Nisan comments on The Value (and Danger) of Ritual - Less Wrong

29 Post author: Raemon 30 December 2011 06:52AM

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Comment author: Nisan 04 January 2012 05:34:36AM 0 points [-]

I had the unexpected privilege of taking part in a ritual on New Year's Eve. We went into the back yard, sat in a close circle around a fire, and chanted in Sanskrit.

We chanted each mantra 108 times while the host counted on a string of beads. After the first dozen repetitions the mantra becomes automatic and you zone out. Staring at the fire has the same mesmerizing effect. As a result I kept an empty mind for half an hour, and that always feels healthy.

We also threw spices into the fire, which was supposed to symbolize something, but it didn't do much for me.

After the chanting we brightened the atmosphere by singing a song. Then we went around the circle, sharing our hopes and goals for the coming year. I think if we knew each other better we would have shared more.

Comment author: TheOtherDave 04 January 2012 02:27:08PM 2 points [-]

It's also likely that, had you shared more, you'd have known each other better.

Comment author: wedrifid 04 January 2012 06:54:32AM 2 points [-]

We also threw spices into the fire, which was supposed to symbolize something, but it didn't do much for me.

Wrong spice. ;)

Comment author: Raemon 04 January 2012 05:49:02AM 0 points [-]

I have been meaning to learn to meditate. I don't think it'd end up working on a large scale but I'd be interested in smaller scale stuff (presumably similar to what you describe).

I did want to include some kind of goal-setting ritual with the Solstice - it would have tied in well - but it would have drained focus in unpredictable ways. I may try for it next year if I can figure out a good way to do so.