(Find songs on YouTube in playlist LifeCycle: songs by Liz Campbell

Sunday, July 26, 2020

The tale of the pangolin

This song is a product of the 2020 worldwide Covid-19 epidemic that caught us all off-guard, leaving few of us untouched in some way. The debate and speculation over the source of the disease has necessarily opened up the 'Pandora's Box' issue that can no longer be ignored: is the rampant rape of wildlife species and biomes partly responsible for the surging release of  virulent viruses deadly to humans?

If so, nature's true justice for unchecked human behaviour. 
Some have said it's good news for the pangolin species, calling a halt to the barbaric trap-and-trade practice of these critically endangered animals. Time will tell. Us humans have much to answer for on this planet. The so-called "great pause" experienced during lockdown may well force critical reflection of our human habits; it literally gives pause to consider the choice of practicing restraint, on many levels.                    
       
This song is from the LifeCycle playlist. 

Liz Campbell is the sole writer and composer of all the published material on this blogsite, unless otherwise stated.

She has further blogsites:
   songs for children http://connectsongdance.blogspot.com/

   aspects of smallholding https://jessam-smallholding.blogspot.com/       

It's enough to (really) listen and look

                        

                        What I need                    April  2015        LC

 

  Please can I have:

           A cup and a half of belly-laugh

And half a kilo of tears

          To see me through


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Cut the words and just watch and listen:

This beguiling wise man who keeps catching my attention did not use a lot of words, and it seems by all accounts that he spoke only after deep consideration. Hence he wrote nothing down, left no essential statement or message (that ‘mission statement’ of such paramount importance these days to institutions... only to become a burden to carry); his presence and being left enough to remember and it was over to his friends and followers to recall things he had said – a rough draft flow of gist, I imagine.

He did however indulge in telling stories, and these treasures are beautifully laid down, mostly preluding with the statement: ‘if you have ears, listen!’ or ‘if you have eyes, look!’.  That alone is enough to keep one going an entire lifetime, learning to look and listen!

I sense that he refers not only listening to words, but beyond that, also listening and looking with our bodies, and inside our own bodies and what they tell us in any situation. That is ‘deep listening’from inside out. When people tell you to really listen, what do they mean? How does the word – really- change the quality of any action?  Could it be that we listen or look through our body, flesh, blood, bones, all parts of ourselves?

In the aftermath of some great trauma involving loss, my experience of profound dreams always multiplied: for me, helpful agents in healing. One such dream I’ll relate as it introduced me to this aspect of my secret love affair:

A dear, gentle, tall, slow-moving and greatly respected uncle of mine said to me: ‘There are 13 different ways to hear, you know’. Then an old woman, the archetypal hag, wise and forthright, commented in her aged, matter-of-fact, no-nonsense voice: ‘But no matter, if you don’t want to hear I can just give you a stroke’.

This exchange was just the end tip of a larger dream story.

Both characters had something to say: the gentle slow uncle pointing out that there are many ways to hear, not just with our ears. Our gut talks to us. My knees talk when I pound them on a treadmill. Our breath catches. Our neck spasms just at that moment. We are walking conversations within our selves if we give it some attention! 

The crone in the dream was quite right. Not long after this dream I quit my stressful full-time job. Had I not stepped off that treadmill I would have been increasingly beset by physical ailments that were already setting in. Our bodies look after us by finding ways to make us stop. We develop tremors, or facial twitches, chronic neck pains, twisted spasms in our gut or lower back, and these eventually stop us in our tracks to claim our attention.  

Watching and listening are dangerous practices as they tell us things that can’t be ignored. 

There is a way of inclining ourselves to listen and look with our entire body. Our body works hard to give us information and guidance but is easily over-ridden by our busy bustling ego with its stories and constructs, plans and cover ups, fixes and finger pointings. Subtle or pretty blatant signs from within ourselves can give us all we need for the moment: a range of body-based signals firing off in the energy transfers constantly happening within our cells – nothing short of miraculous!

When something is watched, it behaves differently. Try it. Watch children play, and once they know you’re watching they change their behaviour slightly. Apparently even atomic particles change their behaviour when observed (quantum physics). 

No great magic, nor doctrine, nor cure, nor mission statement. Just an urging to wake up in all situations, to WATCH and LISTEN.

 

 Liz Campbell is the sole writer and composer of all the published material on this blogsite, unless otherwise stated.

She has further blogsites:
   songs for children http://connectsongdance.blogspot.com/

   aspects of smallholding https://jessam-smallholding.blogspot.com/       

Thursday, July 23, 2020

We sing!

This song was composed specifically for school celebratory occasions requiring pomp and pageantry. Sung heartily, with harmonies and the addition of any young brass players, it creates a festive, jubilant fanfare, allowing the singers to sparkle. 

The original words by Fred Pratt Green, borrowed from an old methodist hymnbook, have been tweaked and changed to become inclusive; they can, I hope, be sung easily by people of any persuasion, faith, religion, or those who subscribe to none. It feeds no creed; it simply proclaims that everything belongs! The universal 'alleluia' is already there in the very music itself.

The music is composed, played and recorded by Liz Campbell, with Tshego Makube as the main vocalist. Should anyone want to use the song for public occasions, please acknowledge the source of this piece. Should anyone want a simple copy of the music, it can be provided. 

        

                When in our music God is glorified

               And adoration leaves no room for pride

                It is as though the whole creation cried:

                        Alleluia          alleluia           we sing!

How often making music we have found

A new dimension in the world of sound

As music moves us to a more profound

                        Alleluia          alleluia           we sing!

 

        So have we all in countless heartfelt song

        In faith and love, through centuries of wrong,

        Sung praises to the truth in ev’ry tongue

                    Alleluia          alleluia           we sing!

Let ev’ry instrument be tuned for praise

Let all rejoice who have a voice to raise

May God give us grace to sing always

                        Alleluia          alleluia           we sing!

 

        So may our voices rise to God in song

        To whom, in whom, through whom we all belong

        Who was and is the music all along

                Alleluia          alleluia           alleluia           we sing!


Liz Campbell is the sole writer and composer of all the published material on this blogsite, unless otherwise stated.

She has further blogsites:
   songs for children http://connectsongdance.blogspot.com/

   aspects of smallholding https://jessam-smallholding.blogspot.com/