Mother Earth Drum
This is my drum, awesome in its
beauty, sound and function! Deer hide drumhead with unique black walnut
batik. Mystic images. It’s lightweight! Strong, lightweight birch frame.
Only 2 1/4'” deep! You can do stops and buzzes with the fingers of your
grip hand! You can create the sound of a thunderstorm! Honors the four
directions! Special comfortable grip with amethyst inset!
The
unique handgrip keeps your fingers away from the sharp rawhide edges and
allows easy access to the backside of the head so you can use advanced
drumming techniques such as STOPS and BUZZES with either your thumb or
fingers or both! This drum is a marvel to use. The surface of the drumhead
is perfect for creating the sounds of a thunderstorm with your palm swirling
the wind, your fingernails scratching the voice of thunder, and your
fingertips tap-tap-tapping the fall of the rain.
Larry Cloud-Morgan showed me how
to do that one evening in northern Minnesota. We were staying over at Ed and
RuthAnn's ranch for a two-day conference of the regional Native American
Student Associations.
Drumming from the Heart
The drum is
the heartbeat of Mother Earth. The animal who provided the hide did so with
intention and purpose. In the drum the spirit of the animal nation lives.
The honor and respect you show the drum also honors the four-legged, the
winged ones, the crawlers and the bugs. The birch tree who contributed the
wood for the frame did so with intention and purpose. In the drum the spirit
of the plant nation lives. The honor and respect you show the drum honors
the trees, bushes, flowers, and grasses. The stone in the heart of the drum
asked to be a part of the drum so that you would remember the stone nation.
The honor and respect you show the drum is honor and respect for the rocks,
the soil, the waters and the air.
When you
drum, prayers from the Web of Life are sent to the Star Web connecting
Mother Earth and Father Sky. The purpose of the stone in the handgrip is so
that you can hold in your hand the spirit of the foundation of the Web of
Life, the First Order of Being, upon which all other beings depend for their
life. The plant nation—the trees, the grasses and flowers—receive their life
from the rocks, the waters and the air. Plants are the Second Order Of
Being in the Web of Life upon which the animal nation depends. The Third
Order of Being gives its own flesh so that the younger brother, the human
can live. These are the Four Orders of Being in the Web of Life, each
interwoven with the other, interconnected in the One.
As beautiful as the
drum is, it is not a decorative object. Your drum is as alive as you are.
It feels the cold and the heat, the damp and the dry. Care for it. Touch
it with love and respect. It will last for many generations if treated with
care. Protect your drum from extremes of temperature and humidity. High
humidity will dull the tone. Extreme low humidity can tighten the hide
giving a higher tone. It can even split or crack the drumhead. Wrap you
drum in insulating layers for protection and keep it in a safe place. You
can keep it in a bag specially made for it.
There are
many ways to use the drum for sending prayers, for connecting with the Star
Web; it also allows you to receive power, wisdom and healing energy. As you
discover your natural heritage of power and wisdom, the drum can be used to
remove blockages of energy flow, can wash away residues of hurt and pain,
and can lift you into other worlds. Learn the power of deep passion, the
carrier wave of love.
Your drum
can teach you to listen to the whisper of the spirit wind in your heart.
Some people call this meditation, but it is simply connecting with Mother
Earth and Father Sky, the Star Web, the Grandmothers and Grandfathers who
are the spirit-keepers of the four directions, and most importantly, with
the Great Mystery that lies within you. These are the Seven Directions.
Before you
use your drum you might wish to prepare it with a cleansing Sage Ceremony
and Prayers to the Seven Directions. Smudging with sage and other aromatic
plant materials has been used since ancient times by many people as a
ceremony of cleansing and purification—among pre-Christian Druids and
Essenes as well as Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, among Hindus and
Buddhists as well as Cherokee and Lakota. Called "incense" in some
traditions, it can be made of a variety of fragrant plant materials. Native
Americans have used their local plants or obtained more exotic materials
through trade with the tribes of other regions. Among the plants they used
for smudge are tobacco, sweetgrass, calamus, red willow bark, red osier
dogwood, cedar needles and sage. (This is not culinary sage of the genus
Salvia. Rather it is one of the species of the genus Artemisia, which
includes the landscape perennials, silver mound and silver king, as well as
sagebrush and mugwort.)
Our sage
comes from Mt. Shasta and the area around it. Its fragrance is wonderful
before and during the smudging. The sage is dried and, with cotton string,
tied it into bundles as thick as our hands can hold. Four colors of string
are combined to honor the four directions—red for the east, yellow for the
south, black for the west, and white for the north.
You
can ignite the bundle on one end, put out the flame and use it as a smoking
wand, or you can crumble sage from the bundle and place it in a shell or
pottery container to smolder. Some prefer a large shell (although some
people believe that the shell has water energy which impairs the fire energy
of the smudge), others use an earthenware bowl or a hollowed rock. You will
need something to fan the embers to keep them burning. In some traditions
it is considered disrespectful to blow upon the smudge with your breath.
You can use your hand to sweep air into the embers, but a feather, feather
fan or wing is much more effective. To light the smudge or to reignite it,
you will also need matches or perhaps a lighter.
You can use
this ceremony to purify and cleanse people, places and things. Smudging
brings an awareness of the sacred and should be performed with sensitivity
and respect. As you add each pinch of the smudge mixture to the shell or
pot, offer thanks to the Grandmothers and Grandfathers of each of the four
directions. The order of honoring might differ from nation to nation. Some
start with the east because there Father Sun begins each day. Always the
rotation is sun-wise, following the path of the sun (east-south-west-north);
then to Mother Earth (down), Father Sun (up) and finally to the Great
Mystery within all things (brought to your heart). If you will be using the
sage bundle as a wand, then you can offer the entire sage bundle to these
Seven Directions.
Bring the
smudge together in a mound in the center of the container. After igniting
the mixture, fan it until it is smoldering without flame. Once again offer
the smoke to the Seven Directions. Cleanse yourself by drawing the smoke
over your head, over your heart and over each shoulder. With the help of
another, you can be cleansed under each foot, along your legs and back, as
well.
Sacred
space can be smudged before it is entered by others or at the beginning of
the ceremony. Pass though the smoke whatever ceremonial objects you wish to
use—the fan, the pipe, your hands, a dream catcher, or your drum and the
beater.
Although
you might prefer to create a prayer from your own heart, here is a prayer I
wrote as an example:
Prayer to
the Seven Directions
Grandfathers and Grandmothers of the East, each day you bring us new light
so that we may grow in wisdom. We have been waiting for the time when your
light would shine in the hearts of all people. Then they would remember the
Original Instructions that were written in our hearts since the beginning of
all things. Now is the time.
Grandmothers and Grandfathers of the South, your warm winds have sent us
your love and the abundance from Mother Earth. We have always known that as
we follow the Original Instructions we will walk in balance and harmony and
all our needs will be met. The power and wisdom of this path is not easily
understood when the mind is taught inside boundaries and the heart is closed
to sissagwaad, the soft wind of spirit. Open the heart of those who follow
the way of the mind.
Grandfathers and Grandmothers of the West, in the darkness
of night you have sent us dreams to see deep inside our hearts, to learn how
to walk the path of the spirit. We see the beauty that hides behind each
moment and discover the Great Mystery that is in us and all things. Help
the people of the mind see the power of their dreams. Help them learn from
their dreams so that they can remember the Original Instructions.
Grandmothers and Grandfathers of the North, you have brought
the cold winds and snows each year to cleanse our Mother Earth. Now the
cleansing of the mind has begun. The energies of the stars have shifted
into a new focus to end domination and hierarchy. No longer is it possible
to live by the mind unless it is guided by the heart. Blow the fresh, clean
wind of spirit to sweep away the belief systems that limit our brothers and
sisters who are trapped in the way of the mind.
Kee-shay Giidzhii Manidou, you have sent visions and dreams
to help us remember Who we are. We have not forgotten the Original
Instructions. The stories have now been rediscovered and returned to the
people. You have shown that the path of reconciliation and peace is
through the heart. Send the light of inspiration to the Ogichidaag‘ who
will show others a new way of being.
Gee-mama-nama-kee,
you are our Mother, our Source of Life. You have given us our food, our
water, air, shelter, and so many beautiful beings who are our Brothers and
Sisters. We know we are connected to you and to all other beings in the Web
of Life. Many are those who do not know of their connection. They see only
with their eyes and their mind. With a narrow focus they see parts of
things instead of the energy of love and wholeness. They have forgotten the
Original Instructions. As their Mother, you have been patient with them.
Extend that patience a little longer so the Ogichidaag‘ can show them a new
way.
Great
Mystery, we feel your presence in us and in all things. You are the spiral
energy of love that connects all, is all. You are the circle of life, the
circle way, the Original Instructions. When we are living in our heart, we
can soar with the White Eagle to see beyond horizons.
When the
drum has been smudged you can beat on it and say this prayer, either in
English or Anishinaabemowin, the language of the Anishinabeg:
Midewewewigun, nindo-wiyauh.
I seek the drum.
And then:
N’midewewewigun,
manitouwiyauwiwih.
Upon my drum bestow the mystery.
And to Ishpiming, All That Is:
M’gwech, Giidji manidou
Thanks, Great Spirit
Finally, an acknowledgement of
the gift:
Kikinowautchi-beegaudae
It is so.
Your drum
has been opened as a carrier of your prayers and petitions to the Great
Mystery. Other songs can be found in Ojibway Ceremonies by Basil
Johnston from Bison Books (1990).
How the
drum was brought to the Anishinabeg is told by Edward Benton-Banai in the
Mishomis Book: the Voice of the Ojibway (1988) by Indian Country
Communications, Inc. The original drum was the water drum, mi-tig-wa-tik’
day-way-gun, and contained water to represent the First Order of Being.
In our
drum this is replaced by the stone set in the handgrip to avoid the humidity
that would otherwise soften the drumhead. Later, the Anishinabeg added
stones to the exterior ties of their drum. The hide of the deer,
wawashkesh’shee, gave peace and gentleness to the drum, as well as speed and
agility to the drumbeat.
One of the
ceremonial uses of the Mother Earth Drum is healing. The first time I used
the drum in healing, I heard the sissagwad, the soft wind of spirit, whisper
to me to hold the drum over each chakra and beat softly. It worked. The
next time that I did a healing, I did some energy work to break up blockages
as I had been instructed to do. Then I noticed my drum sitting nearby and
realized that I was supposed to use it…but not beating it. I was to caress
the drum to make the sound of the wind whipping up a storm. The with my
fingernails scraping across the drum, make the sound of thunder, and,
drawing the fingers close together the thunder disappears into the
distance. With more wind and more thunder comes the rain, the tapping of
fingers making the multitude of raindrops striking the ground. More wind,
more thunder, more rain…and then quieter, more distant thunder, a gentling
wind, diminishing raindrops. Silence… The hurts and pains were washed away
and all was fresh and clean. Another time, a friend in Denver asked me to
help me with one of her horses who had a wound that wouldn’t heal. I
thought: OK, some sage ceremony, some drumming.
I heard the
sissagwad whisper. “No drumming. Use the rattle.”
“What?!” I
questioned.
The
sissagwad repeated, “No drumming. Use the rattle.”
“Impossible!” I thought. I remembered the cowboy movies I had seen as a
boy. The horse hears the rattlesnake and panics, rearing high in the air.
And I was going to be right there under the flailing front feet of the
horse. How about drumming instead! I begged.
“No
drumming. Use the rattle.”
I did the sage
ceremony, smudging the entire paddock and the horse. The horse just stood
perfectly still as I swept the
smoke
over the leg and then its whole body.
Then it was time for the rattle.
I began to shake the rattle, watchful of any hint of a dangerous response.
None. It worked. Then the horse "whispered" to me that 'it had tickled.'
"What?" I asked. "It tickled," the horse repeated. When the bandage was
taken off too soon, it still tickled so I scratched it." I told Diana to
keep the wrap on longer and the problem was solved. A few months later I
heard about the movie, The Horse Whisperer, but I knew that it worked BOTH
ways—the horse can whisper to the human, too.
[This is an excerpt from
Stories Dream-Catchers Weave.]
So
listen to the sissagwad in your heart. Don’t get locked into any rigid
ritual. That’s a head thing, a mind thing. Don’t misunderstand: the mind
is good, but the intuition, listening to the soft wind of spirit in the
heart, is an awesome source of wisdom beyond anything of which the mind is
capable.
Another
way to use the drum is to create a buzzing sound with each beat. Medicine
men would often place inside the drum a stick with lots of smaller sticks
pressing lightly against the back of the drumhead. The multiple tones and
harmonics are supposed to elicit healing. With the Mother Earth Drum you
can place the fingernail of your forefinger against the backside of the
drumhead so that as you drum you will create a buzz. Unlike the medicine
drum, you can withdraw your fingernail from the backside of the drumhead and
use a normal beat. You can also use the tip of your finger to create a stop
to a beat. Or you can use the fingernail of your forefinger to scratch on
the backside of the drumhead. In using and combining all of these drumming
techniques, you have a diverse “vocabulary” of sounds that can be used as
needed. If your fingers are long enough you might even be able to use both
your thumb and forefinger giving you two variations on the backside of the
drumhead as well as the multitude of variations with the beater on the front
of the drumhead. Your virtuosity is not limited to a change of volume and
rhythms.
You will
also find it very dramatic and powerful to strike the drumhead hard with the
beater and hold the beater firmly against the drumhead. It’s almost like an
explosion and reverberates with a rising, ringing overtone. Used with a
crescendo of volume and rhythm, you can punctuate the finale of a sequence
or, followed with quieter drumming and nuanced rhythms, you can create a
symphony in percussion. The thin design of the Mother Earth Drum makes this
all possible.
The drum
can also be used for meditation and shamanic traveling. A constant, steady
beat of the drum can alter consciousness.
Recovered from copyright theft of an
unprincipled white squaw.
White Eagle Soaring: Dream Dancer of the 7th Fire
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