For what it is worth, different traditions use different sets of sounds and
claim them is the bestest.
L
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, noozguru@... wrote :
That's just the power of sound which musicians are particularly familiar with.
Any sound will have an impact on
As I read it, one or another of the mantra traditions in India assign
mantra-hood to any short set of Sanskrit syllables, so if there are equivalent
Hebrew and Sanskrit sounds, then by definition, the equivalent collection of
Hebrew syllables are mantras.
There's a LOT of 1, 2, 3 and 4
And Jews and Christians say Amen.
Ammon was the name of the highest Egyptian deity.
The Hindu mantra is Aum.
Gotta be some linkage there, no? Either there was a cross-civilization spread
of that form or the Ah sound occurs naturally when one listens out for
that inner vibration.
U? I am not sure, there may be more to it.
Ah! UAt first I think I got it, now I am not sure, there may be more
to it.
That's just the power of sound which musicians are particularly familiar
with. Any sound will have an impact on consciousness. There are just
some sounds that make better mantras than others.
On 12/12/2014 01:45 AM, lengli...@cox.net [FairfieldLife] wrote:
As I read it, one or another of
Ahhh. I am not sure.
Oh. I think I sort of get it.
U. Well, I need to ponder on this a bit it.