape? Does this make me feel good and full and nurtured or is it merely a habitual way of masking my pain or unworthiness or fear?
Get a drum, grab a rattle. Hell, grab a couple of sticks and walk around your yard banging them together. Go inside, find that trance-like state of feeling safe and connected to all that is. Gather some friends and sit around a fire. Try to catch yourself within your daily habits and routine and see if you can make it into something sacred and nourishing. Let’s all look for meaning in our actions; then let the toxic stuff go.
That is ceremony.