Another exceptional video. Your editing is great and you're a very good teacher. Thanks for posting this.
@AerikArkadian6 ай бұрын
Thank you for the encouragement! I’ll keep making the videos as long as you keep watching and enjoying them!
@barasunАй бұрын
Thank you for the beautiful and informational video. Just waiting for my first Himalayan bowl to arrive by post. So excited!
@AerikArkadianАй бұрын
@@barasun huzzah! Enjoy the new instrument. Did you choose any note in particular?
@WitchNTheWorking6 ай бұрын
Super cool!!! Thanks for the lesson!! I always wanted to get a large deep bowl that makes a really bassy deep sound for ritual in circles
@AerikArkadian6 ай бұрын
Thank you! I’m glad you enjoyed it. Personally I’ve always wanted a full set of big crystal bowls… they’re just so expensive!
@timothyappleseed29863 ай бұрын
@@AerikArkadian Ben Kerkwyk is really into these. Matt Beall has purchased a bunch of them on the Antiquities market and has recently been interviewed about them by Danny Jones, Nick Sierra and Alex Dunn measure these and talk about how they found sacred geometry embedded in the structural design. You won't find them if you search for singing bowls. None of these guys claim that these are singing bowls. But soon it will be revealed. Look up these names on you tube. I found out about them at the cosmic summit last month in NC.
@timothyappleseed29863 ай бұрын
There are stone jars that were dug up out of a tumb of some king in Egypt and was dated back 5000 years. Sorry i don't know his name but I think it was in Sakura. If i can find it I'll try to reply to this message with the name. The thing is, these stone jars are made out of granite that is almost as hard as diamonds. These stone jars are so precise that they rival the capacities of today. But there's a few other problems with them. Yes, they looks like vases but they don't stand up straight because the bottoms are round or pointed. They have nubs that look like handle brackets but they are not drilled through to hold handles. Well, some of then were drilled but they were drilled later. The holes are crude and don't match the original art. They also have no lids for these jars. And guess why, they are not jars. They aren't even containers. What They are finding out right now as we speakb is that these are singing bowls that spin. Yes, they spin like a top when you wrap a string around the neck and pull it. They are also very heavy and spin pivot a very small surface that minimizes any friction. They say that if you spin them on a polished granite surface they will literally spin all day. The nubs on the side are there to balance the bowls. They are spinning singing bowls, inverted granite bells. And they probably came through the ice ages.
@AerikArkadian3 ай бұрын
That’s really cool! Thanks for sharing that. If you can find a link to an article or something, I’d love to read it. Otherwise I’ll try to find some more info when I have some free time.
@timothyappleseed29863 ай бұрын
@@AerikArkadian Ben Kerkwyk of Uncharted X is really into these. Matt Beall has purchased a bunch of them on the Antiquities market and has recently been interviewed about them by Danny Jones, Nick Sierra and Alex Dunn measure these and talk about how they found sacred geometry embedded in the structural design. You won't find them if you search for singing bowls. None of these guys claim that these are singing bowls. They call them ancient stone vases. But soon it will be revealed that these are spinning singing bowls.
@AerikArkadian3 ай бұрын
@@timothyappleseed2986 sounds fascinating. I’ll check it out! Thank you