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Conversations with Birds: The Metaphysics of Bird and Human Communication

von Alan Powers

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An exploration of communicating with birds and the lessons they can teach us * Discusses specific birdtalk techniques and offers insights into many species * Looks at the long-standing tradition of "avitherapy" throughout history and in literature and the arts * Explains how song-talk with birds restores peace, calms anxiety, and enhances health For decades Alan Powers has studied bird vocalizations, developing the remarkable ability to imitate birds' songs and get them to respond and even change tunes. Through his years of study, he has discovered that birds can teach us important lessons about the world and about ourselves. As Powers explains, by communing cross-species we reach out to the timeless interconnected web of all life past and present--what Renaissance philosopher Giordano Bruno called in Latin the Uni-versus, the "Whole turned into One." Sharing his journey to learn birdtalk and his profound observations about the poetic, spiritual, and healing influences of birdsong, Powers explores the ancient language of birds and the depth of meaning birds convey. He explains how bird speech sounds like song to us, but birdtalk is urgent and nuanced, whether about predators or the weather. He details how he began learning birdtalk, listening to one bird each summer, learning their many vocalizations and variations. Discussing specific techniques, he shares insights into the birdtalk of many species, including the complex and intelligent speech of Crows, the emotional depths of Loons, the mimicry of Blue Jays, and the beautiful song of the Wood Thrush. Exploring the intertwined metaphysics of bird and human languages, Powers looks at the long-standing tradition of "avitherapy" throughout history, literature, and the arts. He shares insights into birds from Shakespeare and Emily Dickinson, reveals how birds appear in love songs throughout the world, and examines how famous writers such as Keats, Catullus, St. Francis of Assisi, and the French historian Jules Michelet found that talking to birds improved their state of mind. He also explores how song-talk with birds restores peace, calms anxiety, and enhances health.… (mehr)
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An exploration of communicating with birds and the lessons they can teach us

• Discusses specific birdtalk techniques and offers insights into many species

• Looks at the long-standing tradition of “avitherapy” throughout history and in literature and the arts

• Explains how song-talk with birds restores peace, calms anxiety, and enhances health

For decades Alan Powers has studied bird vocalizations, developing the remarkable ability to imitate birds’ songs and get them to respond and even change tunes. Through his years of study, he has discovered that birds can teach us important lessons about the world and about ourselves. As Powers explains, by communing cross-species we reach out to the timeless interconnected web of all life past and present--what Renaissance philosopher Giordano Bruno called in Latin the Uni-versus, the “Whole turned into One.”

Sharing his journey to learn birdtalk and his profound observations about the poetic, spiritual, and healing influences of birdsong, Powers explores the ancient language of birds and the depth of meaning birds convey. He explains how bird speech sounds like song to us, but birdtalk is urgent and nuanced, whether about predators or the weather. He details how he began learning birdtalk, listening to one bird each summer, learning their many vocalizations and variations. Discussing specific techniques, he shares insights into the birdtalk of many species, including the complex and intelligent speech of Crows, the emotional depths of Loons, the mimicry of Blue Jays, and the beautiful song of the Wood Thrush.

Exploring the intertwined metaphysics of bird and human languages, Powers looks at the long-standing tradition of “avitherapy” throughout history, literature, and the arts. He shares insights into birds from Shakespeare and Emily Dickinson, reveals how birds appear in love songs throughout the world, and examines how famous writers such as Keats, Catullus, St. Francis of Assisi, and the French historian Jules Michelet found that talking to birds improved their state of mind. He also explores how song-talk with birds restores peace, calms anxiety, and enhances health. ( )
  AlanWPowers | Feb 28, 2023 |
"Winged Words about our Feathered Friends"

'Avian language may well be the language of the psyche, of the soul and mind.’ Alan Powers
Convinced of the spiritual and healing effects of talking with birds, Powers has studied birdsong as a language for decades and developed a unique ability to imitate birds, by whistling to and with them, inviting them to respond and even vary their song. It’s a singular story.
He describes how he started to learn birdtalk, listening attentively to one bird each summer, moving on to appreciate the language of a number of species, including that of crows, loons, blue jays, orioles and the wood thrush, and discusses particular birdtalk techniques.

Powers’ narrative style is allusive, musicological, literary and diaristic; his tone can be professorial and didactic at times, chirpy and buoyant at others, and there’s gravitas: ‘I speak with other species and fear my own,’ he remarks.
hinzugefügt von AlanWPowers | bearbeitenMedium, Geoff Ward (Mar 3, 2023)
 
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We two alone will sing like birds i' th' cage. Lear V.3

We've been on earth all these years and we still don't know for certain why birds sing. We need someone to unlock the code to the foreign language... Annie Dillard, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek.
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For Sherley and Leonard Unger, and for Susan Mohl Powers
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All living beings communicate with their own species and react to other species, often with fear--as in the common gargle-rattles birds make when detecting a threat. Reversing this species-centric tendency, I speak with other species and fear my own...
     My musical instructions from birds and my musical development have yielded fruitful effects on myself, including health of spirit.
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Avian language may well be the language of the psyche, of the soul and mind. (p.69)
Birds' discussion of investment can be summed up in the seasonal ebb and flow of sunlight. (p.62)
The most beautiful birdtalk, the pentatonic song of the Wood Thrush, like the black keys on a piano, often ends in a rasp. [warning] (p. xiv)
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An exploration of communicating with birds and the lessons they can teach us * Discusses specific birdtalk techniques and offers insights into many species * Looks at the long-standing tradition of "avitherapy" throughout history and in literature and the arts * Explains how song-talk with birds restores peace, calms anxiety, and enhances health For decades Alan Powers has studied bird vocalizations, developing the remarkable ability to imitate birds' songs and get them to respond and even change tunes. Through his years of study, he has discovered that birds can teach us important lessons about the world and about ourselves. As Powers explains, by communing cross-species we reach out to the timeless interconnected web of all life past and present--what Renaissance philosopher Giordano Bruno called in Latin the Uni-versus, the "Whole turned into One." Sharing his journey to learn birdtalk and his profound observations about the poetic, spiritual, and healing influences of birdsong, Powers explores the ancient language of birds and the depth of meaning birds convey. He explains how bird speech sounds like song to us, but birdtalk is urgent and nuanced, whether about predators or the weather. He details how he began learning birdtalk, listening to one bird each summer, learning their many vocalizations and variations. Discussing specific techniques, he shares insights into the birdtalk of many species, including the complex and intelligent speech of Crows, the emotional depths of Loons, the mimicry of Blue Jays, and the beautiful song of the Wood Thrush. Exploring the intertwined metaphysics of bird and human languages, Powers looks at the long-standing tradition of "avitherapy" throughout history, literature, and the arts. He shares insights into birds from Shakespeare and Emily Dickinson, reveals how birds appear in love songs throughout the world, and examines how famous writers such as Keats, Catullus, St. Francis of Assisi, and the French historian Jules Michelet found that talking to birds improved their state of mind. He also explores how song-talk with birds restores peace, calms anxiety, and enhances health.

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