I had read some of Oliveros’s Meditations before for a class, however, I really appreciate that the reading gave some context as to how the exercises came to be. I would never have taught of creating music as a way to practice healing and meditation through active listening. For me music usually is the result of some sort of meditative process: the composer goes through some sort of realization or feeling that in turn is used as inspiration for music. But Oliveros saw making music as an inspiration for meditation, which is something that flipped in my head.

It was also interesting to see how this practice of Sonic Meditation created communities. We talked before in class about drum circles and about live coding communities, so music as a means to create community kind of a recurrent theme in our readings. However, this specific method is not only a result of political situations that people wanted to discuss but rather an exercise in learning how to listen to these situations and topics. This act of listening then leads towards a communal healing process which I found fascinating.

Oliveros mentions when talking about accepting others, especially minorities that “Healing can occur… when one’s inner experience is made manifest and accepted by others”. Throughout the reading, we come back to this idea of learning to actively listen to a performance, and this is something very important for the audience to do. Oliveros makes a point of how healing and meditation require an audience. It can be just one individual for the initial stages but then grows into developing an audience that must learn how to listen. Her techniques empower individuals to speak up when they are ready and explain to the audience how to engage with what they are listening to. Her philosophy promotes the type of audience needed for a communal healing process: an audience who actively listens.

Prior to this reading, I had never considered how meditation could be linked to activism. I found it very interesting how Pauline Oliveros considered her Sonic Meditations ‘humanitarian’, and initially, I was confused by this idea. But towards the end of the reading, the author mentioned how Oliveros participated in second-wave feminism’s idea that ‘the personal is political’. This reminded me of a Transnational Feminisms class that I took a year ago, where I learnt that the world treats women’s bodies as the vessels upon which nations are built. What a women can and cannot do with her body is what defines each country’s national identity.

With this in mind, Oliveros’ Sonic Meditations has a powerful goal and a lasting message, which is to help women become more in tune with their bodies and to use it to listen to the world around them. I particularly found the following quote interesting: “Walk so silently that the bottoms of your feet become ears”. It challenges us to change the way we use our bodies on a daily basis, and to be more sensitive to the things happening around us, which could manifest from merely being personal to being political. Oliveros also challenges the restrictions that society puts on the ways we are allowed to move our bodies, which I find especially powerful.

“Take a walk at night. Walk so silently that the bottoms of your feet become ears.”

I think this is one of the most interesting forms of sonic meditation mentioned in the article. Because sounds are vibrations, that means we can hear them through touch, like feeling a phone vibrate on a table. I imagine that walking (barefoot?) at night, in a quiet neighbourhood, the vibrations from the different sounds can be felt through the feet. These vibrations may even be something that our ears can’t hear which I think is an interesting way to give more perspective of the things happening around us even the things we don’t necessarily hear or see. It is interesting how she combined different senses together in her meditation. I also think this is why there was a blur between her musical work and bodywork and why her meditations were so effective.

 

Oliveros described listening as a necessary pause before thoughtful action. A thoughtful action can only be taken when we fully understand and acknowledge what is happening around us. She thought of taking a moment to listen as more important than simply taking action. Through her mediations, Oliveros was not only able to empower women through music, but she was also able to bring them peace during a difficult time. I found the article to be inspiring in some way as there is still much to learn from her sonic and kinetic meditations.

A few key words I extracted from this article are “sonic meditation”, “listen”, “heal”, and “feminist activism”. “sonic meditation” is an “experiment in self-care” initiated by Oliveros. In this meditation, Oliveros “taught awareness through slow, quotidian movements like sitting, standing, lying, and walking. In meditation, Oliveros asks participants to feel the rhythms of their bodies with the sounds they make, such as the sound of breathing. This kind of meditation is regarded as a “turning of mind and body”. For Oliveros, when “one’s inner experience is made manifest and accepted by others”, healing can occur. She herself would follow this code by sharing her “Sonic Meditations” in print and in performance. Meanwhile, because of the inherently gender-exclusive nature of “sonic meditation,” such practices are seen as a feminist struggle.

For me, there is a controversial point in the article where the author calls “sonic meditation” a “musical experimentation”. A related issue is whether the breathing and the sound made by the gong can be included in the category of music. Beyond that, I think this “quiet activism” of listening is really an action to create a more open and inclusive society. Through such meditation experiments, people can pay more attention to listening. By bringing this habit to life, people can become more attentive to the inner experience of others. For females who lacked voice and attention at that time, this was an innovative and bold attempt to fight for the rise of feminism. But again, who would have thought that feminism would be expressed in such an obscure and seemingly unrelated way?

First of all, unfortunately, I have not participated in or tried meditation in the professional sense. So I can’t really draw any conclusions on the difference between Sonic Meditation and other meditations.

What makes me feel interested is the way how Oliveros’s Sonic Meditation going:

“Take a walk at night. Walk so silently that the bottoms of your feet become ears.”

  1. Mirror

  2. Kinetic Awareness—Make your last audible breath a sung tone

  3. Circle—Visualize your signature letter by letter slowly. Simultaneously hearing your name. Do this forward, then backwards. (Without sound) See your signature in a selected color. Do these with eyes closed and eyes open.

  4. Bowl Gong Meditation. If you lose track of the pitch or want to verify your memory hit the gong again.

  5. Walk once around the room as slowly as possible backwards

  6. Teach yourself to fly as long as possible

What Oliveros did was very similar to games in a broad sense. And these ways just remind me of a book called Grapefruit by Yoko Ono(小野洋子). The subtitle of this book is called “A Book of Instructions and Drawings”. In this book, I will refer to its first section called “music”, she also mentioned a lot of interesting, unusual ideas for making or enjoying music. I will give you some random examples:

TAPE PIECE I

Stone Piece

Take the sound of the stone aging.

TAPE PIECE II

Rome Piece

Take the sound of the room breathing.

  1. at dawn

  2. in the morning

  3. in the afternoon

  4. in the evening

  5. before dawn

Bottle the smell of the room of that particular hour as well.

CLOCK PIECE

Listen to the clock strokes.

Make exact repetitions in your head

after they stop.

In my opinion, they both instruct people to experience some sounds by synesthesia or to reproduce some sounds with methods like memorizing. And just as how Roger Caillois defines games, both of them let people experience sounds or music in a way separated from the routine of life; they let people have an uncertain experience of those sounds, because it is encouraged to involve people’s initiative; what’s more, they are unproductive…

In general, what they both have in common is the use of games or unconventional methods to actively engage people in the act of “listening”. As a non-popular way, this active “listening” is not only an art but also a medium for meditation or thinking.

 

At first sight, it is not obvious to me what “Sonic Meditation” is referred to. After reading about their topics for each meetings, I think it’s about connecting senses, mostly between sound and other senses. It must be very novel to connect the kinetic and sonic element at the time of its creation as the boundary between the two became ‘blurry’. It is also interesting how they brought in documenting, reflection, journaling and discussion into practicing music, to improve their consciousness in the process. I also find it fascinating how it transformed from a lonely process of creating music by oneself to a group improvising session. 

I like the concept of empowering women in the realm of music and would like to know more about how women are historically held down for too long. 

However, I am suspicious towards whether I would something such as ‘Teach yourself to fly’ as art. But I do believe that certain type of listening exercise have healing powers on a spiritual level, often like the background music in awareness practice and meditation videos. 

The thought of activism taking place in more private quiet spaces was interesting. The text brings attention to the forms of activism that can less visible but just as impactful – one that takes place in the form of listening. People often associate activism as voicing your opinions, making them heard. And people who remain in silence are, in many instances, shamed for not contributing enough towards the movement. The text, however, made me think further about the instances where silence is a necessary component for thoughtful activism to occur. What if silence is the product of active listening and learning, prior to voicing an opinion? What if silence is one healing emotionally from a traumatic event?

 

The privacy of the meetings allowed the group to listen to sounds of their choice, giving them a sense of control and power over how they engaged their senses in the midst of such political unrest and chaos. I think there is a lot of power in the line that describes

“listening as a necessary pause before thoughtful action”.

Thoughtful action is only possible after one has given time to think. And listening invites more ideas to fertilize the thoughts preceding an action. By declaring this pause necessary, Olivero describes listening just as important as taking action. This reading inspired me to become more sensitive to the sounds that surround us and further experiment with the medium for healing purposes.