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June 18, 2015 at 10:23 pm #209957
Anonymous
GuestA lot of you folks say that this or that “resonates” with you. Words can mean different things to different people. I want to understand what you are saying, from YOUR perspective.
Can you share this with me? and provide examples perhaps?
June 18, 2015 at 10:35 pm #301027Anonymous
GuestI say “resonates” when I mean that something is consistent with my experience. June 18, 2015 at 10:53 pm #301028Anonymous
GuestResonates, to me, rings true or rings right. Now that doesn’t mean that right or true can’t change. But at the time, if someone says or does something that sits with my present understanding – it resonates.
Jeffrey Hollands conference talk, “Are We Not All Beggars” – resonates with me.
June 18, 2015 at 11:01 pm #301029Anonymous
GuestDefinition of resonates:
Quote:produce or be filled with a deep, full, reverberating sound.
“the sound of the siren resonated across the harbor”
I use it when I sense something sounds right inside of me. Less about logic or meaning, and more about how it sounds to me personally…it rings true based on my experience.
It has a little more deep expression than just saying “I agree”.
June 19, 2015 at 4:54 am #301030Anonymous
GuestWe bought two singing bowls in Nepal which are used in meditation, and they totally resonate. The sound enters your bones and vibrates. They are pretty amazing. Quote:Singing bowls (also known as Tibetan Singing Bowls, rin gongs, Himalayan bowls or suzu gongs) are a type of bell, specifically classified as a standing bell. Rather than hanging inverted or attached to a handle, singing bowls sit with the bottom surface resting, and the rim of singing bowls vibrates to produce sound characterized by a fundamental frequency (first harmonic) and usually two audible harmonic overtones (second and third harmonic).[citation needed]
Singing bowls are used worldwide for meditation, music, relaxation, and personal well-being. Singing bowls were historically made throughout Asia, especially Nepal, China and Japan. They are closely related to decorative bells made along the silk road from the Near East to Western Asia. Today they are made in Nepal, India, Japan, China and Korea.
June 19, 2015 at 4:59 am #301031Anonymous
GuestI use that word to describe something that makes my heart and mind vibrate in unison. June 19, 2015 at 3:59 pm #301032Anonymous
Guesthawkgrrrl wrote:We bought two singing bowls in Nepal which are used in meditation, and they totally resonate. The sound enters your bones and vibrates. They are pretty amazing
I took my daughter to a buddhist temple one Sunday where the instructor took two pieces of wood. He hit one piece of wood on his chair with a thud. And then to the railing in front of him. Loud but sharp sound. Then he struck the wood with the other piece of wood and in harmony, the two made an incredibly beautiful and ringing sound that was pleasant to hear.His lesson to all of us: When you find the right place to be in your life…it sound true and beautiful. When you are in the wrong place, even doing the same action sounds dull or sharp and painful. We all have the right place to bring out our inner beauty, as we were meant to be.
That resonates.
June 19, 2015 at 4:54 pm #301033Anonymous
GuestR4H, Ask someone you know who plays guitar (well) to show you how they tune the guitar using harmonics. It’s a thing of beauty when two strings ‘resonate’ with each other, and probably as good an object lesson as you can get on the topic.
June 19, 2015 at 7:29 pm #301034Anonymous
GuestOn Own Now wrote:R4H,
Ask someone you know who plays guitar (well) to show you how they tune the guitar using harmonics. It’s a thing of beauty when two strings ‘resonate’ with each other, and probably as good an object lesson as you can get on the topic.
I agree. And it drives home the point that both notes need to be perfectly in tune/properly spaced from each other to get the resonance.I can’t just suddenly start using “resonance” now, so I’ll probably just stick with the annoying-even-to-myself Valley Girl “
totallyunderstand,” “ totallyagree.” But, this is the place! Lots of resonating going on here.
:thumbup: June 20, 2015 at 11:26 pm #301035Anonymous
GuestFor me something resonates when it has deep meaning. Sometimes it’s a new thought. Sometimes it is a statement that suddenly makes an experience I had, make sense. Sent from my XT1080 using Tapatalk
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