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most of us are dancing the rhythm of life but few follow its steps.

2007-02-05 15:42:29 · 6 answers · asked by maconsolviaa 5 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

6 answers

I unfortunately like this question. Unfortunately as I have still work to do, but I take this five minutes to answer this fantastic question instead as good as I manage.

Yes you are true. Many dance to the rhythm of life. They do not think a lot about it but just move to its rhythm. They breath in and when breathing in they need to breath out. The eternal rhythm of give and take. They eat and they need to discharge of the food again.
They wake up in the morning and move and then they need a rest again and sleep.
You give and you expect to take.

The body grows old and it changes and most people dance with the change. They follow the rhyhtm of becoming and decay.

You intermingle with similar minded people and you follow the rhythm of life again that sais that same attracts same.

People talk of heavy or of light thoughts and they discuss endlessly their inner well being and in that they dance with the reality that we are more than our body.
They sow salad to reap salad and so they sow love to reap love and again they dance with the ryhtm of life

And still most of them who dance with the rhythm of life are totally unaware of the steps. They even deny them and only a few follow this steps consciously but they are regarded as fools especially of the wild dancers. People who follow the steps of the rhythm of life are aware of them. They look at them, taking their time to do that. For example they might say, look at this law of balance, which governs everything. And then become aware that there is the law of gravity which effects all our outer plus inner life.
Then look around people how everything all around us follows the law of sow and reap and we are part of that.
Dancing lets us sometimes forget the steps. People who only dance, deny that there is justice and that there is a meaning in life or that there is a higher power sustaining this laws.
Therefore it might be good to dance and look at this steps again from time to time, so not to get confused.

2007-02-05 16:44:03 · answer #1 · answered by I love you too! 6 · 4 0

No real offense but HOW CAN YOU KNOW, the truth in the detail after your Q?

Most???

Beyond that you ask DO WE? Who might WE be?

As a species we would most enjoy a balance, a "rhythm" in your feeling, and if it happens we often Savor it, but please don't believe that MOST are DANCING.

Your metaphor, and please don't take offense, is pretty cliche, and FOLLOWING is MOST what our species does. LEAD is a minority.

Consider this. LIFE is a "river" sometimes flowing in such strength that we have no option but to be taken by the "flow" At other times it meanders, allowing us explorations or detours to touch shorelines. Some of us however contest a natural flow, especially when we feel it may dash us on rocks in some "rapids" ahead. AND so we swim against currents.

Now, as an analogy that should be relatively easy to understand.

With regard to a DANCE, certainly I equate that word sooooooooooo often to "IT" and even if that happens to be your analogy, (which is OK) IT needs to be most satisfactory in having a "partner" If you wish to relate life to a rhythm, then you should also consider that it has a melody, moments of "loud" percussion, and also pauses in the "flow" not only of the dance, but the "music"

If all this is a major concern to you personally I have a suggestion, so elequently and susinctly stated by my love, Aldara. "The Universe WILL take care of the details"

To attempt analyzing the "flow" or "dance" or whatever other TAG you put on life, is to NOT truly enjoy it in it's most precious moments.

Steven Wolf

2007-02-06 00:02:53 · answer #2 · answered by DIY Doc 7 · 0 0

Sarah Trehub is trying to prove that a knowledge of how keys and patterns in music relate e is inherent at birth. This psychologist from the University of Toronto conducted an experiment to see if infants could detect changes in music. She studies the effect music has on a group of six to nine month old infants. As she varies the pitch, tempo, and melodic contour of the music she finds that babies can detect changes in all three. To find whether our “musical preferences are shaped by culture alone or wired into our brain from birth” she plays consonant (pleasant) and dissonant (unpleasant) music for the babies. The babies smiled when consonant music was played such as perfect fourths and fifths but cried and whined when dissonant music was played such as the unstable tritone. She concludes that, “What seems to be a biologically based preference may explain the inclusion of perfect fifths and fourths in music across cultures and across centuries.” In addition to maintaining this map of musical keys, the Rostromedial Prefronta Cortex is also responsible for processing emotion. “This might explain why music makes you feel like dancing,” says neuroscientist Peter Janata. If Sarah is correct then we are unconciously wired to follow the "rythym of life" from birth.

2007-02-06 00:06:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

if life be music, where be the dancefloor?
if earth be the dancefloor who be the dancer?
if people be the dancer who control the steps?
if we control the steps why so much slaughter in the world?
if so much slaughter, is there rhythm?
if there no rhythm, is there song
it there no song, what is life?

2007-02-06 02:19:34 · answer #4 · answered by Curious 3 · 0 0

the rhythm of life is life

2007-02-06 00:22:25 · answer #5 · answered by zentoccino 2 · 0 0

we turks say:
"this life is whore and have no honest to anyone"

2007-02-06 02:57:51 · answer #6 · answered by earth_from_moon_blueview 2 · 0 0

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