Dear John,
Occasionally, something will grab hold of my mind and won’t let go. Does that happen to you too? A few weeks ago I was watching an Ananda video on YouTube. As internet sites do, they suggest things they think might interest you. In my case, there was a link to the song “Shenandoah.” Perhaps foolishly, I played it, and then its hauntingly lovely melody wouldn’t leave my mind. The words, however, are not particularly uplifting. It’s an old American folk song, sung by voyagers as they set out into the unknown. The lyrics start, “O Shenandoah, I long to see you, And hear your rolling river. O Shenandoah, I long to see you, Way, we’re bound away Across the wide Missouri.” The Missouri River represented the dividing line into the unknown territory of the time. Then, subsequent verses tell of the singer’s love for the daughter of Shenandoah, who was a famous Native American chief. As I said, the words aren’t particularly negative, just not uplifting, so I decided to spiritualize them. If the melody was going to haunt me, I thought that I might as well be haunted by Divine Mother. So I rewrote the lyrics as: “O Divine Mother, I long to know You. Fade away, O world of maya. Divine Mother, I long to know You. Away, I’m bound away into the deep sushumna.
“O Divine Mother, I long to see You. Fade away, O gaudy maya. Divine Mother, I long to see You. Away, I’m bound away through the bright Kutastha. “O Divine Mother, I long to hear You. Fade away, O noise of maya. Divine Mother, I long to hear You. Away, I’m bound away to merge into the bliss of AUM.” |