What's up /x/, I had an idea recently I'd like other people to weigh in on.
In Hinduism, there is the concept of "anahat nad", a sound that is NOT created by two things clashing together. They believe every sound we hear is created by two things crashing together (air to our vocal chords, wheels to the pavement, fire burning wood, etc). This sound is represented in the chant of "om" or "aum".
According to Hinduism, the sound "aum", when properly pronounced, contains the totality of all possible sounds. All of the vowels "ah" "oh" "ooh" "uhmmmm" with all the consonant sounds merely being "stops" in these sounds by your lips or tongue.
After brainstorming on this for a bit, I found a more appropriate representation of the "anahat nad":
>ee-yah-oh-ooh-way
This is what it sounds like when I repeat it like a chant:
http://vocaroo.com/i/s0V555KvYxTS
What does it sound like to you? Is anyone informed enough to elaborate on possible connections or synchronicities between "yahweh" and the concept of "aum"? Let your schizophrenia flow, I'm sure we can find something interesting.
I really don't get why people keep throwing "synchronicity" around and using it incorrectly. Cramming in a big word that isn't an appropriate choice for what you're trying to communicate doesn't make you look smart, it makes you look rock-fucking retarded. Jesus Fuckdancing Christ, why couldn't eugenics have taken off.
>inb4 'jk trollin u 4 laffs' to try and dodge the blow to the ego that comes from realizing you're dumber than a nigger
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PEzR80G98n4
It's pronounced the same way you pronounce Jove, oh wait, this is the first time you've ever heard that name lol
slam
Aum is to 'raise vibration'. As new age and lame as that sounds it is pretty literally what is going on. You start the aum with the 'aah' sound which you produce low in the body, almost in the belly rather than the throat. Then comes the 'ooo' sort of sound from somewhere in the middle and finally the 'mmm' which is almost a hum, very nasal with the sensation of vibration on the lips.
I do think it is more than coincidence that the sounds of the vowels when sustained, run together and looped does kinda sounds like 'yahweh'.
>>18404553
http://vocaroo.com/i/s1BDfSs7jKpz
From a vedic perspective chanting the Hare Krsna mahamantra is more potent than aum and is the sound incarnation of God in this yuga.