For Harpers-Musical-Magical Folk: Yuletide Inspiration for You

This article originally appeared in the December 2000 issue of The Reel Fling, which is the publication of the Harpers Hall & culinary society. If you’re a harper, I hope you enjoy some of these ideas for journeying with your harp.

Don’t play harp? If you play any instrument or sing you can easily make use of these ideas too!

If you’re not a musician at all, I invite you to browse the article anyway. You may very well find some inspiration for your own creative expression as the year ends! Tip: as you read the article, substitute “harp”, “harper”, etc. with the nature and details of your particular creative magic.. Please be sure to let me know how you applied any of these ideas to that which you are most passionate about!

a page from “The Mystic Harper’s Guide to Fun & Magic on the Harp” for December and the Year’s End

by Jane Valencia

Have you misplaced the magic that drew you to the harp? Are you hoping to delve more deeply into the wonder of this amazing instrument? In the spirit of fun, I offer these recipes and suggestions for closing the old year ….

A tune gift.

One of the great traditions of the Harpers Hall & culinary society is the annual Yuletide Party. This is a time when harps and harpers cram into a valiant member’s home. We heft lavish dishes of every description and delight upon unsuspecting tables and counters. We exchange songs, music, conversation, and chocolates in the harp circle and beyond. We catch up with our friends and make new ones, and revel–Harpers Hall style–as the year approaches its longest night.

Leaf-rise - art
Leaf-rise – stamp art by Jane Valencia

As always in a harp circle, revelers will play a merry tune, or invite one and all to play along on an old favorite. An especially fine gift to your fellow harpers at this time of year is to share a tune, song, or poem that honors the season. These pieces can be holiday songs, but certainly don’t have to be. Meaningful tunes and verse can be drawn from any tradition, or can be created by ourselves in response to winter images around or within us.

If possible, make copies of the piece for everyone (note: please be mindful of copyright issues before doing so!). Imagine everyone walking home with a sheaf of tunes and perhaps even collecting them into a “book” of warm-hearted music to drive the cold weather away–memories of a marvelous time, gifts from your fellow harpers.

Improvising on winter.

Luna by the Woodstove - photo by Jane. Harp by Triplett.Winter is a time of inner reflection, a time to curl up by the fire and dream as you await the rebirth of the sun. It can be a time of noise-making and rowdy celebration, but also a time of quiet. Use this time of year to inspire you to respond to the season or even to give thanks.

Try this: Say or think the word “winter”. Off the top of your head, write the first five words that come to mind. They could be images, feelings, actions, whatever. Now think of five more words. Think and write down five more.

Now go to your harp. Pick a mode or simple chord progression, something that suggests ‘winter’ to you. Lydian mode, the “more major than major” scale is interesting and unusual. If your harp is tuned to the Key of C, you will find the Lydian mode on the series of strings that start on F (F G A B C D E F is the scale). While playing an F chord (F C F) in your bass hand, noodle around on the F Lydian scale with your melody hand. Circle around the fourth step of the scale — that whole step interval between the third and fourth degrees is what gives Lydian its distinctive character.

Lydian_Mode

Our Western music ears will want to change the B natural to a B flat! Explore the scale and noodle to your heart’s content. Get dreamy about winter. As you do so, you might want to chant one or more of your winter words. While playing your F drone and melody noodles, you might say or sing: “Snow —- sun — fire — music — return …” or whatever. Lose yourself in the winter magic. Improvise vocally. You may find yourself creating your own chant or song!

Note: To give you a sense of Lydian mode, I include a video I made a number of years back. “Under Starlight” is in Lydian mode, with a little skip over to Mixolydian mode before returning to Lydian again.

https://youtu.be/zOyR7bzB_hQ

Release the old, welcome something new.

We all have hang ups. Something is always holding us back from achieving our musical dreams. In this season of death and rebirth we have a real opportunity to reflect on the stumbling blocks to our paths as harpers and to shed them. Are you fearful? Intimidated? Feel that you’re rhythmically challenged? Write the hindrance onto a piece of paper. To give the “thing” added significance find a tune that symbolizes that hindrance for you (perhaps in the song’s title; or perhaps there is a piece you’ve been working on that has frustrated you in just that discouraging way). Write your hindrance across the top of the music. Ex: “I’m a fake harper”. Ceremonially burn that paper at the Harpers Hall Yuletide Party (or elsewhere).

It is marvelously cleansing to burn, destroy, or give away something that has been dragging you down. If you just can’t bear to burn that piece of music, you could just give it to someone else who might truly enjoy working on that tune or arrangement (in this case you would write your hindrance on a separate paper and burn that). Perhaps at the Yuletide celebration we should all have a tune exchange. Each of us bring a piece of sheet music we don’t want to work on, and come up with some sort of trade. I’m sure all awful tunes can find loving homes and hearts!

Light is Returning - art
Light is Returning – stamp art by Jane Valencia

At the same time you come up with a hindrance, think of a quality that you want to acquire for yourself at this point in your harp journey. Perhaps you want the boldness and flair of Kim Robertson, or the rhythmic splashiness of Alfredo Ortiz? Write your dream on a piece of music that embodies that quality for you, or even attach it to a CD of music that represents what you wish to accomplish. Write it in the present tense: “My music makes people dance.” Use the piece of music or the CD as a reminder or a source of inspiration. Keep it somewhere near your harp, as a talisman.

Now do something to symbolize this change in you. You will no longer be a fake harper (or whatever is your chief depressing belief about your harp playing). You now make people dance when you play (or whatever is your dream). Celebrate this inner change. After all, to imagine is to create magic. If you believe, you will become.

You could line up your favorite stuffed animals and give them a private performance by the dazzling new harper self that is you. Or you could do something completely different: treat yourself to a ceremonial cup of hot chocolate accompanied by lighted candles before you settle down to your next session with your harp. Whisper the words of your dream for yourself like a mantra. You could even do this at the beginning and end of each practice session for weeks or months to come. Use your imagination, have fun. Most importantly, honor the fact that you have chosen the harp as your instrument — and that the harp has chosen you!

How do you honor the closing of the year with your unique creative expression? Please share your stories below!

Harpers Hall Gathering - photo

How has your Creative Fire Guided You in 2015?

Solstice Lanterns - photo
Solstice Houses – photo by Jane Valencia

First, I just want to express my gratitude to you for reading my writings, showing up at my gigs, and enjoying my art in the various ways that you all do. I feel absolutely blessed to be able to do what I love in this world — which is a number of things! Some of you have received newsletters from me or read my blog for years now. I thank you for sticking by me as my creative fire shifted this way and that in its expressions. I’ve finally given up trying to choose the “one thing that I do”. If you’re with me this far, then I trust that you are enjoying something that I offer — and maybe you experience the unity of it better than I sometimes do!

Here on this shortest day, I invite you to take some time to sit by your own creative fire. Just imagine your unique way of being in this universe as a warming fire. What are the qualities of your fire? How do you feel within your body and emotions as you sit by this fire? If you imagine the year since last winter solstice, how has the vigor, shape, and feel of your fire changed through the year? Allow yourself to rest in your imagination and dream space with this, and to be curious and playful!

How does your creative fire shine as we reach the shortest day of the yea
r? How has your creative fire guided you through 2015, and what treasures has its daring and dancing ways revealed for you? Take a moment  imagine yourself as a child, crouched over a basket of wrapped gifts.  How many are there? Unwrap them slowly, one by one. What are they? What do they look/smell/feel like? And how do they make you feel? What are these gifts of you — your magical nature — that you now unwrap and admire? How have they shape-shifted,  deepened, grown more fancy, or … [fill in the blank] since last year?

If you wish, please share below about with what you’ve been on fire, creatively speaking, and how your sense of your self and your right way in the world has rooted further as a result. I’d love to hear your story!

I also invite you to read one of my favorite Winter Solstice poems, shared in a post of mine a few years back. Enjoy!

Last but not least, I hope you can join me for this event!

Red Cedar photo
Red Cedar – photo by Jane Valencia

Women’s Nature Ways: A Mid-Winter Retreat

facilitated by Stacey Hinden and Jane Valencia. Feb. 5-7, 2016, on Bainbridge Island.

Learn powerful tools and practices to listen to the profound bodymind wisdom within you, and to attune to the timeless, generous spirit of Red Cedar. Please visit our website to learn more about our retreat, and how to join a circle of women ready to explore the mystery and wisdom woven both within us and with nature. Early registration discount through December 21st. Enrollment ends January 4. We look forward to journeying with you!

Also: Sign up for our Women’s Nature Ways newsletter and receive a free audio guiding you into the nourishing wisdom at the heart of your nature.

I Love the Magic of Winter – How About You?

Doug-fir Cone - photo by Jane Valencia
Douglas-fir cone, with mice scurrying in to hide. Photo by Jane Valencia

Do you see the mice with their dangling tales (bad pun intended) darting under the scales of the Douglas-fir cone in the photo above? Pacific Northwest legend has it that an elder Douglas-fir once sheltered Mouse during a raging fire. When Mouse scurried under a fir cone scale, the other mice saw their chance for safety, and followed suit. To this day, Douglas-fir shelters mice in its many cones.

Winter is a wonderful time to explore the bare-nature beauty and presence of the trees in terms of their bark, limbs, forms, and even roots. This season in particular is perfect for enjoying the uplifting and celebratory nature of the evergreen.

On your next walk, take notice of the trees. Settle into your child heart and into the way you viewed the world when you were young. What surprises do you discover when you experience nature with your child mind, eyes, and heart? I, for one, can’t walk past a box hedge, or any shrub with small oval leaves without seeing quantities of ice cream cones, thanks to some make-believe we neighborhood kids once played.

As we enter the winter season, do take time to rest into enchantment and fun. What do you notice in your wanders and wondering? Jot us a note about those things in the comment box below!